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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 18 - 18
2 Jan 2024
Ferreira S Tallia F Heyraud A Walker S Salzlechner C Jones J Rankin S
Full Access

For chondral damage in younger patients, surgical best practice is microfracture, which involves drilling into the bone to liberate the bone marrow. This leads to a mechanically inferior fibrocartilage formed over the defect as opposed to the desired hyaline cartilage that properly withstands joint loading. While some devices have been developed to aid microfracture and enable its use in larger defects, fibrocartilage is still produced and there is no clear clinical improvement over microfracture alone in the long term. Our goal is to develop 3D printed devices, which surgeons can implant with a minimally invasive technique. The scaffolds should match the functional properties of cartilage and expose endogenous marrow cells to suitable mechanobiological stimuli in-situ, in order to promote healing of articular cartilage lesions before they progress to osteoarthritis, and rapidly restore joint health and mobility. Importantly, scaffolds should direct a physiological host reaction, instead of a foreign body reaction, associated with chronic inflammation and fibrous capsule formation, negatively influencing the regenerative outcome.

Our novel silica/polytetrahydrofuran/polycaprolactone hybrids were prepared by sol-gel synthesis and scaffolds were 3D printed by direct ink writing. 3D printed hybrid scaffolds with pore channels of ~250 µm mimic the compressive behaviour of cartilage. Our results show that these scaffolds support human bone marrow stem/stromal cell (hMSC) differentiation towards chondrogenesis in vitro under hypoxic conditions to produce markers integral to articular cartilage-like matrix evaluated by immunostaining and gene expression analysis. Macroscopic and microscopic evaluation of subcutaneously implanted scaffolds in mice showed that scaffolds caused a minimal resolving inflammatory response. Our findings show that 3D printed hybrid scaffolds have the potential to support cartilage regeneration.

Acknowledgements: Authors acknowledge funding provided by EPSRC grant EP/N025059/1.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 40 - 40
17 Nov 2023
Kuder I Jones G Rock M van Arkel R
Full Access

Abstract

Objectives

Ultrasound speckle tracking is a safe and non-invasive diagnostic tool to measure soft tissue deformation and strain. In orthopaedics, it could have broad application to measure how injury or surgery affects muscle, tendon or ligament biomechanics. However, its application requires custom tuning of the speckle-tracking algorithm then validation against gold-standard reference data. Implementing an experiment to acquire these data takes months and is expensive, and therefore prohibits use for new applications. Here, we present an alternative optimisation approach that automatically finds suitable machine and algorithmic settings without requiring gold-standard reference data.

Methods

The optimisation routine consisted of two steps. First, convergence of the displacement field was tested to exclude the settings that would not track the underlying tissue motion (e.g. frame rates that were too low). Second, repeatability was maximised through a surrogate optimisation scheme. All settings that could influence the strain calculation were included, ranging from acquisition settings to post-processing smoothing and filtering settings, totalling >1,000,000 combinations of settings. The optimisation criterion minimised the normalised standard deviation between strain maps of repeat measures. The optimisation approach was validated for the medial collateral ligament (MCL) with quasi-static testing on porcine joints (n=3), and dynamic testing on a cadaveric human knee (n=1, female, aged 49). Porcine joints were fully dissected except for the MCL and loaded in a material-testing machine (0 to 3% strain at 0.2 Hz), which was captured using both ultrasound (>14 repeats per specimen) and optical digital image correlation (DIC). For the human cadaveric knee (undissected), 3 repeat ultrasound acquisitions were taken at 18 different anterior/posterior positions over the MCL while the knee was extended/flexed between 0° and 90° in a knee extension rig. Simultaneous optical tracking recorded the position of the ultrasound transducer, knee kinematics and the MCL attachments (which were digitised under direct visualisation post testing). Half of the data collected was used for optimisation of the speckle tracking algorithms for the porcine and human MCLs separately, with the remaining unseen data used as a validation test set.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 34 - 34
17 Nov 2023
Elliott M Rodrigues R Hamilton R Postans N Metcalfe A Jones R McGregor A Arvanitis T Holt C
Full Access

Abstract

Objectives

Biomechanics is an essential form of measurement in the understanding of the development and progression of osteoarthritis (OA). However, the number of participants in biomechanical studies are often small and there is limited ways to share or combine data from across institutions or studies. This is essential for applying modern machine learning methods, where large, complex datasets can be used to identify patterns in the data. Using these data-driven approaches, it could be possible to better predict the optimal interventions for patients at an early stage, potentially avoiding pain and inappropriate surgery or rehabilitation. In this project we developed a prototype database platform for combining and sharing biomechanics datasets. The database includes methods for importing and standardising data and associated variables, to create a seamless, searchable combined dataset of both healthy and knee OA biomechanics.

Methods

Data was curated through calls to members of the OATech Network+ (https://www.oatechnetwork.org/). The requirements were 3D motion capture data from previous studies that related to analysing the biomechanics of knee OA, including participants with OA at any stage of progression plus healthy controls. As a minimum we required kinematic data of the lower limbs, plus associated kinetic data (i.e. ground reaction forces). Any additional, complementary data such as EMG could also be provided. Relevant ethical approvals had to be in place that allowed re-use of the data for other research purposes. The datasets were uploaded to a University hosted cloud platform. The database platform was developed using Javascript and hosted on a Windows server, located and managed within the department.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 52 - 52
17 Nov 2023
Jones R Bowd J Gilbert S Wilson C Whatling G Jonkers I Holt C Mason D
Full Access

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Knee varus malalignment increases medial knee compartment loading and is associated with knee osteoarthritis (OA) progression and severity1. Altered biomechanical loading and dysregulation of joint tissue biology drive OA progression, but mechanistic links between these factors are lacking. Subchondral bone structural changes are biomechanically driven, involve bone resorption, immune cell influx, angiogenesis, and sensory nerve invasion, and contribute to joint destruction and pain2. We have investigated mechanisms underlying this involving RANKL and alkaline phosphatase (ALP), which reflect bone resorption and mineralisation respectively3 and the axonal guidance factor Sema3A. Sema3A is osteotropic, expressed by mechanically sensitive osteocytes, and an inhibitor of sensory nerve, blood vessel and immune cell invasion4. Sema3A is also differentially expressed in human OA bone5.HYPOTHESIS: Medial knee compartment overloading in varus knee malalignment patients causes dysregulation of bone derived Sema3A signalling directly linking joint biomechanics to pathology and pain.

METHODS

Synovial fluid obtained from 30 subjects with medial knee OA (KL grade II-IV) undergoing high tibial osteotomy surgery (HTO) was analysed by mesoscale discovery and ELISA analysis for inflammatory, neural and bone turnover markers. 11 of these patients had been previously analysed in a published patient-specific musculoskeletal model6 of gait estimating joint contact location, pressure, forces, and medial-lateral condyle load distribution in a published data set included in analyses. Data analysis was performed using Pearson's correlation matrices and principal component analyses. Principal Components (PCs) with eigenvalues greater than 1 were analysed.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 49 - 49
17 Nov 2023
Jones R Gilbert S Mason D
Full Access

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Changes in subchondral bone are one of few disease characteristics to correlate with pain in OA1. Profound neuroplasticity and nociceptor sprouting is displayed within osteoarthritic (OA) subchondral bone and is associated with pain and pathology2. The cause of these neural changes remains unestablished. Correct innervation patterns are indispensable for bone growth, homeostasis, and repair. Axon guidance signalling factor, Sema3A is essential for the correct innervation patterning of bony tissues3, expressed in osteocytes4 and known to be downregulated in bone OA mechanical loading5. Bioinformatic analysis has also shown Sema3a as a differentially expressed pathway by bone in human OA patients6.HYPOTHESIS: Pathological mechanical load and inflammation of bone causes dysregulation of Sema3A signalling leading to perturbed sensory nerve plasticity and pain.

METHODS

Human KOLF2-C1 iPSC derived nociceptors were generated by TALEN-mediated insertion of transcription factors NGN2+Brn3A and modified chambers differentiation protocol to produce nociceptor-like cells. Nociceptor phenotype was confirmed by immunocytochemistry. Human Y201-MSC cells were embedded in 3D type-I collagen gels (0.05 × 106 cell/gel), in 48-well plates and silicone plates, were differentiated to osteocytes for 7 days before stimulation with IL-6 (5ng/ml) and soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6r (40ng/ml), IL6/sIL6r and mechanical load mimetic Yoda1 (5μM) or unstimulated (n=5/group) (48-well plates) or were mechanically loaded in silicone plates (5000μstrain, 10Hz, 3000 cycles) or not loaded (n=5/group). Conditioned media transfer was performed from osteocyte to nociceptor cultures assessed by continuous 24-hour phase contrast confocal microscopy. 24-hours after stimulation RNA was quantified by RT-qPCR (IL6) or RNAseq whole transcriptome analysis/DEseq2 analysis (Load). Protein release was quantified by ELISA. Normally distributed data with homogenous variances was analysed by two-tailed t test.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 69 - 69
17 Apr 2023
Day G Jones A Mengoni M Wilcox R
Full Access

Autologous osteochondral grafting has demonstrated positive outcomes for treating articular cartilage defects by replacing the damaged region with a cylindrical graft consisting of bone with a layer of cartilage, taken from a non-loadbearing region of the knee. Despite positive clinical use, factors that cause graft subsidence or poor integration are relatively unknown. The aim of this study was to develop finite element (FE) models of osteochondral grafts within a tibiofemoral joint and to investigate parameters affecting osteochondral graft stability.

Initial experimental tests on cadaveric femurs were performed to calibrate the bone properties and graft-bone frictional forces for use in corresponding FE models, generated from µCT scan data. The effects of cartilage defects and osteochondral graft repair were measured by examining contact pressure changes using in vitro tests on a single cadaveric human tibiofemoral joint. Six defects were created in the femoral condyles which were subsequently treated with osteochondral autografts or metal pins. Matching µCT scan-based FE models were created, and the contact patches were compared. Sensitivity to graft bone properties was investigated.

The bone material properties and graft-bone frictional forces were successfully calibrated from the initial tests with good resulting levels of agreement (CCC=0.87). The tibiofemoral joint experiment provided a range of cases to model. These cases were well captured experimentally and represented accurately in the FE models. Graft properties relative to host bone had large effects on immediate graft stability despite limited changes to resultant cartilage contact pressure.

Model confidence was built through extensive validation and sensitivity testing, and demonstrated that specimen-specific properties were required to accurately represent graft behaviour. The results indicate that graft bone properties affect the immediate stability, which is important for the selection of allografts and design of future synthetic grafts.

Acknowledgements

Supported by the EPSRC-EP/P001076.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 24 - 24
17 Apr 2023
Cooper N Etchels L Lancaster-Jones O Williams S Wilcox R
Full Access

Non-optimal clinical alignment of components in total hip replacements (THRs) may lead to edge loading of the acetabular cup liner. This has the potential to cause changes to the liner rim not accounted for in standard wear models. A greater understanding of the material behaviours could be beneficial to design and surgical guidance for THR devices. The aim of this research was to combine finite element (FE) modelling and experimental simulation with microstructural assessment to examine material behaviour changes during edge loading.

A dynamic deformable FE model, matching the experimental conditions, was created to simulate the stress strain environment within liners. Five liners were tested for 4Mc (million cycles) of standard loading (ISO14242:1) followed by 3Mc of edge loading with dynamic separation (ISO14242:4) in a hip simulator. Microstructural measurements by Raman spectroscopy were taken at unloaded and highly loaded rim locations informed by FE results. Gravimetric and geometric measurements were taken every 1Mc cycles.

Under edge loading, peak Mises stress and plastic deformation occur below the surface of the rim during heel strike. After 7Mc, microstructural analysis determined edge loaded regions had an increased crystalline mass fraction compared to unloaded regions (p<0.05). Gravimetric wear rates of 12.5mm3/Mc and 22.3mm3/Mc were measured for standard and edge loading respectively. A liner penetration of 0.37mm was measured after 7Mc.

Edge loading led to an increase in gravimetric wear rate indicating a different wear mechanism is occurring. FE and Raman results suggest that changes to material behaviour at the rim could be possible. These methods will now be used to assess more liners and over a larger number of cycles. They have potential to explore the impact of edge loading on different surgical and patient variables.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 59 - 59
17 Apr 2023
Pounds G Liu A Jones A Jennings L
Full Access

The aim of this work was to develop a novel, accessible and low-cost method, which is sufficient to measure changes in meniscal position in a whole-knee joint model performing dynamic motion in a knee simulator.

An optical tracking method using motion markers, MATLAB (MATLAB, The MathWorks Inc.) and a miniature camera system (Raspberry Pi, UK) was developed. Method feasibility was assessed on porcine whole joint knee samples (n = 4) dissected and cemented to be used in the simulator (1). Markers were placed on three regions (medial, posterior, anterior) of the medial meniscus with corresponding reference markers on the tibial plateau, so the relative meniscal position could be calculated. The Leeds high kinematics gait profile scaled to the parameters of a pig (1, 2) was driven in displacement control at 0.5 Hz. Videos were recorded at cycle-3 and cycle-50. Conditions tested were the capsule retained (intact), capsule removed and a medial posterior root tear. Mean relative displacement values were taken at time-points relating to the peaks of the axial force and flexion-extension gait inputs, as well as the range between the maximum and minimum values. A one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey post hoc analysis were used to assess differences (p = 0.05).

The method was able to measure relative meniscal displacement for all three meniscal regions. The medial region showed the greatest difference between the conditions. A significant increase (p < 0.05) for the root tear condition was found at 0.28s and 0.90s (axial load peaks) during cycle-3. Mean relative displacement for the root tear condition decreased by 0.29 mm between cycle-3 and cycle-50 at the 0.28s time-point. No statistically significant differences were found when ranges were compared at cycle-3 and cycle-50.

The method was sensitive to measure a substantial difference in medial-lateral relative displacement between an intact and a torn state. Meniscus extrusion was detected for the root tear condition throughout test duration. Further work will progress onto human specimens and apply an intervention condition.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 35 - 35
17 Apr 2023
Afzal T Jones A Williams S
Full Access

Cam-type femoroacetabular impingement is caused by bone excess on the femoral neck abutting the acetabular rim. This can cause cartilage and labral damage due to increased contact pressure as the cam moves into the acetabulum. However, the damage mechanism and the influence of individual mechanical factors (such as sliding distance) are poorly understood. The aim of this study was to identify the cam sliding distance during impingement for different activities in the hip joint.

Motion data for 12 different motion activities from 18 subjects, were applied to a hip shape model (selected as most likely to cause damage, anteriorly positioned with a maximum alpha angle of 80°). The model comprised of a pointwise representation of the acetabular rim and points on the femoral head and neck where the shape deviated from a sphere (software:Matlab).

The movement of each femoral point was tracked in 3D while an activity motion was applied, and impingement recorded when overlap between a cam point and the acetabular rim occurred. Sliding distance was recorded during impingement for each relevant femoral point.

Angular sliding distances varied for different activities. The highest mean (±SD) sliding distance was for leg-crossing (42.62±17.96mm) and lowest the trailing hip in golf swing (2.17±1.11mm). The high standard deviation in the leg crossing sliding distances, indicates subjects may perform this activity in a different manner.

This study quantified sliding distance during cam impingement for different activities. This is an important parameter for determining how much the hip moves during activities that may cause damage and will provide information for future experimental studies.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 144 - 144
11 Apr 2023
Lineham B Altaie A Harwood P McGonagle D Pandit H Jones E
Full Access

Multiple biochemical biomarkers have been previously investigated for the diagnosis, prognosis and response to treatment of articular cartilage damage, including osteoarthritis (OA). Synovial fluid (SF) biomarker measurement is a potential method to predict treatment response and effectiveness. However, the significance of different biomarkers and their correlation to clinical outcomes remains unclear. This systematic review evaluated current SF biomarkers used in investigation of cartilage degeneration or regeneration in the knee joint and correlated these biomarkers with clinical outcomes following cartilage repair or regeneration interventions.

PubMed, Institute of Science Index, Scopus, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Embase databases were searched. Studies evaluating SF biomarkers and clinical outcomes following cartilage repair intervention were included. Two researchers independently performed data extraction and QUADAS-2 analysis. Biomarker inclusion, change following intervention and correlation with clinical outcome was compared.

9 studies were included. Study heterogeneity precluded meta-analysis. There was significant variation in sampling and analysis. 33 biomarkers were evaluated in addition to microRNA and catabolic/anabolic ratios. Five studies reported on correlation of biomarkers with six biomarkers significantly correlated with clinical outcomes following intervention. However, correlation was only demonstrated in isolated studies.

This review demonstrates significant difficulties in drawing conclusions regarding the importance of SF biomarkers based on the available literature. Improved standardisation for collection and analysis of SF samples is required. Future publications should also focus on clinical outcome scores and seek to correlate biomarkers with progression to further understand the significance of identified markers in a clinical context.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 74 - 74
11 Apr 2023
Gilbert S Jones R White P Mason D
Full Access

Stimulation of the mechanosensitive ion channel, Piezo1 promotes bone anabolism and SNPs in the Piezo1 locus are associated with changes in fracture risk. Osteocytes function as critical regulators of bone homeostasis by sensing mechanical signals. The current study used a human, cell-based physiological, 3D in vitro model of bone to determine whether loading of osteocytes in vitro results in upregulation of the Piezo1 pathway.

Human Y201 MSCs, embedded in type I collagen gels and differentiated to osteocytes for 7-days, were subjected to pathophysiological load (5000 µstrain, 10Hz, 5 mins; n=6) with unloaded cells as controls (n=4). RNA was extracted 1-hr post load and assessed by RNAseq analysis. To mimic mechanical load and activate Piezo1, cells were differentiated to osteocytes for 13 days and treated ± Yoda1 (5µM, 2- and 24-hs, n=4); vehicle treated cells served as controls (n=4). RNA was subjected to RT-qPCR and data normalised to the housekeeping gene, YWHAZ. Media was analysed for IL6 release by ELISA.

Mechanical load upregulated Piezo1 gene expression (16.5-fold, p<0.001) and expression of the transcription factor NFATc1, and matricellular protein CYR61, known regulators of Piezo1 mechanotransduction (3-fold; p= 5.0E-5 and 6.8-fold; p= 6.0E-5, respectively). After 2-hrs, Yoda1 increased the expression of the early mechanical response gene, cFOS (11-fold; p=0.021), mean Piezo1 expression (2.3-fold) and IL-6 expression (103-fold, p<0.001). Yoda1 increased the release of IL6 protein after 24 hours (7.5-fold, p=0.001).

This study confirms Piezo1 as an important mechanosensor in osteocytes. Piezo1 activation mediated an increase in IL6, a cytokine that drives inflammation and bone resorption providing a direct link between mechanical activation of Piezo1, bone remodeling and inflammation, which may contribute to mechanically induced joint degeneration in diseases such as osteoarthritis. Mechanistically, we hypothesize this may occur through promoting Ca2+ influx and activation of the NFATc1 signaling pathway.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 39 - 39
11 Apr 2023
Jones R Gilbert S Mason D
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common cause of chronic pain. Subchondral bone is highly innervated, and bone structural changes directly correlate with pain in OA. Mechanisms underlying skeletal–neural interactions are under-investigated. Bone derived axon guidance molecules are known to regulate bone remodelling. Such signals in the nervous system regulate neural plasticity, branching and neural inflammation. Perturbation of these signals during OA disease progression may disrupt sensory afferents activity, affecting tissue integrity, nociception, and proprioception.

Osteocyte mechanical loading and IL-6 stimulation alters axon guidance signalling influencing innervation, proprioception, and nociception.

Human Y201 MSC cells, embedded in 3D type I collagen gels (0.05 × 106 cell/gel) in 48 well plastic or silicone (load) plates, were differentiated to osteocytes for 7 days before stimulation with IL-6 (5ng/ml) with soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6r (40ng/ml) or unstimulated (n=5/group), or mechanically loaded (5000 μstrain, 10Hz, 3000 cycles) or not loaded (n=5/group). RNA extracted 1hr and 24hrs post load was quantified by RNAseq whole transcriptome analysis (NovaSeq S1 flow cell 2 × 100bp PE reads and differentially expressed neurotransmitters identified (>2-fold change in DEseq2 analysis on normalised count data with FDR p<0.05). After 24 hours, extracted IL-6 stimulated RNA was quantified by RT-qPCR for neurotrophic factors using 2–∆∆Ct method (efficiency=94-106%) normalised to reference gene GAPDH (stability = 1.12 REfinder). Normally distributed data with homogenous variances was analysed by two-tailed t test.

All detected axonal guidance genes were regulated by mechanical load. Axonal guidance genes were both down-regulated (Netrin1 0.16-fold, p=0.001; Sema3A 0.4-fold, p<0.001; SEMA3C (0.4-fold, p<0.001), and up-regulated (SLIT2 2.3-fold, p<0.001; CXCL12 5-fold, p<0.001; SEMA3B 13-fold, p<0.001; SEMA4F 2-fold, p<0.001) by mechanical load. IL6 and IL6sR stimulation upregulated SEMA3A (7-fold, p=0.01), its receptor Plexin1 (3-fold, p=0.03). Neutrophins analysed in IL6 stimulated RNA did not show regulation.

Here we show osteocytes regulate multiple factors which may influence innervation, nociception, and proprioception upon inflammatory or mechanical insult. Future studies will establish how these factors may combine and affect nerve activity during OA disease progression.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 20 - 20
11 Apr 2023
Hamilton R Holt C Hamilton D Garcia A Graham C Jones R Shilabeer D Kuiper J Sparkes V Khot S Mason D
Full Access

Mechanical loading of joints with osteoarthritis (OA) results in pain-related functional impairment, altered joint mechanics and physiological nociceptor interactions leading to an experience of pain. However, the current tools to measure this are largely patient reported subjective impressions of a nociceptive impact. A direct measure of nociception may offer a more objective indicator. Specifically, movement-induced physiological responses to nociception may offer a useful way to monitor knee OA. In this study, we gathered preliminary data on healthy volunteers to analyse whether integrated biomechanical and physiological sensor datasets could display linked and quantifiable information to a nociceptive stimulus.

Following ethical approval, 15 healthy volunteers completed 5 movement and stationary activities in 2 conditions; a control setting and then repeated with an applied quantified thermal pain stimulus to their right knee. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) and an electromyography (EMG) lower body marker set were tested and integrated with ground reaction force (GRF) data collection. Galvanic skin response electrodes for skin temperature and conductivity and photoplethysmography (PPG) sensors were manually timestamped to the integrated system.

Pilot data showed EMG, GRF and IMU fluctuations within 0.5 seconds of each other in response to a thermal trigger. Preliminary analysis on the 15 participants tested has shown skin conductance, PPG, EMG, GRFs, joint angles and kinematics with varying increases and fluctuations during the thermal condition in comparison to the control condition.

Preliminary results suggest physiological and biomechanical data outputs can be linked and identified in response to a defined nociceptive stimulus. Study data is currently founded on healthy volunteers as a proof-of-concept. Further exploratory statistical and sensor readout pattern analysis, alongside early and late-stage OA patient data collection, can provide the information for potential development of wearable nociceptive sensors to measure disease progression and treatment effectiveness.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 122 - 122
11 Apr 2023
Chen L Zheng M Chen Z Peng Y Jones C Graves S Chen P Ruan R Papadimitriou J Carey-Smith R Leys T Mitchell C Huang Y Wood D Bulsara M Zheng M
Full Access

To determine the risk of total knee replacement (TKR) for primary osteoarthritis (OA) associated with overweight/obesity in the Australian population.

This population-based study analyzed 191,723 cases of TKR collected by the Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Registry and population data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The time-trend change in incidence of TKR relating to BMI was assessed between 2015-2018. The influence of obesity on the incidence of TKR in different age and gender groups was determined. The population attributable fraction (PAF) was then calculated to estimate the effect of obesity reduction on TKR incidence.

The greatest increase in incidence of TKR was seen in patients from obese class III. The incidence rate ratio for having a TKR for obesity class III was 28.683 at those aged 18-54 years but was 2.029 at those aged >75 years. Females in obesity class III were 1.7 times more likely to undergo TKR compared to similarly classified males. The PAFs of TKR associated with overweight or obesity was 35%, estimating 12,156 cases of TKR attributable to obesity in 2018. The proportion of TKRs could be reduced by 20% if overweight and obese population move down one category.

Obesity has resulted in a significant increase in the incidence of TKR in the youngest population in Australia. The impact of obesity is greatest in the young and the female population. Effective strategies to reduce the national obese population could potentially reduce 35% of the TKR, with over 10,000 cases being avoided.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 57 - 57
11 Apr 2023
Etchels L Wang L Thompson J Wilcox R Jones A
Full Access

Variations in component positioning of total hip replacements can lead to edge loading of the liner, and potentially affect device longevity. These effects are evaluated using ISO 14242:4 edge loading test results in a dynamic system. Mediolateral translation of one of the components during testing is caused by a compressed spring, and therefore the kinematics will depend on the spring stiffness and damping coefficient, and the mass of the translating component and fixture. This study aims to describe the sensitivity of the liner plastic strain to these variables, to better understand how tests using different simulator designs might produce different amounts of liner rim deformation.

A dynamic explicit deformable finite element model with 36mm Pinnacle metal-on-polyethylene bearing geometry (DePuy Synthes, Leeds, UK) was used with material properties for conventional UHMWPE. Setup was 65° clinical inclination, 4mm mismatch, 70N swing phase load, and 100N/mm spring. Fixture mass was varied from 0.5-5kg, spring damping coefficient was varied from 0-2Ns/mm. They were changed independently, and in combination.

Maximum separation values were relatively insensitive to changes in the mass, damping coefficient, or both. The sensitivity of peak plastic strain, to this range of inputs, was similar to changing the swing phase load from 70N to approximately 150N – 200N. Increasing the fixture mass and/or damping coefficient increased the peak plastic strain, with values from 0.15-0.19.

Liner plastic deformation was sensitive to the spring damping and fixture mass, which may explain some of the differences in fatigue and deformation results in UHMWPE liners tested on different machines or with modified fixtures. These values should be described when reporting the results of ISO14242:4 testing.

Acknowledgements

Funded by EPSRC grant EP/N02480X/1; CAD supplied by DePuy Synthes.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 18 - 18
4 Apr 2023
Stanley A Jones G Edwards T Lex J Jaere M
Full Access

Knee pain is common, representing a significant socioeconomic burden. Caused by a variety of pathologies, its evaluation in primary-care is challenging. Subsequently, an over-reliance on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) exists. Prior to orthopaedic surgeon referral, many patients receive no, or incorrect, imaging. Electronic-triage (e-triage) tools represent an innovative solution to address this problem. The primary aim of this study was to ascertain whether an e-triage tool is capable of outperforming existing clinical pathways to determine the correct pre-hospital imaging based on knee pain diagnosis.

Patients ≥18 years with a new presentation of knee pain were retrospectively identified. The timing and appropriateness of imaging was assessed. A symptom-based e-triage tool was developed, using the Amazon LEXbotplatform, and piloted to predict five common knee pathologies and suggest appropriate imaging.

1462 patients were identified. 17% of arthroplasty patients received an ‘unnecessary MRI’, whilst 28% of arthroscopy patients did not have a ‘necessary MRI’, thus requiring a follow-up appointment, with a mean delay of three months (SD 2.6, range 0.2-20.2). Using NHS tariffs, a wasted cost through unnecessary/necessary MRIs and subsequent follow-up appointments was estimated at £45,816. The e-triage pilot was trialled with 41 patients (mean age:58.4 years, 58.5% female). Preliminary diagnoses were available for 34 patients. Using the highest proportion of reported symptoms in the corresponding group, the e-triage tool correctly identified three of the four knee pathologies. The e-triage tool did not correctly identify anterior cruciate ligament injuries (n=3). 79.2% of participants would use the tool again.

A significant number of knee pathology patients received incorrect imaging prior to their initial hospital appointment, incurring delays and unnecessary costs. A symptom-based e-triage tool was developed, with promising pilot data and user feedback. With refinement, this tool has the potential to improve wait-times and referral quality, whilst reducing costs.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 72 - 72
1 Dec 2021
Komperla S Giles W Flatt E Gandhi MJ Eyre-Brook AE Jones V Papanna M Eves T Thyagarajan D
Full Access

Abstract

Shoulder replacements have evolved and current 4th generation implants allow intraoperative flexibility to perform anatomic, reverse, trauma, and revision shoulder arthroplasty. Despite high success rates with shoulder arthroplasty, complication rates high as 10–15% have been reported and progressive glenoid loosening remains a concern.

Objectives

To report medium term outcomes following 4th generation VAIOS® shoulder replacement.

Methods

We retrospectively analysed prospectively collected data following VAIOS® shoulder arthroplasty performed by the senior author between 2014–2020. This included anatomical (TSR), reverse(rTSR), revision and trauma shoulder replacements. The primary outcome was implant survival (Kaplan-Meier analysis). Secondary outcomes were Oxford Shoulder Scores (OSS), radiological outcomes and complications.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 73 - 73
1 Dec 2021
Jones R Gilbert S Mason D
Full Access

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Knee tactile afferents act as synovial joint limit detectors, eliciting signalling upon excessive fibrous tissue strain but play little role in joint function as disruption of their activity does not induce impairments in movement or sensation. In contrast, knee nociceptive afferents gain activity upon inflammation producing painful sensation in pathology such as osteoarthritis. We hypothesize that similar in origin, fast-conducting tactile afferents become sensitized by inflammatory mediators and gain activity causing proprioceptive sensation impairment in patients with knee pathology, driving gait abnormalities and osteoarthritis progression. To investigate the activity of these neurons, we will produce a co-culture model using our existing 3D bone mimetic and iPSC derived tactile sensory neurons by utilizing the NGN2-BRN3A plasmid produced by Nickolls et al producing a model of these tactile neurons at their position within the joint at the fibrous/bony interface.

METHODS

Human Y201 MSC cells embedded in type I collagen gels (0.05 × 106 cell/gel) were differentiated to osteocytes andmechanically loaded in silicone plates (5000 µstrain, 10Hz, 3000 cycles) (n=5). RNA quantified by RNAseq analysis (NovaSeq S1) and neuronal communication pathways identified using DEseq2 analysis.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 71 - 71
1 Dec 2021
Giles W Komperla S Flatt E Gandhi M Eyre-Brook A Jones V Papanna M Eves T Thyagarajan D
Full Access

Abstract

Background/Objectives

The incidence of reverse total shoulder replacement (rTSR) implantation is increasing globally, but apprehension exists regarding complications and associated challenges. We retrospectively analysed the senior author's series of rTSR from a tertiary centre using the VAIOS shoulder system, a modular 4th generation implant. We hypothesised that the revision rTSR cohort would have less favourable outcomes and more complications.

Methods

114 patients underwent rTSR with the VAIOS system, over 7 years. The primary outcome was implant survival. Secondary outcomes were Oxford shoulder scores (OSS), radiographic analysis (scapular notching, tuberosity osteolysis, and periprosthetic radiolucent lines) and complications.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 64 - 64
1 Dec 2021
Hamilton R Holt C Hamilton D Jones R Shillabeer D Kuiper JH Sparkes V Mason D
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Abstract

Objectives

Current tools to measure pain are broadly subjective impressions of the impact of the nociceptive impulse felt by the patient. A direct measure of nociception may offer a more objective indicator. Specifically, movement-induced physiological responses to nociception may offer a useful way to monitor knee OA. In this proof-of-concept study, we evaluated whether integrated biomechanical and physiological sensor datasets could display linked and quantifiable information to a nociceptive stimulus.

Method

Following ethical approval, we applied a quantified thermal pain stimulus to a volunteer during stationary standing in a gait lab setting. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) and an electromyography (EMG) lower body marker set were tested and integrated with ground reaction force (GRF) data collection. Galvanic skin response electrodes and skin thermal sensors were manually timestamp linked to the integrated system.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Dec 2021
Wang J Hall T Musbahi O Jones G van Arkel R
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Abstract

Objectives

Knee alignment affects both the development and surgical treatment of knee osteoarthritis. Automating femorotibial angle (FTA) and hip-knee-ankle angle (HKA) measurement from radiographs could improve reliability and save time. Further, if the gold-standard HKA from full-limb radiographs could be accurately predicted from knee-only radiographs then the need for more expensive equipment and radiation exposure could be reduced. The aim of this research is to assess if deep learning methods can predict FTA and HKA angle from posteroanterior (PA) knee radiographs.

Methods

Convolutional neural networks with densely connected final layers were trained to analyse PA knee radiographs from the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) database with corresponding angle measurements. The FTA dataset with 6149 radiographs and HKA dataset with 2351 radiographs were split into training, validation and test datasets in a 70:15:15 ratio. Separate models were learnt for the prediction of FTA and HKA, which were trained using mean squared error as a loss function. Heat maps were used to identify the anatomical features within each image that most contributed to the predicted angles.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 42 - 42
1 Mar 2021
Williams S Jones A Wilcox R Isaac G Traynor A Board T Williams S
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Abstract

Objectives

Impingement in total hip replacements (THRs), including bone-on-bone impingement, can lead to complications such as dislocation and loosening. The aim of this study was to investigate how the location of the anterior inferior iliac spine (AIIS) affected the range of motion before impingement.

Methods

A cohort of 25 CT scans (50 hips) were assessed and nine hips were selected with a range of AIIS locations relative to the hip joint centre. The selected CT Scans were converted to solid models (ScanIP) and THR components (DePuy Synthes) were virtually implanted (Solidworks). Flexion angles of 100⁰, 110⁰, and 120⁰ were applied to the femur, each followed by internal rotation to the point of impingement. The lateral, superior and anterior extent of the AIIS from the Centre of Rotation (CoR) of the hip was measured and its effect on the range of motion was recorded.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 33 - 33
1 Mar 2021
Koria L Farndon M Lavalette D Jones E Mengoni M Brockett C
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Abstract

Objectives

Over 1% of the global population suffers with ankle osteoarthritis (OA), yet there is limited knowledge on the changes to subchondral bone with OA. In other joints, it has been shown that bone becomes osteosclerotic, with fewer, thicker trabeculae that become hypomineralised, causing an increased apparent bone volume fraction (BV/TV). Microstructural alterations reduce overall joint strength, which may impact the success of late-stage surgical interventions, such as total ankle arthroplasty (TAA). Previous ankle studies have evaluated changes to cartilage, bone plate and bone morphology with OA, hence this study aimed to characterise changes to trabecular architecture.

Methods

Three ankle joints were isolated from non-diseased cadaveric feet (three males: 43, 50 and 57 years, MEEC 18-027). Cylindrical subchondral bone specimens (N=6, 6.5 mm Ø) were extracted from the tibial plafond. Osteoarthritic bone samples (N=6, distal tibia) were sourced from local patients (three males: 65, 58 and 68 years, NREC 07/Q1205/27) undergoing TAA surgery. Specimens were imaged using µCT at a 16 µm isotropic resolution (µCT-100 ScanCo Medical). Virtual cores of bone (6.5 mm Ø) were extracted from the image data of the osteoarthritic specimens and trimmed to a height of 4 mm. BoneJ was used to evaluate key morphological indices: BV/TV; anisotropy (DA); trabecular thickness (Tb.Th); trabecular density (Conn.D) and ellipsoid factor (EF) which characterises rod/plate geometry. Differences between the two groups of specimens were evaluated using a t-test with Bonferroni correction.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 38 - 38
1 Mar 2021
Vasiljeva K Lunn D Chapman G Redmond A Wang L Thompson J Williams S Wilcox R Jones A
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Abstract

Objectives

The importance of cup position on the performance of total hip replacements (THR) has been demonstrated in in vitro hip simulator tests and clinically. However, how cup position changes during gait has not been considered and may affect failure scenarios. The aim of this study was to assess dynamic cup version using gait data.

Methods

Pelvic movement data for walking for 39 unilateral THR patients was acquired (Leeds Biomedical Research Centre). Patient's elected walking speed was used to group patients into high- and low-functioning (mean speed, 1.36(SD 0.09)ms−1 and 0.85(SD 0.08)ms−1 respectively). A computational algorithm (Python3.7) was developed to calculate cup version during gait cycle. Inputs were pelvic angles and initial cup orientation (assumed to be 45° inclination and 7° version, anterior pelvic plane was parallel to radiological frontal plane). Outputs were cup version angles during a gait cycle (101 measurements/cycle). Minimum, maximum and average cup version during gait cycle were measured for each patient. Two-sample t-test (p=0.05) was used to compare groups.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 7 - 7
1 Mar 2021
Gilbert S Bonnet C Jones R Mason D
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Abstract

Objectives

The mechanisms underlying abnormal joint mechanics are poorly understood despite it being a major risk factor for developing osteoarthritis. This study investigated the response of a 3D in vitro bone cell model to mechanical load.

Methods

Human MSC cells (Y201) embedded in 3D type I collagen gels were differentiated in osteogenic media for 7-days in deformable, silicone plates. Gels were loaded once (5000 µstrain, 10Hz, 3000 cycles), RNA extracted 1-hr post load and assessed by RT-qPCR and RNAseq analysis (n=5/treatment). Cell shape and phenotype were assessed by immunocytochemistry and phalloidin staining. Data was analysed by Minitab.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 86 - 86
1 Mar 2021
Bommireddy L Granville E Davies-Jones G Gogna R Clark DI
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Abstract

Objectives

Clavicle fractures are common, yet debate exists regarding which patients would benefit from conservative versus operative management. Traditionally shortening greater than 2cm has been accepted as an indicator for surgery. However, clavicle length varies between individuals. In a cadaveric study clavicle shortening greater than 15% was suggested to affect outcomes. There is no clinical correlation of this in the literature. In this study we investigate outcomes following middle third clavicle fractures and the effect of percentage shortening on union rates.

Methods

We identified a consecutive series of adults with primary midshaft clavicle fractures presenting to our institution from April 2015-March 2017. Clinical records and radiographs were reviewed to elicit outcomes. Time to union was measured against factors including; percentage shortening, displacement, comminution and smoking. Statistical significance was calculated.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 22 - 22
1 Jan 2019
Fermor H Herbert A Jones G Fisher J Ingham E
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Decellularised extracellular matrix scaffolds show great promise for the regeneration of damaged musculoskeletal tissues (cartilage, ligament, meniscus), however, adequate fixation into the joint remains a challenge. Here, we assess the osseo-integration of decellularised porcine bone in a sheep model. This proof-of-concept study supports the overall objective to create composite decellularised tissue scaffolds with bony attachment sites to enable superior fixation and regeneration.

Porcine trabecular bone plugs (6mm diameter, 10mm long) were decellularised using a novel bioprocess incorporating low-concentration sodium dodecyl sulphate with protease inhibitors. Decellularised bone scaffolds (n=6) and ovine allograft controls (n=6) were implanted into the condyle of skeletally mature sheep for 4 and 12 weeks. New bone growth was visualised by oxytetracycline fluorescence and standard resin semi-quantitative histopathology.

Scaffolds were found to be fully decellularised and maintained the native microarchitecture. Following 4-week implantation in sheep, both scaffold and allograft appeared well integrated. The trabecular spaces of the scaffold were filled with a fibro-mesenchymal infiltrate, but some areas showed a marked focal lymphocytic response, associated with reduced bone deposition. A lesser lymphocytic response was observed in the allograft control. After 12-weeks the lymphocytic reaction was minimised in the scaffold and absent in allografts. The scaffold showed a higher density of new mineralized bone deposition compared to allograft. New marrow had formed in both the scaffold and allografts.

Following the demonstration of osteointegration this bioprocess can now be transferred to develop decellularised composite musculoskeletal tissue scaffolds and decellularised bone scaffolds for clinical regeneration of musculoskeletal tissues.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 29 - 29
1 Jan 2019
Yao J Mengoni M Williams S Jones A
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Acetabular tissue damage is implicated in osteoarthritis (OA) and investigation of in situ acetabular soft tissues behaviour will improve understanding of tissue properties and interconnections. The study aim was to visualise acetabular soft tissues under load and to quantify displacements using computed tomography (CT) scans (XtremeCT, Scano Medical).

A CT scan (resolution 82 μm) was performed on the disarticulated, unloaded porcine acetabulum. The femoral head was soaked in Sodium Iodide (NaI) solution and cling film wrapped to prevent transfer to the acetabular side. The joint was realigned, compressed using cable ties and re-scanned. The two images were down-sampled to 0.3 mm. Acetabular bone and soft tissues were segmented. Bony features were used to register the two background images, using Simpleware ScanIP 7.0 (Synopsys), to the same position and orientation (volume difference < 5%). Acetabular soft tissues displacements were measured by tracking the same points at the tissue edges on the two acetabular masks, along with difference in bone position as an additional error assessment.

The use of radiopaque solution provided a clear contrast allowing separation of the femoral and acetabular soft tissues in the loaded image. The image registration process resulted in a difference in bone position in the areas of interest equivalent to image resolution (0.3 mm, a mean of 3 repeats by same user). A labral tip displacement of 1.7 mm and a cartilage thickness change from 1.5 mm unloaded to 0.9 mm loaded, were recorded.

The combination of contrast enhancement, registration and focused local measurement was precise enough to reduce bone alignment error to that of image resolution and reveal local soft tissue displacements. These measurement methods can be used to develop models of soft tissues properties and behaviour, and therapy for hip tissue damage at early stage may be reviewed and optimised.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 7 - 7
1 Jan 2019
Owston H Moisley K Tronci G Giannoudis P Russell S Jones E
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The current ‘gold’ standard surgical intervention for critical size bone defect repair involves autologous bone grafting, that risks inadequate graft containment and soft tissue invasion. Here, a new regenerative strategy was explored, that uses a barrier membrane to contain bone graft. The membrane is designed to prevent soft tissue ingrowth, whilst supporting periosteal regrowth, an important component to bone regeneration. This study shows the development of a collagen-based barrier membrane supportive of periosteal-derived mesenchymal stem cell (P-MSC) growth.

P-MSC-homing barrier membranes were successfully obtained with nonaligned fibres, via free-surface electrospinning using type I collagen and poly(E-caprolactone) in 1,1,1,3,3,3-Hexafluoro-2-propanol. Introduction of collagen in the electrospinning mixture was correlated with decreased mean fibre diameter (d: 319 nm) and pore size (p: 0.2–0.6 μm), with respect to collagen-free membrane controls (d: 372 nm; p: 1–2 μm). Consequently, as the average MSC diameter is 20 μm, this provides convincing evidence of the creation of a MSC containment membrane.

SEM-EDX confirmed Nitrogen and therefore collagen fibre localisation. Quantification of collagen content, using Picro Sirius Red dye, showed a 50% reduction after 24 hours (PBS, 37 °C), followed by a drop to 25% at week 3. The collagen-based membrane has a significantly higher elastic modulus compared to collagen-free control membranes. P-MSCs attached and proliferated when grown onto collagen-based membranes, imaged using confocal microscopy over 3 weeks. A modified transwell cell migration assay was developed, using MINUSHEET® tissue carriers to assess barrier functionality. In line with the matrix architecture, the collagen-based membrane proved to prevent cell migration (via confocal microscopy) in comparison to the migration facilitating positive control.

The aforementioned results obtained at molecular, cellular and macroscopic scales, highlight the applicability of this barrier membrane in a new ‘hybrid graft’ regenerative approach for the surgical treatment of critical size bone defects.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 25 - 25
1 Jan 2019
Jones P Woodgate S Williams D Biggs P Nicholas K Button K Corcoran P Holt C
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Whilst home-based exercise rehabilitation plays a key role in determining patient outcomes following orthopaedic intervention (e.g. total knee replacement), it is very challenging for clinicians to objectively monitor patient progress, attribute functional improvement (or lack of) to adherence/non-adherence and ultimately prescribe personalised interventions. This research aimed to identify whether 4 knee rehabilitation exercises could be objectively distinguished from each other using lower body inertial measurement units (IMUs) and principle components analysis (PCA) in the hope to facilitate objective home monitoring of exercise rehabilitation.

5 healthy participants performed 4 repetitions of 4 exercises (knee flexion in sitting, knee extension, single leg step down and sit to stand) whilst wearing lower body IMU sensors (Xsens, Holland; sampling at 60 Hz). Anthropometric measurements and a static calibration were combined to create the biomechanical model, with 3D hip, knee and ankle angles computed using the Euler sequence ZXY. PCA was performed on time normalised (101 points) 3D joint angle data which reduced all joint angle waveforms into new uncorrelated PCs via an orthogonal transformation. Scatterplots of PC1 versus PC2 were used to visually inspect for clustering between the PC values for the 4 exercises. A one-way ANOVA was performed on the first 3 PC values for the 9 variables under analysis. Games-Howell post hoc tests identified variables that were significantly different between exercises.

All exercises were clearly distinguishable using the PC scatterplot representing hip flexion-extension waveforms. ANOVA results revealed that PC1 for the knee flexion angle waveform was the only PC value statistically different across all exercises.

Findings demonstrate clear potential to objectively distinguish between different knee rehabilitation exercises using IMU sensors and PCA. Flexion-extension angles at the hip and knee appear most suited for accurate separation, which will be further investigated on patient data and additional exercises.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Nov 2018
Jones DA Vasarheyli F Deo S Nagy E
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With increasing numbers of total joint arthroplasties being performed, peri-prosthetic fracture incidence is rising, and operative management remains the gold standard. Short-term survivorship up to 12 months has been well-documented but medium to long-term is almost unknown. We present survivorship review from a district general hospital, undertaking 800 primary hip and knee arthroplasties per year. Patients with peri-prosthetic fractures and background total knee replacements were identified using our computer database between 2006–2011. All patients were operated on our site; methods used include open reduction, internal fixation (ORIF) using Axsos (Stryker Newbury) locking plates (28), intra-medullary nailing (1) or complex revision (6) depending on fracture and patient factors and surgeon's preference. Mortality was assessed at 30 days, 12 months and 5 years. Thirty-four patients were identified with a 7:1 female to male ratio and mean age of 76. 75% of patients had their primary arthrodesis at our hospital. There was only 1 plate failure noted requiring revision plating. Mortality at 30 days, 12 months and 5 years were 3.2, 12.5% and 50% respectively. When compared to the literature our time interval from index surgery to fracture is considerably longer (115 vs 42 months). Further multi-centre reviews are required to further asses this unexpected finding. Overall mortality is better than our hip fracture cohort, suggesting that good results can be achieved in District Hospital. The longer-term results are encouraging and can act as a guide for patients with this injury. We recommend that patients are managed in consultant-led, multi-disciplinary teams.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 6, Issue 11 | Pages 631 - 639
1 Nov 2017
Blyth MJG Anthony I Rowe P Banger MS MacLean A Jones B

Objectives

This study reports on a secondary exploratory analysis of the early clinical outcomes of a randomised clinical trial comparing robotic arm-assisted unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) for medial compartment osteoarthritis of the knee with manual UKA performed using traditional surgical jigs. This follows reporting of the primary outcomes of implant accuracy and gait analysis that showed significant advantages in the robotic arm-assisted group.

Methods

A total of 139 patients were recruited from a single centre. Patients were randomised to receive either a manual UKA implanted with the aid of traditional surgical jigs, or a UKA implanted with the aid of a tactile guided robotic arm-assisted system. Outcome measures included the American Knee Society Score (AKSS), Oxford Knee Score (OKS), Forgotten Joint Score, Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale, University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) activity scale, Short Form-12, Pain Catastrophising Scale, somatic disease (Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders Score), Pain visual analogue scale, analgesic use, patient satisfaction, complications relating to surgery, 90-day pain diaries and the requirement for revision surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 23 - 23
1 May 2017
Jordan R Jones A Malik S
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Introduction

The stability of the elbow joint following an acute elbow dislocation is dependent on associated injuries. The ability to identify these concomitant injuries correctly directs management and improves the chances of a successful outcome. Interpretation of plain radiographs in the presence of either a dislocation or post-reduction films with plaster in-situ is difficult. This study aimed to assess the ability of orthopaedic registrars to accurately identify associated bony injuries on initial plain radiographs using CT as the gold standard for comparison.

Methods

Patients over the age of 16 years undergoing an elbow CT scan within one week of a documented elbow dislocation between 1st June 2010 and 1st June 2014 were included in the study. Three orthopaedic registrars independently reviewed both the initial dislocation and immediate post reduction plain radiographs to identify any associated bony injuries. This radiograph review was repeated by each registrar after two weeks. The incidence of associated injuries as well as the inter- and intra-observer variability was calculated.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 82 - 82
1 Apr 2017
Palmer J Palmer A Jones L Jackson W Glyn-Jones S Price A
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Background

Since 2011, the knee service at the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre has been offering a neutralising medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (HTO) to a group of patients presenting with early medial osteoarthritis of the knee, varus alignment and symptoms for more than 2 years. During development of this practice an association was observed between this phenotype of osteoarthritis and the presence of CAM deformity at the hip.

Methods

A retrospective cohort study. All patients who underwent HTO since 2011 were identified (n=30). Comparator groups were used in order to establish whether meaningful observations were being made: Control group: The spouses of a high-risk osteoarthritis cohort recruited for a different study at our unit (n=20) Pre-arthroplasty group: Patients who have undergone uni-compartmental arthroplasty (UKA) for antero-medial osteoarthritis (n=20)All patients had standing bilateral full-length radiographs available for analysis using in house developed Matlab-based software for hip measurements and MediCAD for lower limb alignment measurements.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 22 - 22
1 Apr 2017
Jones M Parry M Whitehouse M Blom A
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Background

Frequency of primary total hip (THA) and total knee (TKA) arthroplasty procedures is increasing, with a subsequent rise in revision procedures. This study aims to describe timing and excess surgical mortality associated with revision THA and TKA compared to those on the waiting list.

Methods

All patients from 2003–2013 in a single institution who underwent revision THA and TKA, or added to the waiting list for the same procedure were recorded. Mortality rates were calculated at cutoffs of 30- and 90-days post-operation or addition to the waiting list.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 49 - 49
1 Apr 2017
Lancaster-Jones O Al-Hajjar M Thompson J Isaac G Fisher J
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Background

Many factors contribute to the occurrence of edge-loading conditions in hip replacement; soft tissue tension, surgical position, patient biomechanical variations and type of activities, hip design, etc. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of different levels of rotational and translational surgical positioning of hip replacement bearings on the occurrence and severity of edge-loading and the resultant wear rates.

Method

The Leeds II Hip-Joint Simulator and 36mm diameter alumina matrix composite ceramic bearings (BIOLOX delta, DePuy Synthes, UK) were used in this study. Different levels of mismatch between the reconstructed rotational centres of the head and the cup were considered (2, 3 and 4mm) in the medial-lateral axis. Two cup inclination angles were investigated; an equivalent to 45 and 65 degrees in-vivo, thus six conditions (n=6 for each condition) were studied in total with three million cycles completed for each condition. The wear of the ceramic-on-ceramic bearings were determined using a microbalance (Mettler Toledo, XP205, UK) and the dynamic microseparation displacement was measured using a Liner Variable Differential Transformer.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 65 - 65
1 Jan 2017
Lenguerrand E Whitehouse M Beswick A Jones S Porter M Toms A Blom A
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Prosthetic joint infection (PJI) is an uncommon but serious complication of hip and knee replacement. We investigated the rates of revision surgery for the treatment of PJI following primary and revision hip and knee replacement, explored time trends, and estimated the overall surgical burden created by PJI.

We analysed the National Joint Registry for England and Wales for revision hip and knee replacements performed for a diagnosis of PJI and their index procedures from 2003–2014. The index hip replacements consisted of 623,253 primary and 63,222 aseptic revision hip replacements with 7,642 revisions subsequently performed for PJI; for knee replacements the figures were 679,010 primary and 33,920 aseptic revision knee replacements with 8,031 revisions subsequently performed for PJI. Cumulative incidence functions, prevalence rates and the burden of PJI in terms of total procedures performed as a result of PJI were calculated.

Revision rates for PJI equated to 43 out of every 10,000 primary hip replacements (2,705/623,253), i.e. 0.43%(95%CI 0.42–0.45), subsequently being revised due to PJI. Around 158 out of every 10,000 aseptic revision hip replacements performed were subsequently revised for PJI (997/63,222), i.e. 1.58%(1.48–1.67). For knees, the respective rates were 0.54%(0.52–0.56) for primary replacements, i.e. 54 out of every 10,000 primary replacements performed (3,659/679,010) and 2.11%(1.96–2.23) for aseptic revision replacements, i.e. 211 out of every 10,000 aseptic revision replacements performed (717/33,920). Between 2005 and 2013, the risk of revision for PJI in the 3 months following primary hip replacement rose by 2.29 fold (1.28–4.08) and after aseptic revision by 3.00 fold (1.06–8.51); for knees, it rose by 2.46 fold (1.15–5.25) after primary replacement and 7.47 fold (1.00–56.12) after aseptic revision. The rates of revision for PJI performed at any time beyond 3 months from the index surgery remained stable or decreased over time.

From a patient perspective, after accounting for the competing risk of revision for an aseptic indication and death, the 10-year cumulative incidence of revision hip replacement for PJI was 0.62%(95%CI 0.59–0.65) following primary and 2.25%(2.08–2.43) following aseptic revision; for knees, the figures were 0.75%(0.72–0.78) following primary replacement and 3.13%(2.81–3.49) following aseptic revision.

At a health service level, the absolute number of procedures performed as a consequence of hip PJI increased from 387 in 2005 to 1,013 in 2014, i.e. a relative increase of 2.6 fold. While 70% of those revisions were two-stage, the use of single stage revision increased from 17.6% in 2005 to 38.5% in 2014. For knees, the burden of PJI increased by 2.8 fold between 2005 and 2014. Overall, 74% of revisions were two-stage with an increase in use of single stage from 10.0% in 2005 to 29.0% in 2014.

Although the risk of revision due to PJI following hip or knee replacement is low, it is rising. Given the burden and costs associated with performing revision joint replacement for prosthetic joint infection and the predicted increased incidence of both primary and revision hip replacement, this has substantial implications for service delivery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 46 - 46
1 Oct 2016
Nair A Dolan J Tanner KE Pollock PJ Kerr C Oliver FB Watson MJ Jones B Kellett CF
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Adductor canal blocks offer an alternative to femoral nerve block for postoperative pain relief in knee arthroplasty. They may reduce the risk of quadriceps weakness, allowing earlier mobilisation of patients postoperatively. However, little is known about the effect of a tourniquet on the distribution of local anaesthetic in the limb.

Ultrasound-guided adductor canal blocks were performed on both thighs of five human cadavers. Left and right thighs of each cadaver were randomised to tourniquet or no tourniquet for one hour. Iohexol radio-opaque contrast (Omnipaque 350) was substituted for the local anaesthetic for X-Ray imaging. All limbs underwent periodic flexion and extension during this hour to simulate positioning during surgery. The cadavers were refrozen. Fiducial markers were inserted into the frozen tissue. X-rays were obtained in 4 planes (AP, lateral 45° oblique/medial oblique, lateral). University Research Ethics Approval was obtained and cadavers were all pre-consented for research, imaging and photography according to the Anatomy Act (1984).

Analysis of radiographs showed contrast distribution in all thighs to be predominantly on the medial aspect of the thighs. The contrast margins were entire and well circumscribed, strongly suggesting it was largely contained within the aponeurosis of the adductor canal. Tourniquets appeared to push the contrast into a narrower and more distal spread along the length of the thigh compared to a more diffuse spread for those without. Proximal spread towards the femoral triangle was reduced in limbs without tourniquets.

The results suggest that contrast material may remain within the adductor canal structures during adductor canal blocks. Tourniquets may cause greater distribution of contrast proximally and distally in the thigh, but this does not appear to be clinically significant. Further studies might include radio-stereo photometric analysis using the fiducial markers in the limbs and in vivo studies to show the effect of haemodynamics on distribution.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 12 - 12
1 Oct 2015
Legerlotz K Jones E Riley G
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Introduction

The exact mechanisms leading to tendinopathies and tendon ruptures remain poorly understood while their occurrence is clearly associated with exercise. Overloading is thought to be a major factor contributing to the development of tendon pathologies. However, as animal studies have shown, heavy loading alone won't cause tendinopathies. It has been speculated, that malfunctioning adaptation or healing processes might be involved, triggering tendon tissue degeneration. By analysing the expression of the entirety of degrading enzymes (degradome) in pathological and non-pathological, strained and non-strained tendon tissue, the aim of this study was to identify common or opposite patterns in gene regulation. This approach may generate new targets for future studies.

Materials and Methods

RNA was extracted from different tendon tissues: normal (n=7), tendinopathic (n=4) and ruptured (n=4) Achilles tendon; normal (n=4) and tendinopathic (n=4) posterior tibialis tendon; normal hamstrings tendon with or without subjection to static strain (n=4). The RNA was reverse transcribed, then pooled per group The expression of 538 protease genes was analysed using Taqman low-density array quantitative RT-PCR. To be considered relevant, changes had to be at least 4fold and measurable at a level below 36 Cts.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 26 - 26
1 Oct 2015
Udeze C Jones E Riley G Morrissey D Screen H
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Introduction

Tendinopathies are debilitating and painful conditions. They are believed to result from repetitive overuse, which can create micro-damage that accumulates over time, and initiates a catabolic cell response. The aetiology of tendinopathy remains poorly understood, therefore the ideal treatment remains unclear. However, current data support the use of eccentric exercise as an effective treatment. In a previous study, we have shown that eccentric loading generates perturbations in the tendon at 10Hz, which is not present during other less effective loading regimes. Consequently, we hypothesis that 10Hz loading initiates an increased anabolic response in tenocytes, that can promote tendon repair.

Materials and Methods

Human tenocytes from healthy hamstring tendons and tendinopathic Achilles tendons were derived by collagenase digest and outgrowth respectively. Tenocytes were seeded into 3D collagen gels. The gels were fixed in custom-made chambers and placed in an incubator for 24hrs whilst gene expression stabilised. After 24hrs, cyclic uniaxial strain at 1% ± 1% was applied to the cells, at either 1Hz (n=4) or 10Hz (n=4) using a Bose loading system. After 15 minutes of cyclic strain, the samples were maintained in chambers under 1% static strain for 24 hrs after which gene expression was characterised using RT-PCR.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 32 - 32
1 Oct 2015
Chauhan A Morrissey D Jones P Angioi M Kumar B Langberg H Maffulli N Malliaras P
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Introduction

Achilles tendinopathy (AT) is a highly prevalent injury in athletes and non-athletes with an unknown aetiology. Genetic risk factors have been a recent focus of investigation. The aim of this systematic review was to determine which loci have been linked with mid-portion AT and could potentially be used as biomarkers in tendinopathy risk models or as preventative or therapeutic targets.

Materials and Methods

Eight electronic bibliographic databases were searched from inception to April 2015 for cross-sectional, prospective cohort and case-control studies that included empirical research investigating genes associated with mid-portion AT. Potential publications were assessed by two independent reviewers (AAC and PRJ) for inclusion and quality. Quality was evaluated using a validated scale.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 16 - 16
1 Apr 2015
Marsh A Crighton E Yapp L Kelly M Jones B Meek R
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Successful treatment of periprosthetic joint infection involves surgical intervention and identification of infecting organisms to enable targeted antibiotic therapy. Current guidelines recommend intra-operative culture sampling to include at least 4 tissue samples and for each sample to be taken with a separate instrument.

We aimed to review current revision arthroplasty practice for Greater Glasgow, specifically comparing intra-operative sampling technique for infected revision cases with these guidelines.

We reviewed the clinical notes of all patients undergoing lower limb revision arthroplasty procedures in Greater Glasgow Hospitals (WIG, GRI, SGH) from July 2013 to August 2014. Demographics of all cases were collected. For revision procedures performed for infection we recorded details of intraoperative samples taken (number, type and sampling technique) and time for samples to reach the laboratory. Results of microbiology cultures were reviewed.

Two hundred and fifty five revision arthroplasty procedures (152 hips, 103 knees) were performed in the 12 month study period. Of these 57 (22%) were infected cases (28 hips, 29 knees). These cases were treated by 14 arthroplasty surgeons with a median number of 3 infected cases managed per surgeon (range 1–11). 58% of cases had the recommended number of tissue samples taken. The median number of microbiology samples collected was 4 (range 1–14). Most procedures (91%) had no documentation of whether separate instruments were used for sampling. Number of tissue samples taken (≥4, p=0.01), time to lab (<24 hours, p=0.03) were significantly associated with positive culture results.

In Greater Glasgow, a large number of surgeons manage infected arthroplasty cases with variability in intra-operative sampling techniques. Sample collection adheres to guideline recommendations in 58% cases. Adhering to guideline standards increases the likelihood of positive tissue cultures. Implementation of a standardised approach to intra-operative sampling for infected cases may improve patient management.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 180 - 180
1 Jul 2014
Sultan J Chapman G Jones R
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Summary

This study shows a significant reduction in knee adduction moment in patients with medial compartment osteoarthritis, in both the symptomatic and asymptomatic knees. Long-term follow-up studies are required to confirm the effect of treating the asymptomatic side on disease progression.

Background

The knee is the commonest joint to be affected by osteoarthritis, with the medial compartment commonly affected. Knee osteoarthritis is commonly bilateral, yet symptoms may initially present unilaterally. Higher knee adduction moment has been associated with the development and progression of medial compartment knee osteoarthritis. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of lateral wedge insoles on the asymptomatic knee of patients with unilateral symptoms of medial compartment knee osteoarthritis.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 169 - 169
1 Jul 2014
Arnold J Mackintosh S Jones S Thewlis D
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Summary Statement

This study provides preliminary evidence that people with knee osteoarthritis have greater asymmetry in joint loading than healthy controls. Altered loading of the contralateral limb may signify increased risk of injury to other lower limb joints in knee osteoarthritis.

Introduction

Compensatory overloading of other lower limb joints is a potential reason for the non-random evolution of osteoarthritis (OA). In individuals with knee OA altered joint loading exists of the contralateral cognate joints. However, previous studies have neglected the temporal features of asymmetry in joint loading. The study aimed to identify the amount and temporal features of asymmetry in lower limb joint loading in advanced knee OA.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 98 - 98
1 Jul 2014
Palmer A Fernquest S Hamish L Pollard T McNally E Wilson D Wilson D Madler B Carr A Glyn-Jones S
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Summary

The dGEMRIC index correlates more strongly with the pattern of radiographic joint space narrowing in hip osteoarthritis at five year follow-up than morphological measurements of the proximal femur. It therefore offers potential to refine predictive models of hip osteoarthritis progression.

Introduction

Longitudinal general population studies have shown that femoroacetabular impingement increases the risk of developing hip osteoarthritis, however, morphological parameters have a low positive predictive value. Arthroscopic debridement of impingement lesions has been proposed as a potential strategy for the prevention of osteoarthritis, however, the development of such strategies requires the identification of individuals at high risk of disease progression. We investigated whether delayed Gadolinium-Enhanced MRI of Cartilage (dGEMRIC) predicts disease progression. This imaging modality is an indirect measure of cartilage glycosaminoglycan content.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 49 - 49
1 Jul 2014
Gwyn R Mahmood S Malik I Maheson M John A Lyons C Jones S
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Summary

162 patient cohort with serial Metal Artefact Reduction Sequence MRI scans. Patients with normal initial scans can be followed up at 1 year. Those with abnormal scans should be followed up at a shorter interval of 6 months.

Introduction

Cross-sectional imaging is a key investigation in the assessment and surveillance of patients with metal-on-metal (MoM) hip arthroplasty. We present our experience of Metal Artefact Reduction Sequence (MARS) MRI scanning in metal on metal hip arthroplasty. We aimed to investigate the natural history and radiological disease progression from Adverse Reactions to Metallic Debris.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 161 - 161
1 Jul 2014
Jones E Legerlotz K Riley G
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Summary Statement

We have shown that integrin mRNA expression is regulated by the application of mechanical load. This indicates that mechanical loading may modify cell sensitivity to perceive further load through increased interaction with the ECM.

Introduction

Tendinopathies are a range of diseases characterised by pain and insidious degeneration. Although poorly understood, onset is often associated with physical activity. We have previously investigated the regulation by mechanical strain of metalloproteinase gene expression in human tenocyte in a 3D collagen matrix. Integrins are important in cellular interaction with the ECM and are reported to mediate mechanotransduction in various non-tendon tissues. We have reported that TGFbeta activation is a key player in the regulation of metalloproteinases in response to mechanical load, which may be mediated by integrins. This project aims to investigate the effect of cyclic loading and TGFbeta stimulation on integrin expression by human tenocytes, in collagen and fibrin matrices.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 8 - 8
1 Apr 2014
Bell S Anthony I Jones B Blyth M
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The number of primary Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) and primary Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) procedures carried out in England and Wales is increasing annually. The British Orthopaedic Association guidelines for follow up currently differ for patients with TKA and THA. In THA the BOA recommends that Orthopaedic Data Evaluation Panel (ODEP) 10A rated implants should be followed up in the first year, once at seven years and three yearly thereafter. The BOA guidelines for TKA minimum requirement is radiographs at 5 years and each five years thereafter. Few studies have investigated if early follow up affects patient management following total hip and knee arthroplasty

We carried out a retrospective review of all revision procedures carried out in our institution between April 2010 to April 2013. The medical notes and radiographs for each patient were examined to determine the operative indications and patients symptoms. 92 knee revisions and 143 hip revisions were identified. Additionally we retrospectively reviewed the outcome of 300 one year routine arthroplasty follow up appointments.

The mean time of hip revision was 8.5years (range 0 to 27years) and 5.6years (range 0 to 20years) for knee revisions. The commonest cause for revision was aseptic loosening associated with pain in 49 (53%) of knee revision patients and 89 (63%) of hip revisions. Infection accounted for 26 (28%) knee revisions and 16 (12%) hip revisions. Only 1% of hip and knee revisions was carried out in asymptomatic patients with aseptic loosening.

We did not identify any cases were a patients management was altered at the routine arthroplasty review clinic and none were referred on for further surgical treatment. The findings of our study suggest there is no evidence for a routine one year arthroplasty review and revisions were carried out in asymptomatic patients in 1% of patients.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Apr 2014
Frame M Ferguson K Jones B
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Introduction:

When having to remove broken or embedded metal implants using high speed burrs, the consequence is often a significant amount of metal debris which becomes embedded in the soft tissues. This may then act as a source for a foreign body inflammatory reaction or as a third body wear in the situation of joint arthroplasty. We describe a simple, cheap and effective method of reducing this debris using only a sterile water-based lubricating gel.

Materials & Methods:

Several experimental surgical models consisting of porcine muscle over a polyethylene tube with a large fragment titanium locking plate and screw secured to it were constructed. In 8 separate models a screw head locked within the plate was subjected to 90 seconds of high speed burring to create debris. On 4 models no water-based lubricating gel was utilized and on the remaining 4 the surrounding soft tissues were coated in the water-based lubricating gel (AQUAGEL, Halliburton – 42g £1.98). All models were then irrigated with NaCl 500mls using a 20mlsl syringe under manual pressure. Images were then captured after irrigation. The amount of debris was quantified by processing with ImageJ (a public domain, Java-based image processing program developed at the National Institutes of Health and is a computer automated program for counting particles.) The results were then statistically analysed using a student t test (IBM Corp. Released 2011. IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 20.0. Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Aug 2013
Donaldson DQ Torkington M Jones B Blyth M
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Decreased oxygenation and delayed wound healing may negate the advantages of using a medial parapatellar incision in Total Knee Replacement. Tissue biochemical and blood flow data are not currently available in the literature.

20 patients were included in the study and randomised to midline or medial parapatellar skin incision groups, being supervised by one of 3 Consultant surgeons. Cutaneous blood flow was measured using a Speckle Contrast Blood Perfusion Imager at pre-operative and Days 1 & 3 post-operative intervals. Interstitial fluid measurements for lactate, pyruvate, lactate/pyruvate ratio and glucose were obtained from subcutaneous catheters with a dialysis membrane. Pre-operative samples were obtained from a catheter inserted into the prospective lateral wound edge. A catheter inserted after wound closure supplied dialysates at 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, 12 and 24-hour intervals. One catheter was corrupted on insertion; therefore the patients with biochemical data numbered 19.

Cutaneous blood flow improved over the 3 post-operative days in both types of incision and both sides, the medial retaining comparatively better flow. At Day 3, the parapatellar incision group displayed better flow on both sides of the wound. The concentration of lactate was highest in the parapatellar incision group of patients at all intervals. Pyruvate concentrations did not appear to differ across the incision types. Similarly, glucose concentrations did not appear to differ until after 4 hours, when higher concentrations were recorded in the midline group. Lactate/pyruvate ratio appeared to be notably greater in the parapatellar incision group. Plotting change in blood flow relative to change in lactate concentration demonstrated an increase in lactate as flow deteriorates.

The study findings suggest medial parapatellar incisions have increased anaerobic metabolites due to tissue hypoperfusion. Previous studies have demonstrated decreased oxygen tension in lateral based flaps and more recently the medial to lateral arterial anatomy has been demonstrated.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 51 - 51
1 Aug 2013
Robinson P Anthony I Stark A Jones B Ingram R
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The link between squeaking and ceramic on ceramic (CoC) bearings has been widely reported in orthopaedic literature and is described as a hard bearing phenomenon. We aim to look at the incidence of noise in CoC bearings compared to Metal on Polyethylene (MoP) bearing, which have yet to be linked to squeaking.

We developed a noise characterizing hip questionnaire and sent that along with the Oxford Hip Score (OHS) to 1000 patients; 3:2 ratio of CoC to MoP. 282 CoC patients and 227 MoP patients returned the questions: 509 patients in total. Our patient database provided details on femoral head size and the acetabular inclination angle, for each respondent

47 (17%) of the CoC hip patients reported noise compared to 19 (8%) of the MoP hip patients (P=0.054). 9 CoC patients and 4 MoP patients reported squeaking, while clicking was the most frequent answer in both groups. 27% patients with noise reported avoiding recreational activities because of it. Patient's with noisy hips scored on average, 5 points worse in the OHS (CoC: P = 0.04 and MoP: P = 0.007) and were on average 5 years younger (CoC: P<0.001 and MoP: P=0.007). No correlation was found between noisy hips and femoral head size or inclination angle.

The squeaking hip phenomenon is not exclusive to hard bearing THA. Noise from patient's hips may have social implications and this should be highlighted when consenting a patient for either of these hip procedures. In both implants, we showed there to be a correlation between noise production and a lower OHS. However, longer follow up studies are needed to link noise to a poorly functioning implant


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 44 - 44
1 Aug 2013
Frame MC Jones B
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Many orthopaedic procedures require implants to be trialled before definitive implantation. Where this is required, the trials are provided in a set with the instrumentation. The most common scenario this is seen in during elective joint replacements. In Scotland (2007) the Scottish Executive (http://www.sehd.scot.nhs.uk/cmo/CMO(2006)13.pdf) recommended and implemented individually packed orthopaedic implants for all orthopaedic sets. The premise for this was to reduce the risk of CJD contamination and fatigue of implants due to constant reprocessing from corrosion. During many trauma procedures determining the correct length of plate or size of implant can be challenging. Trials of trauma implants is no longer common place. Many implants are stored in closed and sealed boxes, preventing the surgeon looking at the implant prior to opening and contaminating the device. As a result many implants are incorrectly opened and either need reprocessed or destroyed due to infection control policy, thus implicating a cost to the NHS. With even the simplest implants costing several hundreds of pounds, this cost is a very significant waste in resources that could be deployed else where. My project was to develop a method to produce in department accurate, cheap and disposable trials for implants often used in trauma, where the original manufacturer do not offer the option of a trial off the shelf. The process had to not involve contaminating or destroying the original implant in the production of a trial.

Several implants which are commonly used within Glasgow Royal Infirmary and do not have trials were identified. These implants were then CT scanned within their sealed and sterile packaging without contamination. Digital 3D surface renders of the models were created using free open source software (OsiriX, MeshLab, NetFabb). These models were then processed in to a suitable format for 3D printing using laser sintering via a cloud 3D printing bureau (Shapeways.com). The implants were produced in polyamide PA220 material or in 316L stainless steel. These materials could be serialized using gamma irradiation or ethylene oxide gas. The steel models were suitable for autoclaving in the local CSSU.

The implants produced were accurate facsimiles of the original implant with dimensions within 0.7mm. The implants were cost effective, an example being a rim mesh was reproduced in polyamide PA220 plastic for £3.50 and in 316L stainless steel for £15. The models were produced within 10 days of scanning. The stainless steel trials were durable and suitable for reprocessing and resterilisation.

The production of durable, low cost and functional implant trials all completed in department was successful. The cost of production of each implant is so low that it would be offset if just one incorrect implant was opened during a single procedure. With some of the implants tested, the trials would have paid for themselves 100 times. This is a simple and cost saving technique that would help reduce department funding and aid patient care.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Aug 2013
Drury C Elias-Jones C Tait G
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Arthritis of the glenohumeral joint accompanied by an irreparable tear of the rotator cuff can cause severe pain, disability and loss of function, particularly in the elderly population. Anatomical shoulder arthroplasty requires a functioning rotator cuff, however, reverse shoulder arthroplasty is capable of addressing both rotator cuff disorders and glenohumeral deficiencies. The Aequalis Reversed Shoulder Prosthesis design is based on two bio-mechanical principles by Grammont; a medialized center of rotation located inside the glenoid bone surface and second, a 155 degree angle of inclination. Combined, they increase the deltoid lever arm by distalizing the humerus and make the prosthesis inherently stable.

24 consecutive primary reverse total shoulder arthroplasties were performed by a single surgeon for arthritis with rotator cuff compromise and 1 as a revision for a failed primary total shoulder replacement between December 2009 and October 2012. Patients were assessed postoperatively with the use of the DASH score, Oxford shoulder score, range of shoulder motion and plain radiography with Sirveaux score for scapular notching.

Mean age at the time of surgery was 72.5 years (range 59 to 86). Average follow up time was 19.4 months (range 4 to 38). Functional outcome scores from our series were comparable with patients from other follow up studies of similar prosthesis design. All patients showed improvement in range of shoulder movement postoperatively. Complications included one dislocation, one acromion fracture and one humeral shaft fracture. No cases of deep infection were recorded. Overall, the short-term clinical results were promising for this series of patients and indicate reverse shoulder arthroplasty as an appropriate treatment for this group of patients.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 12 - 12
1 Aug 2013
Elias-Jones C MacLeod C
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In 2012 collagenase Clostridium histolyticum (Xiapex) was approved by the SMC for restricted use for the treatment of Dupuytren's contracture. Xiapex was approved on a case by case basis for patients with a palpable pretendinous cord, giving rise to MCPJ contracture of greater than 30 degrees. As of September 2012 we began to offer Xiapex injections to patients in Ayrshire who enquired about the injection, and met the SMC criteria.

To date injections have been performed on 3 patients, in a total of 7 digits. Patients were assessed prior to injection and manipulation, with the degree of contracture recorded and DASH scores noted. Each patient then underwent a standard injection of 0.58 mg of Xiapex. 48 hours post injection each patient underwent manipulation under local anaesthetic, with contractures remeasured, pain scored using a visual analogue scale and complications noted. Each patient was then reviewed at 4 weeks post injection where the residual degree of contracture was recorded and a further DASH score completed.

Mean contracture at the MCPJ prior to injection was 57° (range 34–80), and mean DASH score of 20.8 (range 16.7–24.2). Following manipulation mean residual contracture at the MCPJ measured 21° (range 18–28). The average pain score following was manipulation was rated at 1.1. Mild bruising and swelling were reported in all cases following injection, and manipulation resulted in 2 minor skin tears. At the 4 week review prolonged improvement of contracture was achieved with a mean residual contracture of 14° (range −2–40); with a significant improvement in DASH scores – mean 0.6 (range 0–1.8)

Despite small numbers, we have found Xiapex injections to be a successful and well tolerated treatment for moderate Dupuytren's disease. Further follow up is required to assess the longevity of the correction and ensure the cost effectiveness of Xiapex.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Aug 2013
Joseph J Anthony I Jones B Blyth M
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The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of body mass index (BMI) on patients undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty for osteoarthritis. Data was collected on 664 patients at 4 centres all of whom received a Depuy PFC Sigma prosthesis. Data collected included patient demographics, Oxford Knee Score (OKS), American Knee Society Score, SF-12, complications of surgery and the need for revision.

14% of patients had a BMI<25, 35% were overweight (BMI-25–30), 32% suffered from Grade 1 obesity (BMI-30–35) and 19% had grade 2 obesity (BMI>35). Obese patients were more likely to be female, have a higher ASA grade, present at a younger age and do sedentary work or no work at all. Pre-operative Oxford knee score was significantly worse in the BMI>35 group (p<0.001).

After surgery there was a significant improvement in functional outcome measures at 5 years post-operatively with all BMI groups improved by an average of 18 or 19 points in the OKS. However because those patients with high BMI have poorer pre-operative Oxford scores their post-operative scores were lower compared to patients with a normal BMI. Similar findings were noted with range of motion of the knee joint.

Overall complication rates were found to be significantly higher in obese patients and both revision surgery and deep infection rates increased stepwise with increasing BMI levels.

Deep Infection rates were as follows: BMI<25 0%, BMI-25–30 1.3%, BMI-30–35 1.4%, BMI-35–40 3.2% and BMI>40 6.1%.

Revision rates were as follows: BMI<25 0%, BMI-25–30 0.9%, BMI-30–35 0.9%, BMI-35–40 3.2% and BMI>40 6.1%.

Although obese patients with knee osteoarthritis do benefit from joint arthroplasty, they suffer from an increased rate of complications and need for revision surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 47 - 47
1 Aug 2013
Siddiqui M Bidaye A Baird E Jones B Stark A Abu-Rajab R Anthony I Ingram R
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We compared the postoperative wound discharge rates and 3 months clinical results of three types of wound closure and dressing – 2-octylcyanoacrylate with Opstie (G+O), 2-octylcyanoacrylate with Tegaderm (G+T), and Opsite without 2-octylcyanoacrylate (O) in patients having primary total hip arthroplasty.

We randomised 141 patients scheduled for primary total hip arthroplasty into 3 arms of this study- G+O, G+T, or O. The extent of wound discharge was recorded on a diagrammatic representation of the dressing in situ on paper and graded each day. Dressings were left in-situ provided the extent of wound discharge allowed for this. The patient was clinically reviewed at 3 months to assess their scar length, cosmesis, scar discomfort, and evidence of superficial or deep wound sepsis.

A greater number of patients dressings remained dry on day 1 postoperatively in the two groups with 2-octylcyanoacrylate compared to the no glue group p=0.001. G+T group had a significantly lower proportion of patients with increased leakage of wounds on 2nd postoperative day p=0.044. At 3 months review, there was no statistical difference in the Hollander score or scar discomfort.

In patients who have had primary total hip arthroplasty, usage of 2-octylcyanoacrylate for wound closure along with Tegaderm dressing reduces wound discharge. The same effect is not noted in glue with Opsite group. Whilst dressing changes required in the non-glue group compared from the two glue groups did not reach statistical significance, this may have clinical relevance for patients and nursing staff. No effect on postoperative length of stay, or wound complications was noted.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 16 - 16
1 Aug 2013
Kumar S O'Neill G Stark A Jones B McCartney P Wells J Ingram R
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The aim of this study was to characterise noise associated with ceramic-on-ceramic total hip arthroplasty (THA).

A questionnaire was constructed to assess noise associated with THA. 116 patients responded. All had ceramic-on-ceramic hybrid THA at Glasgow Royal Infirmary between 2005 and 2007 using a Trident prosthesis and Exeter stem. Oxford Hip Questionnaires (OHS) were also completed by the patients.

16.4% of respondents reported noise associated with their ceramic hip. The vast majority reported onset at least 1 year after implantation. The most common noise types were ‘clicking’ (47%) or ‘grinding’ (42%), while ‘squeaking’ was least frequently reported (11%). Noise was most commonly brought on by bending and during sit to stand movements.

No correlation was identified between the incidence of noise and any patient specific factor or demographic variable. The mean OHS at questionnaire follow-up was 39 and there was no significant difference in OHS when comparing noisy and silent hips (p=0.65). Only 1 patient limited social or recreational activities and overall patients felt the noise had minimal effect on their quality of life.

Acetabular component inclination angles were compared on post-operative x-rays. There was no significant difference (p=0.51) in inclination angles of the noisy (47.1°±6.3°, range 30–57°) and silent hips (47.8°±6.1°, range 35–68°). The groups were further analysed for deviation out with the desirable inclination range of 40–45°. Of the noisy hips, a total of 73% were out with this range compared to 63% in the silent hip group.

The incidence of noise within this ceramic-on-ceramic THA group did not appear to be related to patient specific factors, patient reported outcome (OHS) or acetabular inclination angles. Subjective appraisal of the noise revealed that ‘squeaking’ was not common but patients tended to report ‘clicking’ and ‘grinding’ more. The precipitation of noise with bending activities reinforces a possible mechanical cause.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 39 - 39
1 Aug 2013
Lavery J Anthony I Blyth M Jones B
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To validate the Modified Forgotten Joint Score (MFJS) as a new patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) in hip and knee arthroplasty against the UK's gold standard Oxford Hip and Knee Scores (OHS/OKS).

The original Forgotten Joint Score was created by Behrend et al to assess post-op hip/knee arthroplasty patients. It is a new assessment tool devised to provide a greater discriminatory power, particularly in the well performing patients. It measures an appealing concept; the ability of a patient to forget about their artificial joint in everyday life. The original FJS was a 12-item questionnaire, which we have modified to 10-items to improve reliability and missing data.

Postal questionnaires were sent out to 400 total hip/knee replacement (THR/TKR) patients who were 1–2 years post-op, along with the OHS/OKS and a visual pain analog score. The data collected from the 212 returned questionnaires (53% return rate) was analysed in relation to construct and content validity. A sub-cohort of 77 patients took part in a test-retest repeatability study to assess reliability of the MFJS.

The MFJS proved to have an increased discriminatory power in high-performing patients in comparison to the OHS and OKS, highlighted by its more normal frequency of distribution and reduced ceiling effects in the MFJS. 30.8% of patients (n=131) scored 42–48 (equivalent to 87.5–100 in the MFJS) or more in the OKS compared to just 7.69% in the MFJS TKR patients. The MFJS proved to have an increased test-retest repeatability based upon its intra-class correlation coefficient of 0.968 compared to the Oxford's 0.845.

The MFJS provides a more sensitive tool in the assessment of well performing hip and knee arthroplasties in comparison to the OHS/OKS. The MFJS tests the concept of awareness of a prosthetic joint, rather than pain and function and therefore should be used as adjunct to the OKS/OHS.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 20 - 20
1 Aug 2013
Elias-Jones C Reilly J Kerr S Meek R Patil S Kelly M Campton L McInnes I Millar N
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Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) is a significant cause of osteoarthritis in young active individuals but the pathophysiology remains unclear. Increasing mechanistic studies point toward an inflammatory component in OA. This study aimed to characterise inflammatory cell subtypes in FAI by exploring the phenotype and quantification of inflammatory cells in FAI versus OA samples.

Ten samples of labrum were obtained from patients with FAI (confirmed pathology) during open osteochondroplasty or hip arthroscopy. Control samples of labrum were collected from five patients with osteoarthritis undergoing total hip arthroplasty. Labral biopsies were evaluated immunohistochemically by quantifying the presence of macrophages (CD68 and CD202), T cells (CD3), mast cells (mast cell tryptase) and vascular endothelium (CD34).

Labral biopsies obtained from patients with FAI exhibited significantly greater macrophage, mast cell and vascular endothelium expression compared to control samples. The most significant difference was noted in macrophage expression (p<0.01). Further sub typing of macrophages in FAI using CD202 tissue marker revealed and M2 phenotype suggesting that these cells are involved in a regenerate versus a degenerate process. There was a modest but significant correlation between mast cells and CD34 expression (r=0.4, p<0.05) in FAI samples.

We provide evidence for an inflammatory cell infiltrate in femoroacetabular impingement. In particular, we demonstrate significant infiltration of mast cells and macrophages suggesting a role for innate immune pathways in the events that mediate hip impingement. Further mechanistic studies to evaluate the net contribution and hence therapeutic utility of these cellular lineages and their downstream processes may reveal novel therapeutic approaches to the management of early hip impingement.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Aug 2013
Boyle J Anthony I Jones B MacLean A Wheelwright E Blyth M
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A retrospective analysis was carried out to determine the influence of pre-existing spinal pathology on the outcome of Total Knee Replacement surgery. Data was collected from 345 patients who had undergone Total Knee Replacement, at four centres in the UK, between 2000 and 2007. Oxford Knee Scores (OKS), American Knee Society Scores (AKSS) and SF-12 questionnaires were recorded prospectively. Data was collected pre-operatively and then post-operatively at 3 months, 1 year and 2 years. Patients were divided into those with (n=40) and without a history of low back pain (n=305). In addition to determining the influence of low back pain on outcome after Total Knee Replacement we also examined the influence of concomitant hip and ankle pathology in the same cohort of patients.

OKS scores were significantly worse for patients with symptomatic low back pain at 3 (p=0.05), 12 (p=0.009) and 24 months (p=0.039) following surgery. SF-12 physical scores followed a comparable pattern with significance demonstrated at 3 (p=0.038), 12 (p=0.0002) and 24 months (p=0.016). AKSS followed a similar pattern, but significance was only reached at 1 year (p=0.013). The mental component of the SF-12 measure demonstrated a significant improvement in patients' mental health post-operatively for patients with no history of low back pain. In contrast patients with low back pain showed no improvement in mental health scores post-operatively.

In contrast to low back pain, hip and ankle pathology had no statistically significant detrimental effect on the outcome of Total Knee Replacement surgery.

This study demonstrates that low back pain significantly affects the functional outcome after Total Knee Replacement surgery and that patients with low back pain show no improvement in mental health post-operatively.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 53 - 53
1 Aug 2013
Jensen C Gupta S Sprowson A Chambers S Inman D Jones S Aradhyula N Reed M
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Currently, the cement being used for hemiarthroplasties and total hip replacements by the authors and many other surgeons in the UK is Palacos® (containing 0.5g Gentamicin). Similar cement, Copal® (containing 1g Gentamicin and 1g Clindamycin) has been used in revision arthroplasties, and has shown to be better at inhibiting bacterial growth and biofilm formation. We aim to investigate the effect on SSI rates of doubling the gentamicin dose and adding a second antibiotic (clindamycin) to the bone cement in hip hemiarthroplasty.

We randomised 848 consecutive patients undergoing cemented hip hemiarthroplasty for fractured NOF at one NHS trust (two sites) into two groups: Group I, 464 patients, received standard cement (Palacos®) and Group II, 384 patients, received high dose, double antibiotic-impregnated cement (Copal®). We calculated the SSI rate for each group at 30 days post-surgery. The patients, reviewers and statistician were blinded as to treatment group.

The demographics and co-morbid conditions (known to increase risk of infection) were statistically similar between the groups. The combined superficial and deep SSI rates were 5 % (20/394) and 1.7% (6/344) for groups I and II respectively (p=0.01). Group I had a deep infection rate 3.3 %(13/394) compared to 1.16% (4/344) in group II (p=0.082). Group I had a superficial infection rate 1.7 % (7/394) compared to 0.58% (2/344) in group II (p=0.1861). 33(4%) patients were lost to follow up, and 77 (9%) patients were deceased at the 30 day end point. There was no statistical difference in the 30 day mortality, C. difficile infection, or the renal failure rates between the two groups.

Using high dose double antibiotic-impregnated cement rather than standard low dose antibiotic-impregnated cement significantly reduced the SSI rate (1.7% vs 5%; p=0.01) after hip hemiarthroplasty for fractured neck of femur in this prospective randomised controlled trial.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Aug 2013
Sciberras N Murphy E Jones B Blyth M
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Deep surgical infections are a serious complication of total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Various protocols exist for treating these infections, each with its own advocates. In this series we report the one to five year follow-up of infected TKA that were treated with a two-stage revision knee replacement at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary between December 2003 and March 2009.

48 patients were identified from the hospital database. 6 of these were excluded as they did not meet the stipulated infection criteria. Another patient was excluded as no notes were available thereby the infection status could not be determined. Another 8 patients were excluded as these only had a first stage.

33 patients (16 male) average age 67y (49–88) met the inclusion criteria. Mean BMI was of 31.62 (19–47) and 8 patients suffered from rheumatoid arthritis. At presentation, the median for the ESR, CRP and WCC were 70.5, 133 and 8.5 respectively. The infective organism was identified in 22 patients. Following the first stage, the patients were treated with antibiotics (initially intravenous followed by oral) for an average of 11.8 weeks (4–52 weeks). This procedure failed to eliminate the infection in 6 patients (18.18%) who had further re-admissions for infection of the affected prosthesis. The resultant success rate is of over 80% which is comparable to literature data (success rates of 41% to 96% quoted). For these patients, the average time to review was 25.13 months (12–67months). At review these patients had a mean extension of 2.17° (0–10°) and a mean flexion of 98.26 (70–120°). These patients were all satisfied with their outcome.

Our results show a high successful rate of elimination of infection when a two-stage revision is used for infected knee prosthesis with over 80% of patients free of infection.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 27 - 27
1 Apr 2013
Owen SJ Roberts S Eisenstein S Jones P Sharp CA
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Background

Intervertebral disc cells exist in a challenging physiological environment. Disc degeneration occurs early in life implying that disc cells may no longer be able to maintain a functional tissue. We hypothesise that disc cells have a stress response different from most other cells because of the disc environment. We have compared the stress response of freshly isolated and cultured bovine nucleus pulposus (NP) cells with bovine dermal fibroblasts, representative of cells from a vascularised tissue.

Methods

Freshly isolated and passaged bovine NP cells and dermal fibroblasts were cultured for 3 days then subjected to either thermal stress at 45°C for 1h followed by recovery times of 6, 24 and 48h or nutrient stress involving culture without serum for 6, 24 and 48 h. At each time point, cell number and viability were assessed and heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) measured in cell lysates by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 73 - 73
1 Mar 2013
Bowers T Hodgson H Jones G Mustafa A Wilson C Williams R Fairhurst S Mason D
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Introduction

Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) aims to deliver relief from pain and restore normal function. Unfortunately, a significant cohort of patients report poor outcomes.

Hypothesis

Synovial fluid metabolite concentrations at surgery predict outcome of TKA, assessed by a validated measure.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 19 - 19
1 Mar 2013
Prys-Jones O Amin A Hall A
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The internal fixation of osteochondral fragments in fractures normally utilizes intra-articular screws inserted through a pilot hole drilled into cartilage/bone. This trauma causes cartilage injury leading to chondrocyte death. We have quantified the cell death following cartilage drilling and identified irrigation conditions that can protect chondrocytes. Articular cartilage of bovine metacarpophalangeal joints of 3yr-old cows was irrigated in the presence/absence of saline of various compositions. Holes were then made using a standard 1.5mm drill (Ortho Solutions Ltd.) at 18,000 rpm through the articular cartilage into bone. Osteochondral explants were then harvested and cultured in Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium containing chloromethylfluorescein-di-acetate and propidium iodide (10uM each), to label living chondrocytes green and dead cells red, respectively. Axial images were taken by confocal microscopy and the width of the zone of cell death (ZCD) around the hole determined. With no irrigation, new drills caused a ZCD of 171±25um, which was increased when drills used 50+ times were tested (279±31um;p=0.03). With saline irrigation, the ZCD was reduced for old drills (150±6um;p=0.016) but not for new drills (124±8um) suggesting the heating effect of the old drills caused additional chondrocyte death. However for new drills, the ZCD was further reduced significantly to 82±7um when the osmolarity of the saline irrigation solution was raised to 480mOsm using sucrose. Data are mean±s.e.m., from at least 5 separate experiments each with a minimum of 3 replicates. The results demonstrate a chondroprotective effect of raising the osmolarity of saline used during drilling of cartilage which could be clinically beneficial.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 69 - 69
1 Aug 2012
Picardo N Nawaz Z Gallagher K Whittingham-Jones P Parratt T Briggs T Carrington R Skinner J Bentley G
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The aim of this study was to determine whether the clinical outcome of autologous chondrocyte transplantation was dependent on the timing of a high tibial osteotomy in tibio-femoral mal-aligned knees. Between 2000 and 2005, forty-eight patients underwent autologous chondrocyte implantation with HTO performed at varying times relative to the second stage autologous chondrocyte implantation procedure. 24 patients had HTO performed simultaneously with their second stage cartilage transplantation, (the HTO Simultaneous Group). 5 patients had HTO prior to their cartilage procedure, (the HTO pre-ACI Group) and 19 had HTO performed between 1 to 4 years after their second stage cartilage implantation, (the HTO post-ACI Group). There were 29 men and 19 women with a mean age of 37 years (Range 28 to 50) at the time of their second stage procedure.

With average follow-up of 72 months we have demonstrated a significant functional benefit in performing the HTO either prior to or simultaneously with the ACI procedure in the mal-aligned knee. The failure rate in the Post-ACI group was 45% compared to the Pre-ACI and Simultaneous group, with failure rates of 20% and 25%, respectively.

An HTO performed prior to or simultaneously with an autologous chondrocyte implantation procedure in the mal-aligned knee, provides a significant protective effect by reducing the failure rate by approximately 50%.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 7 - 7
1 Aug 2012
Smith J Dawson J Aarvold A Jones A Ridgway J Curran S Dunlop D Oreffo R
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Recent approaches have sought to harness the potential of stem cells to regenerate bone lost as a consequence of trauma or disease. Bone marrow aspirate (BMA) provides an autologous source of skeletal stem cells (SSCs) for such applications, however previous studies have demonstrated that the concentration of SSCs present in iliac crest BMA is below that required for robust bone regeneration. Here we present a novel acoustic-facilitated filtration strategy to concentrate BMA for SSCs, clinically applicable for intra-operative orthopaedic use.

The aim of this study was to demonstrate the efficacy of this strategy in concentrating SSCs from iliac crest bone marrow, as well as femoral canal BMA from older patients.

Iliac crest BMA (Lonza, Rockville, MD, USA) and femoral canal BMA was obtained with informed consent from older patients during total hip replacement. 5 to 40ml of BMA was processed via the acoustically-aided exclusion filtration process to obtain 2-8 fold volume reductions. SSC concentration and function was assessed by flow-cytometry, assays for fibroblastic colony-forming units (CFU-F) and multi-lineage differentiation along chondrogenic, osteogenic and adipogenic pathways examined. Seeding efficiency of enriched and unprocessed BMA (normalised to cell number) onto allograft was assessed.

Iliac crest BMA from 15 patients was enriched for SSCs in a processing time of only 15 minutes. Femoral BMA from 15 patients in the elderly cohort was concentrated up to 5-fold with a corresponding enrichment of viable and functional SSCs, confirmed by flow cytometry and assays for CFU-F. Enhanced osteogenic (P<0.05) and chondrogenic (P<0.001) differentiation was observed using concentrated aspirate, as evidenced by biochemical assay and semi-quantitative histological analysis. Furthermore, enhanced cell seeding efficiency onto allograft was seen as an effect of SSC concentration per ml of aspirate (P<0.001), confirming the utility of this approach for application to bone regeneration.

The ability to rapidly enrich BMA demonstrates potential for intra-operative application to enhance bone healing and offers immediate capacity for clinical application to treat many scenarios associated with local bone stock loss. Further in vivo analysis is ongoing prior to clinical tests.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 117 - 117
1 Aug 2012
Aarvold A Smith J Tayton E Jones A Dawson J Briscoe A Lanham S Dunlop D Oreffo R
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Background

Skeletal stem cells can be combined with human allograft, and impacted to produce a mechanically stable living bone composite. This strategy has been used for the treatment of femoral head avascular necrosis, and has been translated to four patients, of which three remain asymptomatic at up to three year follow-up. In one patient collapse occurred in both hips due to widely distributed and advanced AVN disease, necessitating bilateral hip arthroplasty. However this has provided the opportunity to retrieve the femoral heads and analyse human tissue engineered bone.

Aims

Analysis of retrieved human tissue-engineered bone in conjunction with clinical follow-up of this translational case series.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 8 - 8
1 Aug 2012
Tan H Jones E Kozera L Henshaw K McGonagle D Giannoudis P
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Background and objectives

Fracture healing represents a physiological process regulated by a variety of signalling molecules, growth factors and osteogenic progenitor cells. Bone healing following trauma is associated with increased serum concentrations of several pro-inflammatory and angiogenic growth factors1. Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) has been shown to stimulate mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) proliferation in vitro. However, the in vivo relationship between the levels of PDGF and the numbers of MSCs in humans has not yet been explored. The aim of this study was to investigate PDGF release in the peripheral circulation following trauma and to correlate it with the numbers of MSCs in iliac crest bone marrow (BM) aspirate and in peripheral blood.

Methods

Trauma patients with lower extremity fractures (n=12, age 18-63 years) were recruited prospectively. Peripheral blood was obtained on admission, and at 1, 3, 5 and 7 days following admission. The serum was collected and PDGF was measured using the enzyme-linked immuno-sorbent assay (ELISA) technique. Iliac crest (BM) aspirate (20ml) and peripheral blood (PB) (20ml) was obtained on days 0-9 following admission. MSCs were enumerated using standard colony-forming unit fibroblasts (CFU-F) assay.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 74 - 74
1 Aug 2012
Mak J Moazen M Jones A Jin Z Tsirdis E Wilcox R
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Periprosthetic femoral fractures can occur as a complication of total hip arthroplasty and are often challenging to treat as the mechanical scenario is influenced by the presence of the metal prosthesis within the bone. This research focuses on finding the optimum fixation for transverse, Vancouver type B1 periprosthetic fractures, stabilised using locking plates and secured using screws. The aim of this study was to experimentally validate a computer model of a human femur, develop that model to represent a periprosthetic femoral fracture fixation and show how the model could be used to indicate differences between plating techniques.

In the first development stage, both a laboratory model and a finite element model were developed to evaluate the mechanical behaviour of an intact composite femur under axial loading. Axial strains were recorded along the medial length of the femur in both cases and compared to provide validation for the computational model predications. The computational intact femur model was then modified to include a cemented total hip replacement, and further adapted to include a periprosthetic fracture stabilised using a locking plate, with unicortical screws above, and bicortical screws below the transverse fracture.

For the intact femur case, the experimental and computational strain patterns correlated well with an average difference of 16%. Following the inclusion of the stem, there was a reduction in the strain in the region of the prosthesis reducing by an average of 45%. There was also a large increase in bulk stiffness with the introduction of the prosthesis. When the fracture and plate fixation were included, there was little difference in the proximal strain where the stem dominated, and the strains in the distal region were found to be highly sensitive to the distribution of the screws.

The results of this study indicate that screw configuration is an important factor in periprosthetic fracture fixation. A laboratory model of the periprosthetic facture case is now under development to further validate the computational models and the two approaches will then be used to determine optimum fixation methods for a range of clinical scenarios.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVI | Pages 116 - 116
1 Aug 2012
Theobald P Qureshi A Jones M
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Long bone fractures are a commonly presented paediatric injury. Whilst the possibility of either accidental or non-accidental aetiology ensures significant forensic relevance, there remain few clinical approaches that assist with this differential diagnosis. The aim of this current study was to generate a reproducible model of spiral fracture in immature bone, allowing investigation of the potential relationship between the rotational speed and the angle of the subsequent spiral fracture.

Seventy bovine metacarpal bones were harvested from 7 day old calves. Sharp dissection ensured removal of the soft tissue, whilst preserving the periosteum. The bones were then distributed evenly before eleven groups, before being aligned along their central axis within a torsional testing machine. Each group of bones were then tested to failure at a different rotational speed (0.5, 1, 15, 20, 30, 40, 45, 60, 75, 80 and 90 degrees s-1). The angle of spiral fracture, relative to the long axis, was then measured, whilst the fracture location, the extent of comminution and periosteal disruption, were all recorded.

Sixty-two out of 70 specimens failed in spiral fracture, with the remaining tests failing at the anchorage site. All bone fractures centred on the narrowest waist diameter, with 5 specimens (all tested at 90 degrees s-1) demonstrating comminution and periosteal disruption. The recorded spiral fracture angles ranged from 30 - 45 degrees, and were dependant on the rotational speed.

This study has established a relationship between the speed of rotation and the angle of spiral fracture in immature bovine bone. It is anticipated that further study will enable investigation of this trend in paediatric bone, ultimately providing an additional diagnostic tool for clinicians trying to verify the proposed mechanism of injury.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXVIII | Pages 1 - 1
1 Jun 2012
Bell S Young P Drury C Jones B Blyth M MacLean A
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Total knee arthroplasty is an established and successful operation. In up to 13% of patients who undergo total knee arthroplasty continue to complain of pain. Recently computerised tomography (CT) has been used to assess the rotational profile of both the tibial and femoral components in painful total knee arthroplasty.

We reviewed 56 painful total knee replacements and compared these to 56 matched patients with pain free total knee replacements. Patients with infection, aseptic loosening, revision arthroplasties and gross coronal malalignment were excluded. Datum gathered from case notes and radiographs using a prospective orthopaedic database to identify patients. The age, sex, preoperative and postoperative Oxford scores, visual analogue scores and treatments recorded. The CT information recorded was limb alignment, tibial component rotation, femoral component rotation and combined rotation.

The two cohorts of patients had similar demographics. The mean limb alignments were 1.7 degrees varus and 0.01 degrees valgus in the painful and control groups respectively. A significant difference in tibial component rotation was identified between the groups with 3.2 degrees of internal rotation in the painful group compared to 0.5 degrees of external rotation in the control group (p=0.001). A significant difference in femoral component rotation was identified between the groups with 3.8 degrees of internal rotation in the painful group compared to 1.1 degrees of external rotation in the control group (p=0.001). A significant difference in the combined component rotation was identified between the groups with 6.8 degrees of internal rotation in the painful group compared to 1.7 degrees of external rotation in the control group (p=0.001).

We have identified significant internal rotation in a patient cohort with painful total knee arthroplasty when compared to a control group with internal rotation of the tibial component, femoral component and combined rotation. This is the largest comparison series currently in the literature.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 60 - 60
1 May 2012
McGonagle L Jones M Dowson D King P Theobald P
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Frictional resistance to tendon gliding is minimised by surrounding loose areolar tissues. During periods of prolonged immobilisation, for example post tendon-repair, adhesions can form between the two adjacent tissues, thereby limiting function. Whilst agents applied during surgery are recognised to succeed in adhesion prevention, they have also been reported to provide some reduction in friction during in vitro tendon-bony pulley investigations. This study investigated the effectiveness of common anti-adhesion agents in lubricating the tendon-surrounding tissue contact by comparison with a control study. By using a validated apparatus and with reference to the Stribeck curve, it was determined that the natural in vivo contact is likely to be lubricated by a film of synovial-like fluid. Application of all anti-adhesives generated a similarly efficient lubricating system, and hence administration of these agents should be encouraged to all regions of the tendon disrupted during surgery. Minimising frictional resistance to gliding will reduce the likelihood of tendon ‘gapping’ - and subsequently failure - at the repair site.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 47 - 47
1 May 2012
Bottomley N McNally E Jones L Javaid M Arden N Gill H Dodd C Murray D Beard D Price A
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Introduction

Anteromedial osteoarthritis of the knee (anteromedial gonarthrosis-AMG) is a common form of knee arthritis. In a clinical setting, knee arthritis has always been assessed by plain radiography in conjunction with pain and function assessments. Whilst this is useful for surgical decision making in bone on bone arthritis, plain radiography gives no insight to the earlier stages of disease. In a recent study 82% of patients with painful arthritis had only partial thickness joint space loss on plain radiography. These patients are managed with various surgical treatments; injection, arthroscopy, osteotomy and arthroplasty with varying results. We believe these varying results are in part due to these patients being at different stages of disease, which will respond differently to different treatments. However radiography cannot delineate these stages. We describe the Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) findings of this partial thickness AMG as a way of understanding these earlier stages of the disease.

Method

46 subjects with symptomatic partial thickness AMG underwent MRI assessment with dedicated 3 Tesla sequences. All joint compartments were scored for both partial and full thickness cartilage lesions, osteophytes and bone marrow lesions (BML). Both menisci were assessed for extrusion and tear. Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) integrity was also assessed. Osteophytes were graded on a four point scale in the intercondylar notch and the lateral margins of the joint compartments. Scoring was performed by a consultant radiologist and clinical research fellow using a validated MRI atlas with consensus reached for disagreements. The results were tabulated and relationships of the interval data assessed with linear by linear Chi2 test and Pearson's Correlation.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 26 - 26
1 May 2012
Jones A Aarvold A New A Dunlop D Oreffo R
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AIM

Avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head is a potentially debilitating disease of the hip in young adults. Impaction bone grafting (IBG) of morcellised fresh frozen allograft is used in a number of orthopaedic conditions. This study has examined the potential of skeletal stem cells (SSC) to augment the mechanical properties of impacted bone graft and we translate these findings into clinical practice.

STUDY DESIGN

We have examined the effect of SSC density on augmentation of bone formation. An in vitro model was developed to replicate the surgical IBG process. Plain allograft was used as the control, and the SSC's seeded at a density of 5×103, 5×104 and 2×105 cells per cc of allograft for the experimental groups. All samples were cultured for 2 weeks and mechanically tested to determine shear strength using the Mohr Coulomb failure curve. The approach was translated to 3 patients with early avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head. The patient's bone marrow was concentrated in theatre using a centrifugation device and the concentrated fraction of SSC's were seeded onto milled allograft. The patient's necrotic bone was drilled, curetted and replaced with impacted allograft seeded with SSC's. Osteogenic potential of concentrated and unconcentrated marrow was simultaneously compared in vitro by colony forming unit assays.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 35 - 35
1 May 2012
Cox G Giannoudis P Boxall S Buckley C Jones E McGonagle D
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Introduction

Iliac crest bone marrow aspirate (ICBMA) is frequently cited as the ‘gold-standard’ source of MSCs. MSCs have been shown to reside within the intramedullary (IM) cavities of long-bones [Nelea, 2005] however a comparative assessment with ICBMA has not yet been performed and the phenotype of the latter compartment MSCs remains undefined in their native environment.

Methods

Aspiration of the IM cavities of 6 patients' femurs with matched ICBMA was performed. The long-bone-fatty-bone-marrow (LBFBM) was filtered (70μm) to separate liquid and solid fractions and the solid fraction was briefly (60min, 37oC) digested with collagenase. MSC enumeration was performed using the colony-forming-unit-fibroblast (CFU-F) assay and quantification of cells with the CD45low CD271+ phenotype by flow-cytometry. [Jones 2002, Buhring 2007] MSCs were cultured and standard expansion media and passage 2 cells were differentiated towards osteogenic, adipogenic and chondrogenic lineages.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 80 - 80
1 May 2012
Thomas GER Simpson DJ Gill HS Glyn-Jones S Beard DJ Murray DW EPOS study group
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Femoral stem varus has been associated with poorer results. We report the incidence of varus/valgus malalignment of the Exeter polished, double taper design in a multicentre prospective study. The surgical outcomes at a minimum of five year and complication rates are also reported.

A multicentre prospective study of 987 total hip replacements was undertaken to investigate whether there is an association between surgical outcome and femoral stem malalignment. The primary outcome measure was the change in the Oxford hip score (OHS) at five years. Secondary outcomes included the rate of dislocation and revision.

The incidence of varus and valgus malignment were 7.1% and 2.6% respectively. There was no significant difference in OHS between neutral and malaligned femoral stems at 5 years (neutral, mean = 40.2; varus, mean 39.3, p = 0.465; valgus, mean = 40.9, p = 0.605). There was no significant difference in dislocation rate between the groups (p = 0.66). There was also no significant difference in revision rate (p = 0.34).

This study provides evidence that the Exeter stem is extremely tolerant of varus and valgus malalignment, both in terms of outcome and complication rate.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 82 - 82
1 May 2012
Jones A Hing K
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Background, Context and Motivation

“Increases in reconstructive orthopaedic surgery, resulting from advances in surgical practice and the ageing population, have lead to a demand for bone graft that far exceeds supply.”…Traditional bone grafting methods have been linked with a number of negative issues including increased morbidity due to secondary operation site and action as a vector for spread of disease. (Hing 2004). A solution to these insufficiencies would be the creation of a synthetic osteoinductive bone graft material. This would vastly improve bone graft surgery success rates and expedite post-op recovery times. The aim of this study was to classify then explore the dissolution rates of three experimental hydroxyapatite/silicate apatite synthetic bonegrafts in physiological solutions, (phosphate buffered saline, (PBS) +/− serum proteins, (PBS +FCS). The overall objective being to identify whether there is an explainable significant difference in ion exchange that could be behind the osteoinductive phenomena.

Methods Used

Classification of the apatite samples, (HA, SA1 and SA2), was conducted via X-Ray diffraction, FTIR-PAS Spectroscopy and SEM with EDS analysis. A dissolution experiment of the experimental apatites was conducted in PBS and PBS + FCS solutions, over time periods of 1, 2 and 4 hours, and at 1, 2, 4 and 8 days, with repeat measures.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 5 - 5
1 May 2012
Cox G McGonagle D Boxall S Buckley C Jones E Giannoudis P
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Introduction

Therapeutic exploitation of MSCs in orthopaedics has been tempered by their scarcity within ‘gold-standard’ iliac crest bone marrow aspirate (ICBMA) and the resulting need to expand cells in vitro. This is time-consuming, expensive and results in cells with a reduced differentiation capacity. [Banfi 2000] The RIA is a device that provides continuous irrigation and suction during reaming of long bones. Aspirated contents pass via a filter, trapping bony-fragments, before moving into a ‘waste’ bag, from which MSCs have been previously isolated. [Porter 2009] We hypothesised that ‘waste’ RIA bag contains more MSCs than a standard aspirated volume of ICBMA (30 ml). We further hypothesised than a fatty solid phase within this ‘waste bag’ contains many MSCs trapped within the adipocyte-rich stromal network and hence requiring an enzymatic digestion for their efficient release [Jones 2006].

Methods

The discarded filtrate ‘waste’ bag that contained saline from marrow cavity irrigation procedure from RIA reaming (7 patients) was filtered (70μm) and the solid fraction digested for 60min (37oC) with collagenase. MSC enumeration was performed using the colony-forming-unit-fibroblast (CFU-F). Following culture in standard expansion media, passage 2 cells were differentiated towards osteogenic, adipogenic and chondrogenic lineages and their phenotype was assessed using flow cytometry. ICBMA from the same patients was used as controls.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_VIII | Pages 60 - 60
1 Mar 2012
Jones L Hungerford D
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Bone marrow is an environment rich in its diversity of cell types and niches. Both hematopoietic and osteogenic stromal cells are present and have been studied extensively. Less is known about the function of one of the most abundant cell types in the bone marrow: adipocytes. There are several hypotheses that have been proposed including: passive role as a space filler; active role in the body's general lipid metabolism; role in providing a localized energy reservoir for emergency situations affecting the bone or hematopoiesis; support of differentiation or function of other cell types (such as bone, endothelial, and other stromal cells).

There are several human pathologies associated with increases in adipocyte hypertrophy or proliferation including changes associated with aging, osteoporosis, and osteonecrosis. The reasons for these changes are poorly understood. One etiology associated with both osteoporosis and osteonecrosis, corticosteroid therapy, has been shown to increase the lipid content of osteoblasts and adipocytes.

With osteonecrosis, several pathogenetic mechanisms involving adipocytes have been proposed:

Mechanical - increased size and number cause increased intraosseous pressure and decreased venous outflow

Direct precursor cells away from osteoblastogenesis towards adipogenesis

Liquid fat causing a hypercoagulable state

Osteocyte dysfunction or apoptosis

Adipocyte and bone marrow necrosis

Release adipokines and other factors that have an effect on the cells within the bone marrow (inhibiting angiogenesis, e.g.)

The possibility that adipocytes may actually play an active role in propagating specific pathologic features has only recently been discussed. This is in part due to our increasing understanding that adipocytes have an endocrine role in metabolism.

Only recently have scientists tried to identify specific cellular mechanisms that may be involved in the pathogenesis of osteonecrosis. Results from these studies will not only contribute to our understanding of the disease of osteonecrosis (and other diseases such as osteoporosis) but will also help us to appreciate the multiple functionalities of the heretofore unappreciated adipocyte.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 91-B, Issue 2 | Pages 271 - 277
1 Feb 2009
Toms AD Barker RL McClelland D Chua L Spencer-Jones R Kuiper J

The treatment of bony defects of the tibia at the time of revision total knee replacement is controversial. The place of compacted morsellised bone graft is becoming established, particularly in contained defects. It has previously been shown that the initial stability of impaction-grafted trays in the contained defects is equivalent to that of an uncemented primary knee replacement. However, there is little biomechanical evidence on which to base a decision in the treatment of uncontained defects. We undertook a laboratory-based biomechanical study comparing three methods of graft containment in segmental medial tibial defects and compared them with the use of a modular metal augment to bypass the defect.

Using resin models of the proximal tibia with medial defects representing either 46% or 65% of the medial cortical rim, repair of the defect was accomplished using mesh, cement or a novel bag technique, after which impaction bone grafting was used to fill the contained defects and a tibial component was cemented in place. As a control, a cemented tibial component with modular metal augments was used in identical defects. All specimens were submitted to cyclical mechanical loading, during which cyclical and permanent tray displacement were determined.

The results showed satisfactory stability with all the techniques except the bone bag method. Using metal augments gave the highest initial stability, but obviously lacked any potential for bone restoration.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1298 - 1302
1 Sep 2005
Iesaka K Jaffe WL Jones CM Kummer FJ

We have investigated the role of the penetration of saline on the shear strength of the cement-stem interface for stems inserted at room temperature and those preheated to 37°C using a variety of commercial bone cements. Immersion in saline for two weeks at 37°C reduced interfacial strength by 56% to 88% after insertion at room temperature and by 28% to 49% after preheating of the stem. The reduction in porosity as a result of preheating ranged from 71% to 100%. Increased porosity correlated with a reduction in shear strength after immersion in saline (r = 0.839, p < 0.01) indicating that interfacial porosity may act as a fluid conduit.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 3 | Pages 448 - 458
1 Apr 2001
Jones LC Frondoza C Hungerford DS

The pathogenesis of aseptic loosening of total joint prostheses is not clearly understood. Two features are associated with loosened prostheses, namely, particulate debris and movement of the implant. While numerous studies have evaluated the cellular response to particulate biomaterials, few have investigated the influence of movement of the implant on the biological response to particles. Our aim was therefore to test the hypothesis that excessive mechanical stimulation of the periprosthetic tissues induces an inflammatory response and that the addition of particulate biomaterials intensifies this.

We allocated 66 adult Beagle dogs to four groups as follows: stable implants with (I) and without (II) particulate polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) and moving implants with (III) and without (IV) particulate PMMA. They were then evaluated at 2, 4, 6, 12 and 24 weeks.

The stable implants were well tolerated and a thin, fibrous membrane of connective tissue was observed. There was evidence of positive staining in some cells for interleukin-6 (IL-6). Addition of particulate PMMA around the stable implants resulted in an increase in the fibroblastic response and positive staining for IL-6 and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). By contrast, movement of the implant resulted in an immediate inflammatory response characterised by large numbers of histiocytes and cytokine staining for IL-1ß, TNF-α and IL-6. Introduction of particulate PMMA aggravated this response. Animals with particulate PMMA and movement of the implant have an intense inflammatory response associated with accelerated bone loss.

Our results indicate that the initiation of the inflammatory response to biomaterial particles was much slower than that to gross mechanical instability. Furthermore, when there was both particulate debris and movement, there was an amplification of the adverse tissue response as evidenced by the presence of osteolysis and increases in the presence of inflammatory cells and their associated cytokines.