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Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 7 | Pages 539 - 550
21 Jul 2023
Banducci E Al Muderis M Lu W Bested SR

Aims. Safety concerns surrounding osseointegration are a significant barrier to replacing socket prosthesis as the standard of care following limb amputation. While implanted osseointegrated prostheses traditionally occur in two stages, a one-stage approach has emerged. Currently, there is no existing comparison of the outcomes of these different approaches. To address safety concerns, this study sought to determine whether a one-stage osseointegration procedure is associated with fewer adverse events than the two-staged approach. Methods. A comprehensive electronic search and quantitative data analysis from eligible studies were performed. Inclusion criteria were adults with a limb amputation managed with a one- or two-stage osseointegration procedure with follow-up reporting of complications. Results. A total of 19 studies were included: four one-stage, 14 two-stage, and one article with both one- and two-stage groups. Superficial infection was the most common complication (one-stage: 38% vs two-stage: 52%). There was a notable difference in the incidence of osteomyelitis (one-stage: nil vs two-stage: 10%) and implant failure (one-stage: 1% vs two-stage: 9%). Fracture incidence was equivocal (one-stage: 13% vs two-stage: 12%), and comparison of soft-tissue, stoma, and mechanical related complications was not possible. Conclusion. This review suggests that the one-stage approach is favourable compared to the two-stage, because the incidence of complications was slightly lower in the one-stage cohort, with a pertinent difference in the incidence of osteomyelitis and implant failure. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2023;4(7):539–550


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1267 - 1271
1 Sep 2005
Allami MK Jamil W Fourie B Ashton V Gregg PJ

The Department of Health and the Public Health Laboratory Service established the Nosocomial Infection National Surveillance Scheme in order to standardise the collection of information about infections acquired in hospital in the United Kingdom and provide national data with which hospitals could measure their own performance. The definition of superficial incisional infection (skin and subcutaneous tissue), set by the Center for Disease Control (CDC), should meet at least one of the defined criteria which would confirm the diagnosis and determine the need for specific treatment. We have assessed the interobserver reliability of the criteria for superficial incisional infection set by the CDC in our current practice. The incisional site of 50 patients who had an elective primary arthroplasty of the hip or knee was evaluated independently by two orthopaedic clinical research fellows and two orthopaedic ward sisters for the presence or absence of surgical-site infection. Interobserver reliability was assessed by comparison of the criteria for wound infection used by the four observers using kappa reliability coefficients. Our study demonstrated that some of the components of the current CDC criteria were unreliable and we recommend their revision


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 85-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 104 - 104
1 Feb 2003
Abudu A Sivardeen KAZ Grimer RJ Noy M
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Deep prosthetic infections are a significant cause of failure after arthroplastic surgery. Superficial wound infections are a risk factor for deep infections. We aimed to quantify the risk of deep infection after superficial wound infections, and analyse the microbiology of organisms grown. We defused Superficial Infection according to the definition used by the Centre for Disease Control, and Deep Infection according to the Swedish Hip Register. We retrospectively analysed the results of 6782 THR and TKRs performed consecutively from 1988–1998. We analysed patient records, radiology and microbiological data. The latter collected prospectively by our infection control team. We identified 81 (1. 2%) superficial wound infections, however we had to exclude 3 due to poor follow-up. Of the 78 patients studied, mean age was 71 (23–89), 50 were female, 28 male, 41 THR, 37 TKR and follow-up was a mean 49 months (12–130). The majority (81%) of organisms grown in the superficial wound infections were gram positive Staphylococci. These organisms were most frequently sensitive to Erythromycin or Flucloxacillin. All the superficial infections were treated with antibiotics, 66% settled with less than 6 weeks therapy. Deep prosthetic infections occurred in 10% of superficial infections in both THR and TKR. In 80% of cases the organism in the superficial infection caused the deep infection. Wound dehiscence, haematoma, post-op pyrexia and patient risk factors had no affect on onset of deep infection. However patients who had a wound discharge with positive microbiology and those patients in whom there was clinical doubt about the diagnosis of deep infection and thus had antibiotic therapy for more than six weeks had increased risk of deep sepsis


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 85-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 151 - 151
1 Feb 2003
Al-lami M Fourie B Koreli A Finn P Wilson S Gregg P
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The Department of Health and the Public Health Laboratory Service established the Nosocomial Infection National Surveillance Scheme (NINSS) in response to the need to standardise the collection of information about infections acquired in hospital. This would provide national data that could be used as a ‘benchmark’ by hospitals to measure their own performance. The definition of superficial incisional infection (skin and subcutaneous tissue), set by Centers of Disease Control (CDC), should meet at least one of the following criteria: I: Purulent drainage from the superficial incision. II: The superficial incision yields organisms from the culture of aseptically aspirated fluid or tissue, or from a swab, and pus cells are present. III: At least two of the following symptoms and signs of inflammation: pain or tenderness, localized swelling, redness or heat, and a. the superficial incision is deliberately opened by a surgeon to manage the infection, unless the incision is culture-negative or b. clinician’s diagnosis of superficial incisional infection. This study assessed the interobserver reliability of the superficial incisional infection criteria, set by the CDC, in current practice. The incisional site of 50 consecutive patients, who underwent elective primary joint arthroplasty (Hips & Knees), were evaluated independently by four observers. The most significant results of the study I: All four observers achieved absolute agreement (kappa=1) for Purulent wound discharge and clinical diagnosis of wound infection. II: The four observers obtained good agreement for pain criteria (kappa=0.76, III: There was significant disagreement (fair to poor) between all four observers for the following criteria: Localized swelling (kappa=0.34), Redness (kappa=0.33) and tenderness (kappa = 0.05). This is the first study to assess the reliability of the criteria, as set by the CDC and recommended by NINSS, for the diagnosis of superficial incisional infection and shows the Criterion III is not reliable and we recommend it should be revised. Failure to do so could lead to inaccurate statistics regarding hospital wound infection and detrimental effect on hospital trusts in the setting of league table


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 9 | Pages 766 - 767
13 Sep 2024
Parker MJ


Aims

There is conflicting evidence on the safety of intra-articular injections of hyaluronic acid (HA) or corticosteroids (CSs) before total knee arthroplasty (TKA). We performed a meta-analysis of the relationship between intra-articular injections and subsequent infection rates after TKA.

Methods

We searched PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library for cohort studies that assessed the effect of preoperative injection of drugs into the joint cavity on the infection rate after TKA. The outcomes analyzed included the total infection rate, as well as those for different preoperative injection time periods and different drugs.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 118 - 118
4 Apr 2023
Zhang J Lu V Zhou A Thahir A Krkovic M
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Open tibial fractures can be difficult to manage, with a range of factors that could affect treatment and outcome. We present a large cohort of patients, and analyse which factors have significant associations with infection outcome. Elucidation will allow clinicians to strive for treatment optimisation, and patients to be advised on likely complications. Open tibia fractures treated at a major trauma centre between 2015-2021 were included. Mean age at injury was 55.4 (range 13-102). Infection status was categorized into no infection, superficial infection, and osteomyelitis. Age, mode of injury, polytrauma, fibula status, Gustilo-Anderson (GA) classification, wound contamination, time from injury to: first procedure/definitive plastics procedure/definitive fixation, type of definitive fixation, smoking and diabetic status, and BMI, were collected. Multicollinearity was calculated, with highly correlated factors removed. Multinomial logistic regression was performed. Chi Squared testing, with Post Hoc Bonferroni correction was performed for complex categorical factors. Two hundred forty-four patients with open tibial fractures were included. Forty-five developed superficial infection (18.4%), and thirty-nine developed osteomyelitis (16.0%). Polytrauma, fibula status, and type of definitive fixation were excluded from the multivariate model due to strong multicollinearity with other variables. With reference to the non-infected outcome; superficial infection patients had higher BMI (p<0.01), higher GA grade (p<0.01), osteomyelitis patients had longer time to definitive fixation (p=0.049) and time to definitive plastics procedure (p=0.013), higher GA grade (p<0.01), and positive wound contamination(p=0.015). Poc hoc analysis showed “no infection” was positively associated with GA-I (p=0.029) and GA-II (p<0.01), and negatively associated with GA-IIIC (p<0.01). Osteomyelitis was positively associated with GA-IIIc (p<0.01). This study investigated the associations between the injury and presentation factors that may affect infection outcome. The variables highlighted are the factors clinicians should give extra consideration to when treating cases, and take preventative measures to optimize treatment and mitigate infection risk


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 98 - 98
4 Apr 2023
Lu V Tennyson M Zhang J Zhou A Thahir A Krkovic M
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Fragility ankles fractures in the geriatric population are challenging to manage, due to fracture instability, soft tissue compromise, patient co-morbidities. Traditional management options include open reduction internal fixation, or conservative treatment, both of which are fraught with high complication rates. We aimed to present functional outcomes of elderly patients with fragility ankle fractures treated with tibiotalocalcaneal nails. 171 patients received a tibiotalocalcaneal nail over a six-year period, but only twenty met the inclusion criteria of being over sixty and having poor bone stock, verified by radiological evidence of osteopenia or history of fragility fractures. Primary outcome was mortality risk from co-morbidities, according to the Charlson co-morbidity index (CCI), and patients’ post-operative mobility status compared to pre-operative mobility. Secondary outcomes include intra-operative and post-operative complications, six-month mortality rate, time to mobilisation and union. The mean age was 77.82 years old, five of whom are type 2 diabetics. The average CCI was 5.05. Thirteen patients returned to their pre-operative mobility state. Patients with low CCI are more likely to return to pre-operative mobility status (p=0.16; OR=4.00). Average time to bone union and mobilisation were 92.5 days and 7.63 days, respectively. Mean post-operative AOFAS ankle-hindfoot and Olerud-Molander scores were 53.0 (range 17-88) and 50.9 (range 20-85), respectively. There were four cases of broken distal locking screws, and four cases of superficial infection. Patients with high CCI were more likely to acquire superficial infections (p=0.264, OR=3.857). There were no deep infections, periprosthetic fractures, nail breakages, non-unions. TTC nailing is an effective treatment methodology for low-demand geriatric patients with fragility ankle fractures. This technique leads to low complication rates and early mobilisation. It is not a life-changing procedure, with many able to return to their pre-operative mobility status, which is important for preventing the loss of socioeconomic independence


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 6 - 6
10 Jun 2024
Bethel J Najefi A Davies M Gosney E Patel K Ahluwalia R
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Introduction. Hindfoot intramedullary nail fixation (HFN) or fibula pro-tibial screw fixation (PTS) are surgical options for ankle fractures in patients with multiple co-morbidities; we compared their outcomes. Methods. A retrospective review of 135 patients who underwent HFN fixation (87 patients) or PTS fixation (48 patients) for ankle fractures (AO/OTA A/B/C) from 5 major trauma centres. Patient demographic data, co-morbidities, Charlson Co-morbidity Index Score (CCIS), weight-bearing, and post-operative complications were recorded. Radiographs were assessed for non-union and anatomical reduction. Results. HFN estimated 10-year survival was 27±31% and was 48±37% for PTS (p<0.001). Average time to full weightbearing (FWB) in the HFN group was 1.7±3.3 weeks compared to 7.8±3.8 weeks in the PTS group (p<0.001). Despite this, HFN fixation carried a greater VTE risk (p=0.02). HFN accompanied by joint preparation had greater risk of infection (p=0.01), metalwork failure (p=0.02) and wound breakdown (p=0.01). The overall complication rate in diabetic patients was 56%, but 76% in HFN patients. In the HFN group 17 (20%) patients died at 1 year. Patients with open fractures(p=0.01), dementia (p<0.05), and a higher CCIS (p=0.04) were more likely to die after HFN surgery. Age and co-morbidity matched data showed a higher rate of complications and mortality in those above 75 years fixed with a HFN, irrespective of CCIS. In those between 60–75 years, there was a greater risk of superficial infection and mortality after HFN, irrespective of CCIS. These complications were not seen after PTS. Conclusion. HFN carries a greater risk of superficial infections, VTE and mortality compared to PTS, independent of age and CCIS. Diabetes leads to a greater comparative risk of deep infections, wound breakdown and non-union in HFN. Alternative methods of fixation (e.g. PTS) should be considered before HFN. HFN may be suitable in selective indications where other methods are not appropriate


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 4 | Pages 227 - 235
1 Apr 2021
Makaram NS Leow JM Clement ND Oliver WM Ng ZH Simpson C Keating JF

Aims. The primary aim of this study was to identify independent predictors associated with nonunion and delayed union of tibial diaphyseal fractures treated with intramedullary nailing. The secondary aim was to assess the Radiological Union Scale for Tibial fractures (RUST) score as an early predictor of tibial fracture nonunion. Methods. A consecutive series of 647 patients who underwent intramedullary nailing for tibial diaphyseal fractures were identified from a trauma database. Demographic data, comorbidities, smoking status, alcohol consumption, use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and steroid use were documented. Details regarding mechanism of injury, fracture classification, complications, and further surgery were recorded. Nonunion was defined as the requirement for revision surgery to achieve union. Delayed union was defined as a RUST score < 10 at six months postoperatively. Results. There were 41 nonunions (6.3%), of which 13 were infected (31.7%), and 77 delayed unions (11.9%). There were 127 open fractures (19.6%). Adjusting for confounding variables, NSAID use (odds ratio (OR) 3.50; p = 0.042), superficial infection (OR 3.00; p = 0.026), open fractures (OR 5.44; p < 0.001), and high-energy mechanism (OR 2.51; p = 0.040) were independently associated with nonunion. Smoking (OR 1.76; p = 0.034), open fracture (OR 2.82; p = 0.001), and high-energy mechanism (OR 1.81; p = 0.030) were independent predictors associated with delayed union. The RUST score at six-week follow-up was highly predictive of nonunion (sensitivity and specificity of 75%). Conclusion. NSAID use, high-energy mechanisms, open fractures, and superficial infection were independently associated with nonunion in patients with tibial diaphyseal fractures treated with intramedullary nailing. The six-week RUST score may be useful in identifying patients at risk of nonunion. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(4):227–235


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 9, Issue 11 | Pages 778 - 788
1 Nov 2020
Xu H Yang J Xie J Huang Z Huang Q Cao G Pei F

Aims. The efficacy and safety of intrawound vancomycin for preventing surgical site infection in primary hip and knee arthroplasty is uncertain. Methods. A systematic review of the literature was conducted, indexed from inception to March 2020 in PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, Embase, and Google Scholar databases. All studies evaluating the efficacy and/or safety of intrawound vancomycin in patients who underwent primary hip and knee arthroplasty were included. Incidence of periprosthetic joint infection (PJI), superficial infection, aseptic wound complications, acute kidney injury, anaphylactic reaction, and ototoxicity were meta-analyzed. Results were reported as odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). The quality of included studies was assessed using the risk of bias in non-randomized studies of interventions (ROBINS-I) assessment tool. Results. Nine studies involving 4,607 patients were included. Intrawound vancomycin was associated with lower incidence of PJI (30 patients (1.20%) vs 58 control patients (2.75%); OR 0.44, 95% CI 0.28 to 0.69) and simultaneous acute kidney injury (four patients (0.28%) vs four control patients (0.35%), OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.19 to 2.55). However, it did not reduce risk of superficial infection (four patients (0.67%) vs six control patients (1.60%), OR 0.60, 95% CI 0.17 to 2.12) and was associated with higher incidence of aseptic wound complications (23 patients (2.15%) vs eight in control patients (0.96%), OR 2.39, 95% CI 1.09 to 5.23). Four studies reported no anaphylactic reactions and three studies reported no ototoxicity in any patient group. Conclusion. The current literature suggests that intrawound vancomycin used in primary hip and knee arthroplasty may reduce incidence of PJI, but it may also increase risk of aseptic wound complications. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2020;9(11):778–788


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1099 - 1107
1 Oct 2023
Henry JK Shaffrey I Wishman M Palma Munita J Zhu J Cody E Ellis S Deland J Demetracopoulos C

Aims. The Vantage Total Ankle System is a fourth-generation low-profile fixed-bearing implant that has been available since 2016. We aimed to describe our early experience with this implant. Methods. This is a single-centre retrospective review of patients who underwent primary total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) with a Vantage implant between November 2017 and February 2020, with a minimum of two years’ follow-up. Four surgeons contributed patients. The primary outcome was reoperation and revision rate of the Vantage implant at two years. Secondary outcomes included radiological alignment, peri-implant complications, and pre- and postoperative patient-reported outcomes. Results. There were 168 patients (171 ankles) included with a mean follow-up of 2.81 years (2 to 4.6) and mean age of 63.0 years (SD 9.4). Of the ten ankles with implant failure (5.8%), six had loosening of the tibial component. In the remaining four failed implants, one was due to periprosthetic joint infection (PJI), one was due to loosening of the talar component, and two were due to loosening of both the tibial and talar components. Seven patients underwent reoperation: irrigation and debridement for superficial infection (n = 4); bone grafting for cysts (n = 2); and open reduction internal fixation (n = 1). Asymptomatic peri-implant lucency/subsidence occurred in 20.1% of ankles, with the majority involving the tibial component (n = 25). There were statistically significant improvements in PROMs in all domains. Conclusion. Short-term results of this implant demonstrate early survival comparable to the reported survivorship of similar low-profile, non-stemmed implants. Radiological lucency occurred more commonly at the tibial component, and revisions occurred primarily due to loosening of the tibial component. Further research is needed to evaluate longer-term survivorship. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2023;105-B(10):1099–1107


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 31 - 31
1 Dec 2021
Lu V Zhang J Thahir A Krkovic M
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Abstract. Objectives. Current literature on pilon fracture includes a range of different management strategies, however there is no universal treatment algorithm. We aim to determine clinical outcomes in patients with open and closed pilon fractures, managed using a treatment algorithm applied consistently over the span of this study. Methods. 135 patients over a 6-year period were included. Primary outcome was AOFAS score at 3, 6, 12-months post-injury. Secondary outcomes include time to partial weight-bear (PWB), full weight-bear (FWB), bone union time, follow-up time. AO/OTA classification was used (43A: n=23, 43B: n=30, 43C: n=82). Treatment algorithm consisted of fine wire fixator (FWF) for severely comminuted closed fractures (AO/OTA type 43C3), or open fractures with severe soft tissue injury (GA type 3). Otherwise, open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) was performed. When required, minimally invasive osteosynthesis was performed in combination with FWF to improve joint congruency. Results. Mean AOFAS score 3, 6, and 12 months post-treatment for open and closed fracture patients were 44.12 and 53.99 (p=0.007), 62.38 and 67.68 (p=0.203), 78.44 and 84.06 (p=0.256), respectively. 119 of 141 fractures healed without further intervention (84.4%). Average time to union was 51.46 and 36.48 weeks for open and closed fractures, respectively (p=0.019). On average, open, and closed fracture patients took 12.29 and 10.76 weeks to PWB (p=0.361); 24.04 and 20.31 weeks to FWB (p=0.235), respectively. Common complications for open fractures were non-union (24%), post-traumatic arthritis (16%); for closed fractures they were post-traumatic arthritis (25%), superficial infection (22%). Open fracture was a risk factor for non-union (p=0.042;OR=2.558,95% CI 1.016–6.441), bone defect (p=0.001;OR=5.973,95% CI 1.986–17.967), and superficial infection (p<0.001;OR=4.167,95% CI 1.978–8.781). Conclusions. FWF with minimally invasive osteosynthesis, where required for severely comminuted closed fractures, and FWF for open fractures with severe soft tissue injury, are safe methods achieving low complication rates and good functional recovery


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 1 | Pages 66 - 71
27 Jan 2020
Moriarty P Kayani B Wallace C Chang J Plastow R Haddad FS

Aims. Graft infection following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) may lead to septic arthritis requiring multiple irrigation and debridement procedures, staged revision operations, and prolonged courses of antibiotics. To our knowledge, there are no previous studies reporting on how gentamicin pre-soaking of hamstring grafts influences infection rates following ACLR. We set out to examine this in our study accordingly. Methods. This retrospective study included 2,000 patients (1,156 males and 844 females) who underwent primary ACLR with hamstring autografts between 2007 to 2017. This included 1,063 patients who received pre-soaked saline hamstring grafts for ACLR followed by 937 patients who received pre-soaked gentamicin hamstring grafts for ACLR. All operative procedures were completed by a single surgeon using a standardized surgical technique. Medical notes were reviewed and data relating to the following outcomes recorded: postoperative infection, clinical progress, causative organisms, management received, and outcomes. Results. Superficial wound infection developed in 14 patients (1.31 %) receiving pre-saline soaked hamstring grafts compared to 13 patients (1.38 %) receiving pre-gentamicin soaked hamstring grafts, and this finding was not statistically significant (p = 0.692). All superficial wound infections were treated with oral antibiotics with no further complications. There were no recorded cases of septic arthritis in patients receiving pre-gentamicin soaked grafts compared to nine patients (0.85%) receiving pre-saline soaked grafts, which was statistically significant (p = 0.004). Conclusion. Pre-soaking hamstring autographs in gentamicin does not affect superficial infection rates but does reduce deep intra-articular infection rates compared to pre-soaking hamstring grafts in saline alone. These findings suggest that pre-soaking hamstring autografts in gentamicin provides an effective surgical technique for reducing intra-articular infection rates following ACLR. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(1):66–71


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 7 | Pages 589 - 595
1 Jul 2022
Joo PY Chen AF Richards J Law TY Taylor K Marchand K Clark G Collopy D Marchand RC Roche M Mont MA Malkani AL

Aims. The aim of this study was to report patient and clinical outcomes following robotic-assisted total knee arthroplasty (RA-TKA) at multiple institutions with a minimum two-year follow-up. Methods. This was a multicentre registry study from October 2016 to June 2021 that included 861 primary RA-TKA patients who completed at least one pre- and postoperative patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) questionnaire, including Forgotten Joint Score (FJS), Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcomes Score for Joint Replacement (KOOS JR), and pain out of 100 points. The mean age was 67 years (35 to 86), 452 were male (53%), mean BMI was 31.5 kg/m. 2. (19 to 58), and 553 (64%) cemented and 308 (36%) cementless implants. Results. There were significant improvements in PROMs over time between preoperative, one- to two-year, and > two-year follow-up, with a mean FJS of 17.5 (SD 18.2), 70.2 (SD 27.8), and 76.7 (SD 25.8; p < 0.001); mean KOOS JR of 51.6 (SD 11.5), 85.1 (SD 13.8), and 87.9 (SD 13.0; p < 0.001); and mean pain scores of 65.7 (SD 20.4), 13.0 (SD 19.1), and 11.3 (SD 19.9; p < 0.001), respectively. There were eight superficial infections (0.9%) and four revisions (0.5%). Conclusion. RA-TKA demonstrated consistent clinical results across multiple institutions with excellent PROMs that continued to improve over time. With the ability to achieve target alignment in the coronal, axial, and sagittal planes and provide intraoperative real-time data to obtain balanced gaps, RA-TKA demonstrated excellent clinical outcomes and PROMs in this patient population. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2022;3(7):589–595


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 74 - 74
4 Apr 2023
Mariscal G Barrés M Barrios C Tintó M Baixauli F
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To conduct a meta-analysis for intertrochanteric hip fractures comparing in terms of efficacy and safety short versus long intralomedullary nails. A pubmed search of the last 10 years for intertrochanteric fracture 31A1-31A3 according to the AO/OTA classification was performed. Baseline characteristics of each article were obtained, complication measures were analyzed: Peri-implant fracture, reoperations, deep/superficial infection, and mortality. Clinical variables consisted of blood loss (mL), length of stay (days), time of surgery (min) and nº of transfusions. Functional outcomes were also recorded. A meta-analysis was performed with Review Manager 5.4. Twelve studies were included, nine were retrospective. The reoperations rate was lower in the short nail group and the peri-implant fracture rate was lower in the long nail group (OR 0.58, 95% CI 0.38 to 0.88) (OR 1.88, 95% CI 1.04 to 3.43). Surgery time and blood loss was significantly higher in the long nail group (MD −12.44, 95% CI −14.60 to −10.28) (MD −19.36, 95% CI −27.24 to −11.48). There were no differences in functional outcomes. The short intramedullary nail has a higher risk of peri-implant fracture; however, the reoperation rate is lower compared to the long nail. Blood loss and surgery time was higher in the long nail group


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 6 - 6
1 Nov 2021
Lu V Zhang J Thahir A Lim JA Krkovic M
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Introduction and Objective. Despite the low incidence of pilon fractures among lower limb injuries, their high-impact nature presents difficulties in surgical management and recovery. Current literature includes a wide range of different management strategies, however there is no universal treatment algorithm. We aim to determine clinical outcomes in patients with open and closed pilon fractures, managed using a treatment algorithm that was applied consistently over the span of this study. Materials and Methods. This retrospective study was conducted at a single institution, including 141 pilon fractures in 135 patients, from August 2014 to January 2021. AO/OTA classification was used to classify fractures. Among closed fractures, 12 had type 43A, 18 had type 43B, 61 had type 43C. Among open fractures, 11 had type 43A, 12 had type 43B, 27 had type 43C. Open fractures were further classified with Gustilo-Anderson (GA); type 1: n=8, type 2: n=10, type 3A: n=12, type 3B: n=20. Our treatment algorithm consisted of fine wire fixator (FWF) for severely comminuted closed fractures (AO/OTA type 43C3), or open fractures with severe soft tissue injury (GA type 3). Otherwise, open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) was performed. When required, minimally invasive osteosynthesis (MIO) was performed in combination with FWF to improve joint congruency. All open fractures, and closed fractures with severe soft tissue injury (skin contusion, fracture blister, severe oedema) were initially treated with temporary ankle-spanning external fixation. For all open fracture patients, surgical debridement, soft tissue cover with a free or pedicled flap were performed. For GA types 1 and 2, this was done with ORIF in the same operating session. Those with severe soft tissue injury (GA type 3) were treated with FWF four to six weeks after soft tissue management was completed. Primary outcome was AOFAS Ankle-Hindfoot score at 3, 6 and 12-months post-treatment. Secondary outcomes include time to partial weight-bear (PWB) and full weight-bear (FWB), bone union time. All complications were recorded. Results. Mean AOFAS score 3, 6, and 12 months post-treatment for open and closed fracture patients were 44.12 and 53.99 (p=0.007), 62.38 and 67.68 (p=0.203), 78.44 and 84.06 (p=0.256), respectively. 119 of the 141 fractures healed without further intervention (84.4%). Average time to bone union was 51.46 and 36.48 weeks for open and closed fractures, respectively (p=0.019). Union took longer in closed fracture patients treated with FWF than ORIF (p=0.025). On average, open and closed fracture patients took 12.29 and 10.76 weeks to PWB (p=0.361); 24.04 and 20.31 weeks to FWB (p=0.235), respectively. Common complications for open fractures were non-union (24%), post-traumatic arthritis (16%); for closed fractures they were post-traumatic arthritis (25%), superficial infection (22%). Open fracture was a risk factor for non-union (p=0.042; OR=2.558, 95% CI 1.016–6.441), bone defect (p=0.001; OR=5.973, 95% CI 1.986–17.967), and superficial infection (p<0.001; OR=4.167, 95% CI 1.978–8.781). Conclusions. The use of a two-staged approach involving temporary external fixation followed by definitive fixation, provides a stable milieu for soft tissue recovery. FWF combined with MIO, where required for severely comminuted closed fractures, and FWF for open fractures with severe soft tissue injury, are safe methods achieving low complication rates and good functional recovery


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 101 - 101
1 Nov 2016
Taneja A Khong H Sharma R Smith C Railton P Puloski S Johnston K Powell J
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Patients undergoing Joint Arthroplasty received a significant proportion of blood transfusions. In this study, we compared the risk of Deep Infection, and Superficial Infection post operation following Primary Total Hip or Knee replacement in blood-transfused and non-blood-transfused patients. Cohort of patients who underwent primary total Hip or Knee Arthroplasty from April 2012 to March 2015 in Alberta. Patient characteristics, comorbidity, received blood transfusion were collected from electronic medical records, operating room information systems, discharge abstract database, provincial clinical risk grouper data. Deep Infection and Superficial Infection were captured from Provincial Surgical Site Infection Surveillance data. Deep Infection include deep incisional and organ/space infections. Logistic regression analysis were used to compare Deep Infection and Superficial Infection in blood-transfused and non-blood-transfused cohorts, and risk-adjusted for age, gender, procedure type, and co-morbidities. Our study cohort contains 27891 patients, with mean of age at admission was 66.3±10.4, 57.5% female, 49.3% had 1 or more comorbidities. 58.8% underwent Knee Replacement. 11.1% received blood transfusion during hospital stay (Total Hip Replacement (THR) =13.1% and Total Knee Replacement (TKR) =9.7%,). 1.1% had Deep Infection (THR=1.4% and TKR=0.9%) and 0.5% had Superficial Infection (THR=0.5% and TKR=0.5%). Blood-transfused patients got 1.7% Deep Infection and 1.0% Superficial infection. Non-blood-transfused patients got 1.0% Deep Infection and 0.5% Superficial infection. Controlling for age, gender, procedure type, and co-morbidities, the odds of Deep Infection were 1.6 times higher for blood-transfused patients than for non-blood-transfused patients (adjusted odds ratio [OR]=1.6, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.2–2.2], p=0.004). The odds of Superficial Infection were 2.0 times higher for transfused patients (adjusted OR=2.0, 95% CI [1.3–3.0], p=0.002). Blood transfusion increases Deep Infection and Superficial Infection post-surgery following Primary Total Knee or Hip Replacement. This finding suggests to reduce the unnecessary blood transfusion for patients considering Joint Arthroplasty. Reducing the blood transfusion will save the inpatient cost and decrease the infective complications post-surgery in Hip or Knee Arthroplasty patients


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 12 - 12
17 Jun 2024
Shah K Battle J Hepple S Harries B Winson I Robinson P
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Background. Open subtalar arthrodesis has been associated with a moderate rate of non-union, as high 16.3%, and high rates of infection and nerve injury. Performing this operation arthroscopically serves to limit the disruption to the soft tissue envelope, improve union rates and reduce infection. Our study describes our outcomes and experience of this operation. Method. Retrospective review of all patients who underwent an arthroscopic subtalar arthrodesis between 2023 and 2008. We excluded patients undergoing concurrent adjacent joint arthrodesis. The primary aim was to report on rates of union. Secondary outcomes included reporting on conversion to open procedure, duration of surgery, infection, and iatrogenic injury to surrounding structures. Results. 135 patients were included in the final analysis. 129 patients (95.5%) achieved union. The median time to fusion was 98 days. All cases were performed through sinus tarsi portals. 38 cases were performed with an additional posterolateral portal. Most cases (107/77%) were performed with 2 screws. 3 cases (2.2%) were converted to open procedures. The median tourniquet time was 86 minutes but available in only 88 (65%) cases. There were 4 (2.9%) superficial infections and no deep infections. 1 patient sustained an injury to FHL and there were no reported nerve injuries. Conclusions. At present this is the largest series of arthroscopic subtalar arthrodeses. We demonstrate that this operation can achieve high rates of union with low rates of infection with an equally low likelihood of needing to convert to an open procedure with modest operative times. In our experience the addition of a posterolateral portal does not appear to increase the incidence of nerve injury and aids in the visualisation of all 3 facets


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 4 - 4
7 Nov 2023
Tshisikule R
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Our study sought to establish the necessity of prolonged pre-operative antibiotic prophylaxis in patients presenting with zone II and zone V acute flexor tendon injuries (FTI). We hypothesized that a single dose of prophylactic antibiotic was adequate in prevention of post-operative wound infection in acute zone II and V FTI. This was a prospective study of 116 patients who presented with zone II and zone V acute FTI. The study included patients who were 18 years and older. Those with macroscopic contamination, immunocompromised, open fractures, bite injuries, and crush injuries were excluded. Patients were randomised into a group receiving a single dose of prophylactic antibiotic and another group receiving a continuous 8 hourly antibiotic doses until the day of surgery. Each group was subdivided into occupational and non-occupational injuries. Their post-operative wound outcomes were documented 10 – 14 days after surgery. The wound outcome was reported as no infection, superficial infection (treated with wound dressings), and deep infection (requiring surgical debridement). There was 0.9% rate of deep post-operative wound infections, which was a single zone V acute FTI case in a single dose prophylactic antibiotic group. There was a 7.8% superficial post-operative wound infection rate, which was mainly zone II acute FTI in both antibiotic groups. There was a strong association between zone II acute FTI and post-operative wound infection (p < 0.05). There was no association between (antibiotic dosage or place of injury) with post-operative wound infection (p > 0.05). There is no benefit in prescribing prolonged pre-operative antibiotic in patients with acute, simple lacerations to zone II and zone V FTI if there is no macroscopic wound contamination


Abstract. INTRODUCTION. The anatomic distal femoral locking plate (DF-LCP) has simplified the management of supracondylar femoral fractures with stable knee prostheses. Osteoporosis and comminution seem manageable, but at times, the construct does not permit early mobilization. Considerable soft tissue stripping during open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) may delay union. Biological plating offsets this disadvantage, minimizing morbidity. Materials. Thirty comminuted periprosthetic supracondylar fractures were operated from October 2010 to August 2016. Fifteen (group A) were treated with ORIF, and fifteen (group B) with closed (biological) plating using the anatomical DF-LCP. Post-operatively, standard rehabilitation protocol was followed in all, with hinged-knee-brace supported physiotherapy. Clinico-radiological follow-up was done at 3 months, 6 months, and then yearly (average duration, 30 months), and time to union, complications, failure rates and function were evaluated. Results. Average time to union was 4.5 months (range, 3–6 months) in group A, and 3.5 months (range, 2.5–5 months) in group B. Primary bone grafting was done in twelve patients (all group A). At final follow-up, all fractures had healed, and all (but two) patients were walking unsupported, with no pain or deformity, with average knee range of motion (ROM) of 90° (range, 55 to 100°). Two patients had superficial infection (group A), two had knee stiffness (group A), one had shortening of 1.5cm (group B) and one had valgus malalignment of 10 degrees (group B). Conclusion. Biological plating in comminuted supracondylar fractures about stable TKA prostheses is an excellent option, may obviate need for bone grafting, and reducing complications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 56 - 56
1 Nov 2022
Thimmegowda A Gajula P Phadnis J Guryel E
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Abstract. Aim. To identify the difference in infection rates in ankle fracture surgery in Laminar and Non Laminar flow theatres. Background. The infection rates in ankle fracture surgery range between 1–8%. The risk factors include diabetes, alcoholism, smoking, open fractures, osteoporotic fractures in the elderly, and high BMI. Laminar flow has been shown to reduce infections in Arthroplasty surgeries. Therefore, it has become mandatory to use in those procedures. However, it's not the same with ankle fracture surgery. Materials and Methods. It was a retrospective study. The data was collected over a 5 year period between 2015 and 2020. It was collected from Blue spier, Panda, and theatre register. There were 536 cases in each group i.e. Laminar flow (LF) and Non-Laminar flow (NLF). The variables looked at were: 1. Superficial and deep infection rates in LF and NLF theatres, 2. The number of open fractures, 3. Type of ankle fractures (Bimalleolar, Trimalleolar), 4. The number of infected cases who had external fixation prior to ORIF, 5. The number of cases that had Plastics reconstructive procedures, and 6. The grade of the operating surgeon. Conclusions. Superficial infection rate between NLF and LF was not significantly different 11.5% vs 10.3%. The deep infection rate was statistically significant against NLF theatres at 6.34% vs 4.29%. The open fracture was a major contributing factor for deep SSI (14.7% vs 26%). The application of an external fixator in LF and NLF theatres did not alter the infection. rates. Bimalleolar fractures were associated with a higher infection rate


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 8 - 8
4 Apr 2023
Fridberg M Ghaffari A Husum H Rahbek O Kold S
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There is no consensus on how to evaluate and grade pin site infection. A precise, objective and reliable pin site infectious score is warranted. The literature was reviewed for pin site infection classification systems, The Modified Gordon Score (MGS) grade 0-6 was used. The aim was to test the reliability of The Modified Gordon Infection Score. The observed agreement and inter-rater reliability were investigated between nurse and doctors. MGS was performed in the outpatient clinic at Aalborg University Hospital, Denmark on 1472 pin sites in 119 patients by one nurse and one of three orthopaedic surgeons blinded to each other's judgement. The data was stored in a Red Cap Database for further statistical analysis. The observed agreement between the nurse and the 3 orthopaedic surgeons was evaluated with a one-way random-effect model with interclass correlation with absolute agreement. Furthermore the observed agreement for each of the 3 surgeons with the nurse was calculated. The distribution of MGS infection grade in the 1472 pin sites was: Grade 0; n=1372, Grade 1; n=32, Grade 2; n=39, Grade 3; n=24, Grade 4; n=5, Grade 5; n=0, Grade 6; n=0. The observed agreement between the nurse and the surgeons was calculated as 98%. The ICC estimated between nurse and the surgeons was 0,8943 (ICC >0,85 = reliable). The grading was done by three different doctors with an agreement with the nurse as follows. Rater1 (n=416) =99,5 %, Rater2 (n=1440) =97,4%, Rater3 (n=1440) =96,6%. A limitation to this study is that the dataset represents mostly clean pin sites with MGS 0. Only 100 pin sites had signs of superficial infection MGS 1-4 none above 4. We found that the MGS infection score is highly reliable for low grade infections but we cannot conclude on reliability in severe infections


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 22 - 22
8 May 2024
Brookes M Kakwani R Townshend D Murty A
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Background. Traditionally, the extended lateral approach (ELA) was the favoured approch for calcaneal fractures, but has been reported to have high incidence of wound complications. There has been a move amongst surgeons in the United Kingdom towards the sinus tarsi approach (STA) due to its minimally invasive nature, attempting to reduce such complications. Aims. To evaluate outcomes of ELA and STA for all consecutive calcaneal fracture fixation in our institution over a 10yr period. Method. Retrospective cohort study of all calcaneal fractures surgically treated with either approach between January 2008 and January 2018. Anatomic restoration was assessed radiologically by the change in Gissane's and Bohler's angles and calcaneal width. Post-operative complications including metalwork removal were recorded. Results. 35 calcaneal fractures were managed surgically via either approach during this period (21 STA and 14 ELA). There was a statistically significant improvement in the radiological makers when the post-operative films were compared to pre-operative ones. When the post-operative films from the 2 groups were compared against each other, there was no significant difference (p< 0.05) in any of the radiological markers. In the ELA group, 2 patients (14.3%) developed deep infections requiring metalwork removal and 1 had delayed wound healing (7.1%). No deep infections occurred with the STA; 1 patient (4.8%) had a superficial infection, treated with antibiotics. Of patients who had metalwork in situ for more than 1 year, 37.5% of the STA group required removal due to pain compared to only 16.7% with ELA. Conclusions. We have moved from ELA to STA. Our results have shown no difference in restoration of calcaneal anatomy but with a decrease in post-operative wound complications including infection. However, we have shown an increase in metalware removal in the STA group and it is important to ascertain the cause and significance of this


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 69 - 69
23 Feb 2023
Morgan S Wall C de Steiger R Graves S Page R Lorimer M
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The aim of this study was to examine the incidence of obesity in patients undergoing primary total shoulder replacement (TSR) (stemmed and reverse) for osteoarthritis (OA) in Australia compared to the incidence of obesity in the general population. A 2017–18 cohort of 2,621 patients from the Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry (AOANJRR) who underwent TSR, were compared with matched controls from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) National Health Survey from the same period. The two groups were analysed according to BMI category, sex and age. According to the 2017–18 National Health Survey, 35.6% of Australian adults are overweight and 31.3% are obese. Of the primary TSR cases performed, 34.2% were overweight and 28.6% were obese. The relative risk of requiring TSR for OA increased with increasing BMI category. Class-3 obese females, aged 55–64, were 8.9 times more likely to require TSR compared to normal weight counterparts. Males in the same age and BMI category were 2.5 times more likely. Class-3 obese patients underwent TSR 4 years (female) and 7 years (male) sooner than their normal weight counterparts. Our findings suggest that the obese population is at risk for early and more frequent TSR for OA. Previous studies demonstrate that obese patients undergoing TSR also exhibit increased risks of longer operative times, higher superficial infection rates, higher periprosthetic fracture rates, significantly reduced post-operative forward flexion range and greater revision rates. Obesity significantly increases the risk of requiring TSR. To our knowledge this is the first study to publish data pertaining to age and BMI stratification of TSR Societal efforts are vital to diminish the prevalence and burden of obesity related TSR. There may well be reversible pathophysiology in the obese population to address prior to surgery (adipokines, leptin, NMDA receptor upregulation). Surgery occurs due to recalcitrant or increased pain despite non-op Mx


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 24 - 24
23 Apr 2024
Thompson E James L Narayan B Peterson N
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Introduction. Management of deformity involving limb length discrepancy (LLD) using intramedullary devices offers significant benefits to both patients and clinicians over traditional external fixation. Following the withdrawal of the PRECICE nail, the Fitbone became the primary implant available for intramedullary lengthening and deformity correction within our service. This consecutive series illustrates the advantages and complications associated with the use of this device, and describes a novel technique modification for antegrade intramedullary lengthening nails. Materials & Methods. A retrospective cohort review was performed of patient outcomes after treatment with the Fitbone nail at two tertiary referral limb reconstruction services (one adult, one paediatric) between January 2021 to December 2023. Aetiology, indications, initial and final LLD, use of concomitant rail assisted deformity correction (ORDER), removal time and healing index were assessed. Complications of treatment were evaluated and described in detail, alongside technique modifications to reduce the rate of these complications. Results. 21 nails (18 femoral, 2 tibial, 1 humeral) were inserted in 6 adult and 13 paediatric patients. Post-traumatic and congenital/developmental LLD were the most common indications for surgery in the adult and paediatric cohorts respectively. ORDER was employed in 11 cases (9 femurs and 2 tibias). Treatment goals were achieved in all but one case. Complications included superficial infection, locking bolt migration, periprosthetic fracture and component failure. Seven patients required unplanned returns to theatre. Conclusions. The Fitbone nail is an established option for intramedullary limb lengthening, however its use in the UK has been relatively limited compared to the PRECICE until 2021. Our data helps to define its place for limb lengthening and complex deformity correction in both adult and paediatric patients, including in humeral lengthening and retrograde femoral insertion across an open physis. We have identified important potential risks and novel techniques to simplify surgery and avoid complications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 32 - 32
10 May 2024
Wells Z Zhu M Sim K Schluter D Young SW
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Objectives. Post-infective arthritis is an important sequalae of septic arthritis(SA). While total knee arthroplasty(TKA) is an effective treatment for said arthritis, previous SA brings challenges for treatment planning. Using prospectively collected data from a cohort of patients with knee SA, this study aims to determine the proportion of patients requiring eventual TKA, and risk factors of developing prosthetic joint Infection(PJI). Methods. All cases of 1st episode knee SA from 01/01/2000 to 31/12/2020 were identified in the Auckland region. Patient records and NZJR records of all cases were searched to identify subsequent TKA. PJI following arthroplasty was identified using ICM criteria. Univariate and multivariate analysis was performed to determine risk factors for developing PJI. Results. 854 cases of native SA were identified. Of these, 71 (8.3%) progressed to TKA. Average time from completion of SA treatment to TKA was 3.8 years (SD 3.4). At an average follow-up of 7.8 years(1–19.6), 11(15.5%) developed PJI and required reoperation in the form of; DAIR (n =5), revision (n= 6). A further 4 were readmitted for superficial infections. Five-year and ten-year implant survival was 90.0% and 87.1%, significantly lower than average survival of TKA in the NZJR (97.3% at 5 years and 95.7% at 10). Average time between completion of SA treatment and TKA was 2.1 years in those developing PJI, vs 4.1 years in those who did not(p = 0.0019). 4.8% of cases developed PJI when TKA was performed >5 years after SA, compared with 20% risk of PJI within 5 years(p=0.16). Multivariate analysis showed no significant impact of pre-defined medical risk factors or demographic on outcomes. Conclusion. A significant percentage of patients required TKA following knee SA. Time lapsed from SA treatment completion to TKA is an important risk factor for developing PJI


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 99 - 99
4 Apr 2023
Lu V Tennyson M Fortune M Zhou A Krkovic M
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Fragility ankle fractures are traditionally managed conservatively or with open reduction internal fixation (ORIF). Tibiotalocalcaneal (TTC) fusion is an alternative option for the geriatric patient. This systematic review and meta-analysis provides a detailed analysis of the functional and clinical outcomes of hindfoot nailing for fragility ankle fractures presented so far in the literature. A systematic search was performed on MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Scopus, Web of Science, identifying fourteen studies for inclusion. Studies including patients over 60 with a fragility ankle fracture, treated with TTC nail were included. Patients with a previous fracture of the ipsilateral limb, fibular nails, and pathological fractures were excluded. Subgroup analyses were performed according to (1) open vs closed fractures, (2) immediate post-operative FWB vs post-operative NWB, (3) majority of cohort are diabetics vs minority of cohort are diabetics. Meta-regression analyses were done to explore sources of heterogeneity, and publication bias was assessed using Egger's test. The pooled proportion of superficial infection, deep infection, implant failure, malunion, and all-cause mortality was 0.10 (95%CI:0.06-0.16; I2=44%), 0.08 (95%CI:0.06-0.11, I2=0%), 0.11 (95%CI:0.07-0.15, I2=0%), 0.11 (95%CI:0.06-0.18; I2=51%), and 0.27 (95%CI:0.20-0.34; I2=11%), respectively. The pooled mean post-operative OMAS score was 54.07 (95%CI:48.98-59.16; I2=85%). The best-fitting meta-regression model included age and percentage of male patients as covariates (p=0.0263), and were inversely correlated with higher OMAS scores. Subgroup analyses showed that studies with a majority of diabetics had a higher proportion of implant failure (p=0.0340) and surgical infection (p=0.0096), and a lower chance of returning to pre-injury mobility than studies with a minority of diabetics (p=0.0385). Egger's test (p=0.56) showed no significant publication bias. TTC nailing is an adequate alternative option for fragility ankle fractures. However, current evidence includes mainly case series with inconsistent outcome measures reported and post-operative rehabilitation protocols. Prospective RCTs with long follow-up times and large cohort sizes are needed to clearly guide the use of TTC nailing for ankle fractures


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 13 - 13
2 May 2024
Wijesekera M East J Chan CD Hadfield J As-Sultany M Kassam A Petheram T Jones HW Palan J Jain S
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This large UK multicentre study evaluates clinical outcomes and identifies factors associated with local complication following PFR for non-oncological conditions. 132 patients across four UK centres underwent PFR from 01/08/2004-28/03/2023 with median follow-up of 1.9 (Q10.5-Q34.2) years. 75 (56.8%) patients were female and the mean age was 74.0 (SD 11.7) years. 103 (78%) patients had Charleston Comorbidity Index ≥3. ASA class was III or IV in 66.6%. Indications were infected revision (39, 29.5%), periprosthetic fracture (36, 27.3%), acute trauma (30, 22.7%), aseptic revision (17, 12.9%), failed trauma (nine, 6.8%) and complex primary arthroplasty (one, 0.8%). The primary outcome was the local complication rate. Secondary outcomes were systemic complications, reoperation and mortality rates. Comparisons were made with t-tests and Chi2 tests to investigate patient and surgical factors associated with local complication. Statistical significance was p<0.05. There were 37(28.0%) local complications. These were 18 (13.6%) dislocations, eight (6.1%) prosthetic joint infections, four (3.0%) haematomas, three (2.3%) superficial infections, one (0.8%) wound dehiscence, one (0.8%) sciatic nerve palsy and one (0.8%) femoral perforation. Dislocation mostly occurred in conventional articulations (12, 9.1%) followed by dual-mobility cups (three, 2.3%), constrained cups (two, 1.5%) and hemiarthroplasty (one, 0.8%). Median time to local complication was 30 (Q14-Q3 133) days. Seven (5.3%) patients developed a systemic complication. Thirty-three (25.0%) patients underwent reoperation. Thirty-day and one-year mortality rates were 3.8% and 12.1%, respectively. Longer surgical waiting times (7.9 \[SD 16.9) versus 2.6 \[SD 4.4\] days, p<0.001) and longer operating times (212.5 \[SD 71.8\] versus 189.4 \[SD 59.3\] mins, p=0.0450) were associated with local complication. Due to its high complication rate, PFR should be a salvage option when performed for non-oncological indications. Conventional articulations should be avoided. PFR should be delivered in a timely manner and ideally as dual-consultant cases to reduce operating time


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 17 - 17
24 Nov 2023
Frank F Pomeroy E Hotchen A Stubbs D Ferguson J McNally M
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Aim. Pin site infection (PSI) is a common complication of external fixators. PSI usually presents as a superficial infection which is treated conservatively. This study investigated those rare cases of PSI requiring surgery due to persistent osteomyelitis (OM), after pin removal. Method. In this retrospective cohort study we identified patients who required surgery for an OM after PSI (Checketts-Otterburn Classification Grade 6) between 2011 and 2021. We investigated patient demographics, aetiology of the OM, pathogen and histology, treatment strategies and complications. Infection was confirmed using the 2018 FRI Consensus Definition. Successful outcome was defined as an infection-free interval of at least 24 months following surgery, which was defined as minimum follow-up. Results. Twenty-seven patients were treated due to a pin site infection with an osteomyelitis (22 tibias, 2 humeri, 2 calcanei, 1 radius). 85% identified as male and the median age was 53.9 years. Eighteen infections followed external fixation of fractures, with 4 cases after Ilizarov deformity correction, 2 cases followed ankle fusion and 3 after traction pin insertion. Fifteen patients were classified as BACH Uncomplicated and 12 were BACH Complex. The median follow-up was 3.99 years (2.00–8.05 years). Staphylococci were the most common pathogens (16 MSSA, 2 MRSA, 2 CNS). Polymicrobial infections were present in 5 cases (19%). All surgery was performed in a single stage following the same protocol at one institution. This included deep sampling, debridement, implantation of local antibiotics, culture-specific systemic antibiotics and soft tissue closure. Seven patients required flap coverage (6 local, 1 free flap), which was performed in the same operation. 25 (93%) patients had a successful outcome after one surgery. Two had recurrence of infection which was successfully treated by repeat of the protocol. One patient suffered a fracture through the operated site after a fall. This healed without infection recurrence. Wound leakage after local antibiotic treatment was seen in 3/27 (11%) of cases. All resolved without treatment. After a minimum of 2 years follow up, all patients were infection free at the site of the former osteomyelitis. Conclusions. OM after PSI is uncommon but has major implications for the patient as 7 out of 27 patients needed flap coverage. This reinforces the need for careful pin placement and pin site care to prevent deep infection. These infections require appropriate surgery, not just curettage. All patients in our cohort were infection-free after a minimum follow-up of 2 years suggesting that this protocol is effective


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 24 - 24
1 Dec 2020
Daniels NF Lim JA Thahir A Krkovic M
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Objectives. Pilon fractures represent one of the most surgically challenging fractures in orthopaedics. Different techniques exist for their management, with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) and External fixation (Ex-Fix) the most widely used. Whilst there is a plethora of data regarding these strategies for Pilon fractures as a whole, very limited data exists solely on the management of open Pilon fractures. This study aimed to elucidate how surgical management options can influence postoperative complications, and if this can influence future management protocols. Materials and methods. We conducted a search in PubMed, EMBASE and CENTRAL for postoperative complications and functional outcomes in open pilon fractures in those treated with Ex-Fix vs ORIF (PROSPERO-CRD42020184213). The postoperative complications measured included non-union, mal-union, delayed union, bone grafting, amputation, osteoarthritis, deep infection and superficial infection. Functional outcomes in the form of the AOFAS score was also measured where possible. We were able to carry out a meta-analysis for both deep infections and non-unions. Results. The search yielded 309 results and a total of 18 studies consisting of 484 patients were included. All fractures included were open, and consisted of 64 Gustilo-Anderson Type I, 148 Type II, 103 Type IIIa, 90 Type IIIb and 9 Type IIIc. 60 Type III fractures could not be further separated and 12 were ungraded. Both ORIF and Ex-Fix were found to have statistically similar AOFAS scores (p=0.682). For all included studies, the Ex-Fix group had significantly higher rates of superficial infections (p=0.001), non-unions (p=0.001), osteoarthritis (p=0.001) and bone grafting (p=0.001). The meta-analysis found no significant difference in non-union (pooled OR=0.25, 95% CI: 0.03 to 2.24, p = 0.44) or deep infection rates (pooled OR=1.35, 95% CI: 0.11 to 16.69, p = 0.12) between the ORIF and Ex-fix groups. Conclusion. Based on our study, while Ex-Fix and ORIF have similar functional outcomes, Ex-Fix appears to have a significantly higher risk of postoperative complications which must be considered by surgeons when choosing surgical management options. Further research, ideally in a randomised control trial format, is required to definitively demonstrate ORIF superiority in the management of open pilon fractures


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 90 - 90
10 Feb 2023
Burn P
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Polyimide (MP-1, MMATech, Haifa, Israel), is a high performance aerospace thermoplastic used for its lubricity, stability, inertness and radiation resistance. A wear resistant thin robust bearing is needed for total hip arthroplasty (THR). After independent laboratory testing, in 2006, the author used the material as a bearing in two Reflection (Smith and Nephew, USA) hip surgeries. The first, a revision for polyethylene wear, survives with no evidence of wear, noise, new osteolysis or complications related to the MP-1 bearing after 16 yrs. The second donated his asymptomatic MP-1 hip at 6.5yrs for post-mortem examination. There were no osteoclasts, cellular reaction bland in contrast to that of polyethylene. In 2013 a clinical study with ethical committee approval was started using a Biolox Delta (Ceramtec, Germany) head against a polyimide liner in 97 patients. MMATech sold all liners, irradiated: steam 52:45. Sixteen were re-machined in New Zealand. Acetabular shells were Delta PF (LIMA, Italy). The liner locked by taper. The cohort consisted of 46:51 M:F, and ages 43 to 85, mean 65. Ten received cemented stems. For contralateral surgery, a ceramic or polyethylene liner was used. Initial patients were lower demand, later, more active patients, mountain-biking and running. All patients have on-going follow up, including MP-1 liner revision cases. There has been no measurable wear, or osteolysis around the acetabular components using weight-bearing radiographs. Squeaking within the first 6 weeks was noted in 39 number of cases and subtle increase in palpable friction, (passive rotation at 50 degrees flexion), but then disappeared. There were 6 revisions, four of which were related to cementless Stemsys implants (Evolutis, Italy) fixed distally with proximal linear lucencies in Gruen zones 1 and 7, and 2 and 6. No shells were revised and MP-1 liners were routinely changed to ceramic or polyethylene. The liners showed no head contact at the apex, with highly polished contact areas. There were no deep or superficial infections, but one traumatic anterior dislocation at 7 years associated with 5 mm subsidence of a non-collared stem. The initial squeaking and increased friction was due to the engineering of the liner / shell composite as implanted, not allowing adequate clearance for fluid film lubrication and contributed to by shell distortion during impaction. The revised bearings were “equatorial” rather than polar, and with lack of wear or creep this never fully resolved. Where the clearance was better, function was normal. The “slow” utilization was due to my ongoing concern with clearances not being correct. The revision of 4 Stemsys stems, tribology issues may have contributed, but non “MP-1” / Stemsys combinations outside this study have shown the same response, thought to be due to de-bonding of the hydroxyapatite coating. With correct engineering and clearances, a 3.6 mm thick MP-1 bearing, a surface Ra<0.5, steam sterilized, shows no appreciable wear, and with confidence, can be used as a high performance THR bearing


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1284 - 1291
1 Jul 2021
Carter TH Karunaratne BJ Oliver WM Murray IR White TO Reid JT Duckworth AD

Aims. Acute distal biceps tendon repair reduces fatigue-related pain and minimizes loss of supination of the forearm and strength of flexion of the elbow. We report the short- and long-term outcome following repair using fixation with a cortical button techqniue. Methods. Between October 2010 and July 2018, 102 patients with a mean age of 43 years (19 to 67), including 101 males, underwent distal biceps tendon repair less than six weeks after the injury, using cortical button fixation. The primary short-term outcome measure was the rate of complications. The primary long-term outcome measure was the abbreviated Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (QuickDASH) score. Secondary outcomes included the Oxford Elbow Score (OES), EuroQol five-dimension three-level score (EQ-5D-3L), satisfaction, and return to function. Results. Eight patients (7.8%) had a major complication and 34 (33.3%) had a minor complication. Major complications included re-rupture (n = 3; 2.9%), unrecovered nerve injury (n = 4; 3.9%), and surgery for heterotopic ossification (n = 1; 1.0%). Three patients (2.9%) overall required further surgery for a complication. Minor complications included neurapraxia (n = 27; 26.5%) and superficial infection (n = 7; 6.9%). A total of 33 nerve injuries occurred in 31 patients (30.4%). At a mean follow-up of five years (1 to 9.8) outcomes were available for 86 patients (84.3%). The median QuickDASH, OES, EQ-5D-3L, and satisfaction scores were 1.2 (IQR 0 to 5.1), 48 (IQR 46 to 48), 0.80 (IQR 0.72 to 1.0), and 100/100 (IQR 90 to 100), respectively. Most patients were able to return to work (81/83, 97.6%) and sport (51/62,82.3%). Unrecovered nerve injury was associated with an inferior outcome according to the QuickDASH (p = 0.005), OES (p = 0.004), EQ-5D-3L (p = 0.010), and satisfaction (p = 0.024). Multiple linear regression analysis identified an unrecovered nerve injury to be strongly associated with an inferior outcome according to the QuickDASH score (p < 0.001), along with infection (p < 0.001), although re-rupture (p = 0.440) and further surgery (p = 0.652) were not. Conclusion. Acute distal biceps tendon repair using cortical button fixation was found to result in excellent patient-reported outcomes and health-related quality of life. Although rare, unrecovered nerve injury adversely affects outcome. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2021;103-B(7):1284–1291


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 4 | Pages 696 - 703
1 Apr 2021
Clough TM Ring J

Aims. We report the medium-term outcomes of a consecutive series of 118 Zenith total ankle arthroplasties (TAAs) from a single, non-designer centre. Methods. Between December 2010 and May 2016, 118 consecutive Zenith prostheses were implanted in 114 patients. Demographic, clinical, and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) data were collected. The endpoint of the study was failure of the implant requiring revision of one or all of the components. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were generated with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) and the rate of failure calculated for each year. Results. Eight patients (ten ankles) died during follow-up, but none required revision. Of the surviving 106 patients (108 ankles: rheumatoid arthritis (RA), n = 15; osteoarthritis (OA), n = 93), 38 were women and 68 were men, with a mean age of 68.2 years (48 to 86) at the time of surgery. Mean follow-up was 5.1 years (2.1 to 9.0). A total of ten implants failed (8.5%), thus requiring revision. The implant survival at seven years, using revision as an endpoint, was 88.2% (95% CI 100% to 72.9%). There was a mean improvement in Manchester-Oxford Foot and Ankle Questionnaire (MOXFQ) from 85.0 to 32.8 and visual analogue scale (VAS) scores from 7.0 to 3.2, and overall satisfaction was 89%. The three commonest complications were malleolar fracture (14.4%, n = 17), wound healing (13.6%, n = 16), and superficial infection (12.7%, n = 15). The commonest reason for revision was aseptic loosening. No patients in our study were revised for deep infection. Conclusion. Our results show that Zenith survival rates are comparable with those in the literature for other implants and in the National Joint Registry (NJR). Overall patient satisfaction was high as were functional outcomes. However, the data highlight potential complications associated with this surgery. The authors believe that these figures support ankle arthroplasty as an option in the treatment of ankle arthritis. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2021;103-B(4):696–703


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 25 - 25
1 Jun 2023
Pincher B Kirk C Ollivere B
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Introduction. Bone transport and distraction osteogenesis have been shown to be an effective treatment for significant bone loss in the tibia. However, traditional methods of transport are often associated with high patient morbidity due to the pain and scarring caused by the external frame components transporting the bone segment. Prolonged time in frame is also common as large sections of regenerate need significant time to consolidate before the external fixator can be removed. Cable transport has had a resurgence with the description of the balanced cable transport system. However, this introduced increasingly complex surgery along with the risk of cable weave fracture. This method also requires frame removal and intramedullary nailing, with a modified nail, to be performed in a single sitting, which raised concern regarding potential deep infection. An alternative to this method is our modified cable transport system with early intramedullary nail fixation. Internal cables reduce pain and scarring of the skin during transport and allow for well controlled transport segment alignment. The cable system is facilitated through an endosteal plate that reduces complications and removes the need for a single-stage frame removal and nailing procedure. Instead, the patients can undergo a pin-site holiday before nailing is performed using a standard tibial nail. Early intramedullary nailing once transport is complete reduces overall time in frame and allows full weight bearing as the regenerate consolidates. We present our case series of patients treated with this modified cable transport technique. Methodolgy. Patients were identified through our limb reconstruction database and clinic notes, operative records and radiographs were reviewed. Since 2019, 8 patients (5 male : 3 female) have undergone bone transport via our modified balanced cable transport technique. Average age at time of transport was 39.6 years (range 21–58 years) with all surgeries performed by the senior author. Patients were followed up until radiological union. We recorded the length of bone transport achieved as well as any problems, obstacles or complications encountered during treatment. We evaluated outcomes of full weight bearing and return to function as well as radiological union. Results. 4/8 bone defects were due to severely comminuted open fractures requiring extensive debridement. All other cases had previously undergone fixation of tibial fractures which had failed due to infection, soft tissue defects or mal-reduction. The mean tibial defect treated with bone transport was 41mm (range 37–78mm). From the start of cable transport to removal of external fixator our patients spent an average of 201 days in frame. 7/8 patients underwent a 2-week pin-site holiday and subsequent insertion of intramedullary nail 2 weeks later. One patient had sufficient bony union to not require further internal fixation after frame removal. 10 problems were identified during treatment. These included 4 superficial infections treated with antibiotics alone and 5 issues with hardware, which could be resolved in the outpatient clinic. 1 patient had their rate of transport slowed due to poor skin quality over the site of the regenerate. 4 obstacles resulted in a return to theatre for additional procedures. 1 patient had a re-do corticotomy and 3 had revision of their internal cable transport constructs due to decoupling or screw pull out. 1 patient had residual ankle joint equinus following treatment which required an Achilles tendon lengthening procedure. Another patient underwent treatment for DVT. There were no deep infections identified and no significant limb length discrepancies or deformities. Conclusions. Overall, we have found that our modified balanced cable transport technique has allowed for successful bone transport for significant defects of the tibia. We have learned from the obstacles encountered during this case series to avoid unnecessary return trips to theatre for our future transport patients. The internal cable system allowed all patients to complete their planned transport without excessive pin tract scarring or pain. Early conversion to intramedullary nail allowed for a shorter time in frame with continued full weight bearing as the regenerate consolidated. No metalwork failure or deformity has occurred in relation to docking site union. All patients have made a good return to pre-operative function during their follow-up period with no evidence of late complications such as deep infection


Aim. Treatment of complicated wound healing after total joint arthroplasty is controversial. What exactly constitutes prolonged wound drainage is matter of debate and recommendations to manage it vary considerably. Nonoperative measures are often recommended. If drainage persists, surgery may be indicated. To further intricate decision-making, differentiating superficial from deep surgical site infection is also controversial and inherently complex. Specific cutoffs for synovial fluid leukocyte count and blood C-reactive protein (CRP) in the acute stage have been suggested as a way to superficial infection requiring superficial wound washout from deep infection requiring a formal debridement, antibiotics and implant retention (DAIR) procedure. The goal of this study is to analyze clinical and laboratory findings of an institutional protocol of “aggressively” proceeding with formal DAIR in all patients with complicated wound healing. Method. Our indications for DAIR in suspected acute postoperative periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) are: 1)prolonged wound drainage and CRP upward trend after day-3; 2)persistent wound drainage by day-10 regardless of CRP; 3)wound healing disturbance (e.g. “superficial” infection, “superficial” skin necrosis) anytime in early postoperative weeks. We retrospectively evaluated patients undergoing DAIR in the first 60 postoperative days between 2014–2018. Patients without multiple deep tissue cultures obtained intraoperative were excluded. Deep infection was defined by at least two positive deep tissue cultures or one positive deep culture and positive leukocyte count (>10,000 cells/mL or >90% PMN). Results. A total of 44 DAIR procedures were included. Deep infection was confirmed in 79.5%(35/44) of cases. Mean CRP in infected cases was 93mg/L with 63%(19/30) of them below the 100 mg/L threshold. Unfortunately, only a small proportion of cases (10/44) had synovial fluid leukocyte counts available. Mean leukocyte count was 15,558 cells/mL and mean proportion of PMN was 65.3%. Of these ten, six confirmed deep infections were below the proposed >10,000 cells/mL or >90% PMN cutoff. Conclusions. Early diagnosis of acute postoperative PJI is often hampered by its very subtle presentation. This study confirms that more often than not, deep infection is present when facing complicated wound healing after total joint arthroplasty, supporting our institutional “aggressive” protocol. We have been surprised by the number of confirmed acute PJI with low blood CRP levels and low synovial leukocyte counts. We hypothesize that the proposed acute PJI specific thresholds may lead to misinterpret a significant proportion of cases as superficial infections thus compromising timely intervention. The findings of this study lack confirmation in larger cohorts


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 1 | Pages 4 - 11
3 Jan 2022
Argyrou C Tzefronis D Sarantis M Kateros K Poultsides L Macheras GA

Aims. There is evidence that morbidly obese patients have more intra- and postoperative complications and poorer outcomes when undergoing total hip arthroplasty (THA) with the direct anterior approach (DAA). The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of DAA for THA, and compare the complications and outcomes of morbidly obese patients with nonobese patients. Methods. Morbidly obese patients (n = 86), with BMI ≥ 40 kg/m. 2. who underwent DAA THA at our institution between September 2010 and December 2017, were matched to 172 patients with BMI < 30 kg/m. 2. Data regarding demographics, set-up and operating time, blood loss, radiological assessment, Harris Hip Score (HHS), International Hip Outcome Tool (12-items), reoperation rate, and complications at two years postoperatively were retrospectively analyzed. Results. No significant differences in blood loss, intra- and postoperative complications, or implant position were observed between the two groups. Superficial wound infection rate was higher in the obese group (8.1%) compared to the nonobese group (1.2%) (p = 0.007) and relative risk of reoperation was 2.59 (95% confidence interval 0.68 to 9.91). One periprosthetic joint infection was reported in the obese group. Set-up time in the operating table and mean operating time were higher in morbidly obese patients. Functional outcomes and patient-related outcome measurements were superior in the obese group (mean increase of HHS was 52.19 (SD 5.95) vs 45.1 (SD 4.42); p < 0.001), and mean increase of International Hip Outcome Tool (12-items) was 56.8 (SD 8.88) versus 55.2 (SD 5.85); p = 0.041). Conclusion. Our results suggest that THA in morbidly obese patients can be safely and effectively performed via the DAA by experienced surgeons. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2022;3(1):4–11


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 24 - 24
1 Nov 2022
Ray P Garg P Fazal M Patel S
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Abstract. Background. Multiple devices can stabilise the MTP joint for arthrodesis. The ideal implant should be easy to use, provide reproducible and high quality results, and ideally enable early rehabilitation to enable faster return to function, whilst lessening soft tissue irritation. We prospectively evaluated the combination of the IO-Fix (Extremity Medical, NJ, USA) device which consists of an intra-osseous post and lag screw that offers these features with full bearing of weight after surgery. Methods. 67 feet in 65 patients were treated over 31 months. After excluding patients lost to follow-up, undergoing revision arthrodesis, or concomitant first ray procedures, there were 54 feet in 52 patients available with a minimum 12 month follow-up with clinical and radiographic outcomes. All patients were treated using a similar operative technique with immediate bearing of weight in a rigid soled shoe. Results. The mean MOXFQ score improved from 46.4 (range 18 – 64) before surgery to 30.2 (range 0 – 54) at 6 months after surgery (p=0.02), and 18.4 (range 0 – 36) (p< 0.001) at latest follow-up. Arthrodesis across the MTP joint was achieved in 52 feet (96%), at a mean of 61 days (range 39–201). Non-union was observed in two feet; superficial wound infections in two feet; and metalwork impingement in three feet. Conclusions. In the largest reported series to date, the IO-Fix device achieved a union rate of 96% across the MTP joint when coupled with immediate bearing of weight. Significant improvements were seen in patient reported outcomes with low complication rates


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 5 - 5
1 May 2021
Carter TH Karunaratne BJ Oliver WM Murray IR Reid JT White TO Duckworth AD
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Acute distal biceps tendon repair reduces fatigue-related pain and minimises loss of forearm supination and elbow flexion strength. We report the short- and long-term outcome following repair using an EndoButton technique. Between 2010 – 2018, 102 patients (101 males; mean age 43 years) underwent acute (□6 weeks) distal biceps tendon repair using an EndoButton technique. The primary short-term outcome was complications. The primary long-term outcome was the Quick-DASH (Q-DASH). Secondary outcomes included the Oxford Elbow Score (OES), EuroQol-5D-3L (EQ-5D), return to function and satisfaction. At mean short-term follow-up of 4 months (2.0 – 55.5) eight patients (7.8%) experienced a major complication and 34 patients (33.3%) experienced a minor complication. Major complications included re-rupture (n=3, 2.9%), unrecovered nerve injury (n=4, 3.9%) and surgery for heterotopic ossification excision (n=1, 1.0%). Three patients (2.9%) required surgery for a complication. Minor complications included neuropraxia (n=27, 26.5%) and superficial infection (n=7, 6.9%). At mean follow-up of 5 years (1 – 9.8) outcomes were collected from 86 patients (84.3%). The median Q-DASH, OES, EQ-5D and satisfaction scores were 1.2 (IQR 0 – 5.1), 48 (IQR, 46 – 48), 0.80 (IQR, 0.72 – 1.0) and 100/100 (IQR, 90 – 100) respectively. Most patients returned to sport (82.3%) and employment (97.6%) following surgery. Unrecovered nerve injury was associated with a poor outcome according to the Q-DASH (p< 0.001), although re-rupture and further surgery were not (p > 0.05). Acute distal biceps tendon repair using an EndoButton technique results in excellent patient reported outcomes and health-related quality of life. Although rare, unrecovered nerve injury adversely affects outcome


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1178 - 1182
1 Sep 2011
Davis AM Wood AM Keenan ACM Brenkel IJ Ballantyne JA

Studies describing the effect of body mass index (BMI) on the outcome of total hip replacement have been inconclusive and contradictory. We examined the effect of BMI on medium-term outcome in a cohort of 1617 patients who underwent a primary total hip replacement for osteoarthritis. These patients were followed prospectively for five years with the outcomes of dislocation, revision, duration of surgery and deep and superficial infection studied, as well as collecting Harris hip scores (HHS) and Short-Form 36 (SF-36) questionnaires pre-operatively and at review. A multivariate analysis was performed to see whether BMI is an independent predictor of poor outcome. We found that patients with a BMI of ? 35 kg/m. 2. have a 4.42 times higher rate of dislocation than those with a BMI < 25 kg/m. 2. Increasing BMI is also associated with superficial infection and poorer HHS and SF-36 scores at five years. These trends remain significant even when multivariate analysis adjusts for age, gender, prosthesis, operating consultant, pre-operative HHS and SF-36, and comorbidities including diabetes mellitus, cardiac disease and osteoporosis. Despite the increased risks, the five-year outcome scores indicate that obese patients have much to gain from total hip replacement. Thus total hip replacement should not be withheld from patients solely on the grounds of an elevated BMI. However, longer-term follow-up of this cohort is required to establish whether adverse outcomes become more evident with time


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 21 - 21
1 Dec 2022
Cherry A Montgomery S Brillantes J Osborne T Khoshbin A Daniels T Ward S Atrey A
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In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic meant that proceeding with elective surgery was restricted to minimise exposure on the wards. In order to maintain throughput of elective cases, our hospital was forced to convert as many cases as possible to same day procedures rather than overnight admission. In this retrospective analysis we review the cases performed as same day arthroplasty surgeries compared to the same period 12 months previous. We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients undergoing total hip and knee arthroplasties in a three month period between October and December in 2019 and again in 2020, in the middle of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Patient demographics, number of out-patient primary arthroplasty cases, length of stay for admissions, 30-day readmission and complications were collated. In total, 428 patient charts were reviewed for the months of October-December of 2019 (n=195) and 2020 (n=233). Of those, total hip arthroplasties comprised 60% and 58.8% for 2019 and 2020, respectively. Demographic data was comparable with no statistical difference for age, gender contralateral joint replacement or BMI. ASA grade I was more highly prevalent in the 2020 cohort (5.1x increase, n=13 vs n=1). Degenerative disc disease and fibromyalgia were less significantly prevalent in the 2020 cohort. There was a significant increase in same day discharges for non-DAA THAs (2x increase) and TKA (10x increase), with a reciprocal decrease in next day discharges. There were significantly fewer reported superficial wound infections in 2020 (5.6% vs 1.7%) and no significant differences in readmissions or emergency department visits (3.1% vs 3.0%). The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic meant that hospitals and patients were hopeful to minimise the exposure to the wards and to not put strain on the already taxed in-patient beds. With few positives during the Coronavirus crisis, the pandemic was the catalyst to speed up the outpatient arthroplasty program that has resulted in our institution being more efficient and with no increase in readmissions or early complications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 3 - 3
16 May 2024
Sinan L Kokkinakis E Kumar CS
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Introduction. Cheilectomy is a recommended procedure for the earlier stages of osteoarthritis of the 1. st. metatarsophalangeal joint. Although good improvement in symptoms have been reported in many studies, the long term performance of this procedure is not well understood. It is thought that a significant number of patients go onto have arthrodesis or joint replacement. We report on a large cohort of patients who received this procedure and report on the complications and mid-term outcome. Methods. This is a retrospective study looking at all patients who underwent cheilectomy for hallux rigidus between November 2007 and August 2018. Departmental database was used to access patient details and outcome measures recorded include: postoperative wound infection, patient reported improvement in pain and the incidence of further surgical interventions like revision cheilectomy and conversion to arthrodesis and arthroplasty. X-rays were studied using PACS to stage the osteoarthritis (Hattrup and Johnson classification). Results. A total of 240 feet in 220 patients (20 bilateral surgeries) were included in the study, there were 164 Females (75%) and 56 Males (25%), the median age was 55 years (range 22–90 years). Radiological assessment showed 89 Stage 1 arthritis(42%), 105 Stage 2 (50%), 17 Stage 3 (8%) and 9 patients were excluded due to unavailable X-rays. 5 patients (2%) had superficial wound infection. There were 16 further surgeries (7%) performed in this cohort, 12 arthrodesis (5%), 3 revision cheilectomy and 1conversion to arthroplasty. 157 patients were found to be pain-free at the latest post-operative visit (77%), 48 reported minimal pain (23%), 15 patients were excluded due to unavailable data. Conclusion. Cheilectomy appears to produce good improvement in pain with a low complication rate. The rate of conversion to arthrodesis/arthroplasty is lower than in many reported studies


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 17 - 17
8 May 2024
Senthi S Miller D Hepple S Harries W Winson I
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Tendoscopy in the treatment of peroneal tendon disorders is becoming an increasingly safe, reliable, and reproducible technique. Peroneal tendoscopy can be used as both an isolated procedure and as an adjacent procedure with other surgical techniques. The aim of our study was to review all peroneal tendoscopy that was undertaken at the AOC, by the senior authors (IGW, SH), and to determine the safety and efficacy of this surgical technique. Methods. From 2000 to 2017 a manual and electronic database search was undertaken of all procedures by the senior authors. Peroneal tendoscopy cases were identified and then prospectively analysed. Results. 51 patients (23 male, 28 female) were identified from 2004–2017 using a manual and electronic database search. The mean age at time of surgery was 41.5 years (range 16–83) with a mean follow-up time post operatively of 11.8 months (range 9–64 months). The main indications for surgery were lateral and/or postero-lateral ankle pain and lateral ankle swelling. The majority of cases showed unstable peroneal tendon tears that were debrided safely using tendoscopy. Of the 51 patients, 23 required an adjacent foot and ankle operation at the same time, 5 open and 17 arthroscopic (12 ankle, 5 subtalar). Open procedures included 2 first ray osteotomies, 2 open debridements of accessory tissue, one PL to PB transfer. One patient also had an endoscopic FHL transfer. Complication rates to date have been low: 2 superficial wound infections (4%) and one repeat tendoscopy for ongoing pain. A small proportion of patients with ongoing pain were treated with USS guided steroid injections with good results. Conclusion. Our series of peroneal tendoscopy has a low complication rate with high patient satisfaction at discharge. Results of tendoscopic treatment are similar to open techniques, however its advantages make tendoscopic procedures an excellent method to treat peroneal tendon disorders


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 1 | Pages 157 - 167
1 Jan 2022
Makaram NS Goudie EB Robinson CM

Aims. Open reduction and plate fixation (ORPF) for displaced proximal humerus fractures can achieve reliably good long-term outcomes. However, a minority of patients have persistent pain and stiffness after surgery and may benefit from open arthrolysis, subacromial decompression, and removal of metalwork (ADROM). The long-term results of ADROM remain unknown; we aimed to assess outcomes of patients undergoing this procedure for stiffness following ORPF, and assess predictors of poor outcome. Methods. Between 1998 and 2018, 424 consecutive patients were treated with primary ORPF for proximal humerus fracture. ADROM was offered to symptomatic patients with a healed fracture at six months postoperatively. Patients were followed up retrospectively with demographic data, fracture characteristics, and complications recorded. Active range of motion (aROM), Oxford Shoulder Score (OSS), and EuroQol five-dimension three-level questionnaire (EQ-5D-3L) were recorded preoperatively and postoperatively. Results. A total of 138 patients underwent ADROM; 111 patients were available for long-term follow-up at a mean of 10.9 years (range 1 to 20). Mean age was 50.8 years (18 to 75);79 (57.2%) were female. Mean time from primary ORPF to ADROM was 11.9 months (6 to 19). Five patients developed superficial wound infection; ten developed symptomatic osteonecrosis/post-traumatic arthrosis (ON/PTA); four underwent revision arthrolysis. Median OSS improved from 17 (interquartile range (IQR) 12.0 to 22.0) preoperatively to 40.0 (IQR 31.5 to 48.0) postoperatively, and 39.0 (IQR 31.5 to 46.5) at long-term follow-up (p < 0.001). Median EQ-5D-3L improved from 0.079 (IQR -0.057 to 0.215) to 0.691 (IQR 0.441 to 0.941) postoperatively, and 0.701 (IQR 0.570 to 0.832) at long-term follow-up (p < 0.001). We found that aROM improved in all planes (p < 0.001). Among the variables assessed on multivariable analysis, a manual occupation, worsening Charlson Comorbidity Index and increasing socioeconomic deprivation were most consistently predictive of worse patient-reported outcome scores. Patients who subsequently developed ON/PTA reported significantly worse one-year and late OSS. Conclusion. ADROM in patients with persistent symptomatic stiffness following ORPF can achieve excellent short- and long-term outcomes. More deprived patients, those in a manual occupation, and those with worsening comorbidities have worse outcomes following ADROM. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2022;104-B(1):157–167


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 31 - 31
1 Mar 2021
Sun M Buckler N AlNouri M Vaughan M Hilaire TS Sponseller P Smith J Thompson G Howard J El-Hawary R
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Scoliosis is estimated to occur between 21–64% of patients with cerebral palsy (CP), where a subset of patients develops early onset scoliosis (EOS) before the age of ten. Traditional growth friendly (TGF) surgeries in the context of traditional growing rods have been shown to be effective in treating scoliosis in this population, however significant complication rates are reported. Currently, no studies have been done to examine the effect of novel growth friendly surgeries such as magnetically controlled growing rods (MCGR) on EOS in CP patients. The objective of this study is to compare MCGR with TGF surgeries in this patient population, specifically by evaluating radiographic measurements and risk of unplanned reoperations (UPRORs). Patients with EOS secondary to CP were prospectively identified from an international database, with data retrospectively analyzed. Scoliosis (primary curve), maximum kyphosis, T1-S1 and T1-T12 height were measured pre-operation, immediate post-operation, and at two-years follow-up. The risk and etiology of UPRORs were compared between MCGR and TGF. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant for all analyses. Of the 120 patients that met inclusion criteria, 86 received TGF (age 7.5 ± 1.8 years; follow-up 7.0 ± 2.9 years) and 34 received MCGR (age 7.1 ± 2.2 years, follow-up 2.8 ± 0.5 years). Compared to TGF, MCGR resulted in significant improvements in maintenance of scoliosis correction (p=0.04). At final follow-up, UPRORs were 24% for MCGR (8/34 patients) and 43% (37/86 patients) for TGF (p=0.05). To minimize the influence of follow-up period, UPRORs within the first two years post-operation were evaluated: MCGR (21%, 7/34 patients) vs. TGF (14%, 12/86 patients; p=0.37). Within the first two years, etiology of UPROR as a percentage of all patients per group were deep infection (5% TGF, 6% MCGR), implant failure/migration (5% TGF, 9% MCGR), dehiscence (2% TGF, 3% MCGR), and superficial infection (1% TGF, 3% MCGR). The most common etiology of UPROR for TGF was deep infection and implant failure/migration and for MCGR was implant failure/migration. For patients with CP, at final follow-up, MCGR had superior maintenance of scoliosis correction; however, there was no difference in risk of UPROR within the first two years post-operatively (21% MCGR, 14% TGF)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 13 - 13
1 Nov 2017
Dalgleish S Nicol G Faulkner A Sripada S
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Laminar airflow systems are universal in current orthopaedic operating theatres and are assumed to be associated with a lower risk of contamination of the surgical wound and subsequent early infection. Evidence to support their use is limited and sometimes conflicting. We investigated whether there were any differences in infection rates (deep and superficial) between knee and hip arthroplasty cases performed in non-laminar and laminar flow theatres at 10 year follow-up. Between 2002 and 2006, 318 patients underwent knee and hip arthroplasty in a non-laminar flow theatre. Prospectively collected local arthroplasty audit data was collected including superficial and deep infection, revision for infection and functional outcomes. A cohort of patients from the same time period, who underwent knee and hip arthroplasty in a laminar flow theatre, were matched for age, sex, body mass index (BMI), operative approach, implant and experience of surgeon. Superficial infection rates were lower overall in the non-laminar flow theatre (2.2percnt; versus 4.7percnt;), with a significantly lower superficial infection rate for knee arthroplasty performed in the non-laminar flow theatre (2percnt; versus 6.9percnt;). The deep infection rates were similar (1.3percnt; vs 1.9percnt;) for both laminar and non-laminar flow theatre respectively. Revision rates for infection were similar between both groups (0.9percnt; in non-laminar flow theatre vs 0.3percnt; in laminar flow). Whilst the causes of post-operative surgical site infection are multifactorial, our results demonstrate that at long –term follow-up, there was no increased risk of infection without laminar flow use in our theatre


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1352 - 1358
1 Oct 2018
Clough TM Alvi F Majeed H

Aims. Total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) surgery is complex and attracts a wide variety of complications. The literature lacks consistency in reporting adverse events and complications. The aim of this article is to provide a comprehensive analysis of each of these complications from a literature review, and to compare them with rates from our Unit, to aid clinicians with the process of informed consent. Patients and Methods. A total of 278 consecutive total ankle arthroplasties (251 patients), performed by four surgeons over a six-year period in Wrightington Hospital (Wigan, United Kingdom) were prospectively reviewed. There were 143 men and 108 women with a mean age of 64 years (41 to 86). The data were recorded on each follow-up visit. Any complications either during initial hospital stay or subsequently reported on follow-ups were recorded, investigated, monitored, and treated as warranted. Literature search included the studies reporting the outcomes and complications of TAA implants. Results. There were wound-healing problems in nine ankles (3.2%), superficial infection in 20 ankles (7.2%), and deep infection in six ankles (2.2%). Intraoperative fractures occurred in medial malleoli in 27 ankles (9.7%) and in lateral malleoli in four ankles (1.4%). Aseptic loosening and osteolysis were seen 16 ankles (5.8%). Fracture of the polyethylene component occurred in one ankle (0.4%) and edge-loading in seven ankles (2.5%). We observed medial gutter pain in 31 ankles (11.1%). The incidence of thromboembolism occurred in two ankles (0.7%). The results were found to be comparable to the previously reported complications of total ankle arthroplasty in the literature. Conclusion. Total ankle arthroplasty continues to evolve and improve the ankle function. Despite high overall complication rates with TAA surgery, most complications appear to be minor and do not affect final clinical outcome. Our results and literature review will help in the consent process and provide detailed complication rates for an informed consent. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2018;100-B:1352–8


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 9 - 9
1 Jun 2022
Ha T Sinan L Kokkinakis E Kumar CS
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Cheilectomy is a recommended procedure for early stage osteoarthritis of the 1st metatarsophalangeal joint. Although improvement in symptoms has been reported in many studies, long term performance is not well understood. It is thought that significant numbers of patients require subsequent arthrodesis or arthroplasty. We report on a large cohort of patients receiving this procedure and on complications, and mid-term outcome. This is a retrospective study looking at all patients undergoing cheilectomy for hallux rigidus between November 2007 and August 2018. Departmental database was used to record outcome measures including: postoperative wound infection, patient reported improvement in pain and incidence of further surgical interventions like revision cheilectomy, conversion to arthrodesis and arthroplasty. Osteoarthritis was staged radiographically using PACS (Hattrup and Johnson classification). A total of 240 feet in 220 patients (20 bilateral surgeries) were included with 164 females (75%) and 56 males (25%), the median age being 55 years (range 22–90 years). Radiological assessment showed 89 stage 1 arthritis (42%), 105 stage 2 (50%), 17 stage 3 (8%) and 9 patients were excluded due to unavailable radiographs. 5 patients (2%) had superficial wound infections. There were 16 further surgeries (7%); 12 arthrodesis (5%), 3 revision cheilectomy and 1 conversion to arthroplasty. 157 patients were found to be pain-free at the latest post-operative visit (77%), 48 reported minimal pain (23%), 15 patients were excluded due to incomplete data. Cheilectomy appears to effectively reduce pain with low complication rates. Rates of conversion to arthrodesis/arthroplasty are lower than in many reported studies


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 6 | Pages 646 - 651
1 Jun 2019
Aggarwal VK Elbuluk A Dundon J Herrero C Hernandez C Vigdorchik JM Schwarzkopf R Iorio R Long WJ

Aims. A variety of surgical approaches are used for total hip arthroplasty (THA), all with reported advantages and disadvantages. A number of common complications can occur following THA regardless of the approach used. The purpose of this study was to compare five commonly used surgical approaches with respect to the incidence of surgery-related complications. Patients and Methods. The electronic medical records of all patients who underwent primary elective THA at a single large-volume arthroplasty centre, between 2011 and 2016, with at least two years of follow-up, were reviewed. After exclusion, 3574 consecutive patients were included in the study. There were 1571 men (44.0%) and 2003 women (56.0%). Their mean age and body mass index (BMI) was 63.0 years (. sd. 11.8) and 29.1 kg/m. 2. (. sd. 6.1), respectively. Data gathered included the age of the patient, BMI, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, estimated blood loss (EBL), length of stay (LOS), operating time, the presence of intra- or postoperative complications, type of complication, and the surgical approach. The approaches used during the study were posterior, anterior, direct lateral, anterolateral, and the northern approach. The complications that were recorded included prolonged wound drainage without infection, superficial infection, deep infection, dislocation, aseptic loosening, and periprosthetic fracture. Finally, the need for re-operation was recorded. Means were compared using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Student’s t-tests where appropriate and proportions were compared using the chi-squared test. Results. A total of 248 patients had 263 complications related to the surgery, with an incidence of 6.94%. The anterior approach had the highest incidence of complications (8.5% (113/1329)) and the posterior approach had the lowest, at 5.85% (97/1657; p = 0.006). Most complications were due to deep infection (22.8%), periprosthetic fracture (22.4%), and prolonged wound drainage (21.3%). The rate of dislocation was 0.84% (14/1657) with the posterior approach and 1.28% (17/1329) with the anterior approach (p = 0.32). Conclusion. Overall, THA has a relatively low complication rate. However, the surgical approach plays a role in the incidence of complications. We found that the posterior approach had a significantly lower overall complication rate compared with the anterior approach, with an equal dislocation rate. Periprosthetic fracture and surgical site infection contributed most to the early complication rates. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B:646–651


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_21 | Pages 1 - 1
1 Dec 2017
Chambers S Philpott A Lawford C Lau S Oppy A
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Introduction. We describe a novel single incision approach and its safety in the largest reported series of Lisfranc injuries to date. Via separate subcutaneous windows it is possible to access the medial three rays of the foot for bridge plating, without the concern of narrow skin bridges between multiple incisions. Methods. A retrospective review identified all 150 patients who underwent a Lisfranc ORIF via the modified dorsal approach at the Royal Melbourne Hospital between January 2011 and June 2016. All patients were operated by a single surgeon. Removal of metalwork (ROM) was routinely undertaken at six months post-operatively via the same incision. Medical recored were reviewed to record patient demographics, mechanism of injury and surgical details. Outpatient notes were reviewed to identify wound-related complications including; delayed wound healing, superficial infection, wound dehiscence, deep infection, complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS), neuroma and impaired sensation. Median follow-up was 1012 days (range 188–2141). Results. Median age was 37 years (19–78). 110 (73%) patients were male. Mechanism of injury was: motor vehicle accident (37%), motor bike accident (19%) and fall (18%). 24 (16%) injuries were open, 5 of which required soft tissue reconstruction at the primary surgery. A total of 34 wound related complications occurred (22%); superficial infection (14), delayed wound healing (7), wound dehiscence (5), CRPS (4), impaired sensation (3), neuroma (1). Re-operation was necessary in the 5 patients who experienced wound dehiscence; 4 requiring split skin grafts and 1 requiring a free flap. Crush injuries were 10 times more likely to have wound complications than those sustained in motor vehicle accidents. Patients undergoing ROM were more likely to have wound complications than those who did not. Conclusion. The modified dorsal approach using subcutaneous windows to access the midfoot joints offers a viable alternative to existing approaches


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 20 - 20
1 Feb 2012
Chesney D Sales J Elton R Brenkel I
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Introduction. We report the results of a prospective study of 1349 patients undergoing 1509 total knee replacements, identifying factors increasing the risk of infection. Methods. Data were collected prospectively between October 1998 and February 2002 by a dedicated audit nurse. Pre-operative demographic and medical details were recorded. Operative and post-operative complications were noted. The definitions of surgical-site infection were based on a modification of those published by the Centre for Disease Control (CDC) in 1992. A superficial wound infection had a purulent discharge or positive culture of organisms from aseptically-aspirated fluid, tissue, or from a swab. Deep infection was counted as an infection that required a secondary procedure. Patients were seen at 6, 18 and 36 months post-operatively in a dedicated knee audit clinic and infection details recorded. The association between infection and other factors was tested by chi-squared or Mann-Whitney tests for categorised or quantitative factors respectively. Results. 18 patients (1.2% of all total knee replacements) had deep infection and a further 49 suffered a superficial infection. We found no correlation between risk of infection and age, sex, BMI, ASA grade, tourniquet time, lateral release, surgeon, transfusion or the need for catheterisation in the early post-operative period. Diabetic patients had an increased odds ratio for deep and superficial infection, but these results did not reach statistical significance. Only 3 of the 49 superficial infections went onto develop a deep infection at an average of 21 months after surgery. Conclusion. Using modern orthopaedic surgical techniques including laminar flow theatres, systemic antibiotics and antibiotic loaded cement, the risk of infection following TKR is 1.2%. There is a mildly increased risk of infection in diabetics. Catheterisation with antibiotic cover does not increase the risk of infection


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 111 - 111
1 Dec 2020
Lim JA Thahir A Krkovic M
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Introduction. The BOAST (British Orthopaedic Association Standards for Trauma) guidelines do advise that open pilon fractures amongst other open lower limb fractures need to be treated at a specialist centre with Orthoplastic care. The purpose of this study was to determine clinical outcomes in patients with open pilon fractures treated as per BOAST guidelines including relatively aggressive bone debridement. Methods. A retrospective analysis of a single surgeon series of open pilon fractures treated between 2014 and 2019 was conducted. Injuries were graded according to the Gustillo-Anderson classification and all patients were included for the assessment of the rate of infection and fracture healing. Functional outcome assessment was performed in all patients according to the American Orthopedic Foot and Ankle Score (AOFAS) at 6 months after definitive surgery. Initial wound with bone debridement and application of a spanning external fixator was performed within an average of 13.5 (Range: 3–24) hours. Fixation with FWF (Fine Wire Frame) was performed when the wound was healed, with the mean time from primary surgery to application of FWF being 24.5 (Range: 7–60) days. Results. There was a total of 20 patients including 16 males and 4 females. The mean age was 50.45 (Range: 16–88) years. Follow-up was for an average of 23.2 (Range: 5–51) months. There were 3 patients with Gustilo Type I injuries, 6 with Type II, 4 Type with type IIIa and 7 with Type IIIb injuries. Average time to bone union was 9.3 (Range: 2–18) months. The mean AOFAS score was 66 (Range: 15–97) points. TSF was used on 18 patients, while 2 patients had an Ilizarov frame. A corticotomy was performed on 4 patients with critical bone defect post debridement, while 2 patients had Stimulan beads with antibiotics. There was 1 case (5%) of deep infection and 9 cases (45%) of superficial infection. There were also 2 cases (10%) of non-union which required bone grafting from their femur using a RIA (Reamer Irrigation Aspirator). Other complications included 1 case of acute compartment syndrome, 1 case of pulmonary embolism, 1 case of necrotic skin and 1 case of amputation. Conclusion. Results of our study suggests that the use of staged wound debridement including relatively aggressive bone debridement in conjunction with antibiotics, external fixators and patient tailored conversion from spanning external fixator to fine wire frame achieves low rates of wound infection and complications for patients with open pilon fractures


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 11 | Pages 921 - 925
9 Nov 2021
Limberg AK Wyles CC Taunton MJ Hanssen AD Pagnano MW Abdel MP

Aims. Varus-valgus constrained (VVC) devices are typically used in revision settings, often with stems to mitigate the risk of aseptic loosening. However, in at least one system, the VVC insert is compatible with the primary posterior-stabilized (PS) femoral component, which may be an option in complex primary situations. We sought to determine the implant survivorship, radiological and clinical outcomes, and complications when this VVC insert was coupled with a PS femur without stems in complex primary total knee arthroplasties (TKAs). Methods. Through our institution’s total joint registry, we identified 113 primary TKAs (103 patients) performed between 2007 and 2017 in which a VVC insert was coupled with a standard cemented PS femur without stems. Mean age was 68 years (SD 10), mean BMI was 32 kg/m. 2. (SD 7), and 59 patients (50%) were male. Mean follow-up was four years (2 to 10). Results. The five-year survivorship free from aseptic loosening was 100%. The five-year survivorship free from any revision was 99%, with the only revision performed for infection. The five-year survivorship free from reoperation was 93%. The most common reoperation was treatment for infection (n = 4; 4%), followed by manipulation under anaesthesia (MUA; n = 2; 2%). Survivorship free from any complication at five years was 90%, with superficial wound infection as the most frequent (n = 4; 4%). At most recent follow-up, two TKAs had non-progressive radiolucent lines about both the tibial and femoral components. Knee Society Scores improved from 53 preoperatively to 88 at latest follow-up (p < 0.001). Conclusion. For complex primary TKA in occasional situations, coupling a VVC insert with a standard PS femur without stems proved reliable and durable at five years. Longer-term follow-up is required before recommending this technique more broadly. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(11):921–925


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1160 - 1167
1 Jun 2021
Smith JRA Fox CE Wright TC Khan U Clarke AM Monsell FP

Aims. Open tibial fractures are limb-threatening injuries. While limb loss is rare in children, deep infection and nonunion rates of up to 15% and 8% are reported, respectively. We manage these injuries in a similar manner to those in adults, with a combined orthoplastic approach, often involving the use of vascularised free flaps. We report the orthopaedic and plastic surgical outcomes of a consecutive series of patients over a five-year period, which includes the largest cohort of free flaps for trauma in children to date. Methods. Data were extracted from medical records and databases for patients with an open tibial fracture aged < 16 years who presented between 1 May 2014 and 30 April 2019. Patients who were transferred from elsewhere were excluded, yielding 44 open fractures in 43 patients, with a minimum follow-up of one year. Management was reviewed from the time of injury to discharge. Primary outcome measures were the rate of deep infection, time to union, and the Modified Enneking score. Results. The mean age of the patients was 9.9 years (2.8 to 15.8), and 28 were male (64%). A total of 30 fractures (68%) involved a motor vehicle collision, and 34 (77%) were classified as Gustilo Anderson (GA) grade 3B. There were 17 (50%) GA grade 3B fractures, which were treated with a definitive hexapod fixator, and 33 fractures (75%) were treated with a free flap, of which 30 (91%) were scapular/parascapular or anterolateral thigh (ALT) flaps. All fractures united at a median of 12.3 weeks (interquartile range (IQR) 9.6 to 18.1), with increasing age being significantly associated with a longer time to union (p = 0.005). There were no deep infections, one superficial wound infection, and the use of 20 fixators (20%) was associated with a pin site infection. The median Enneking score was 90% (IQR 87.5% to 95%). Three patients had a bony complication requiring further surgery. There were no flap failures, and eight patients underwent further plastic surgery. Conclusion. The timely and comprehensive orthoplastic care of open tibial fractures in this series of patiemts aged < 16 years resulted in 100% union and 0% deep infection, with excellent patient-reported functional outcomes. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2021;103-B(6):1160–1167


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 22 - 22
1 Apr 2022
Lewis C Baker M Brooke B Metcalf B McWilliams G Sidhom S
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Constrained acetabular inserts provide a solution for both complex primary and revision hip arthroplasty, but there have been ongoing concerns for high risk of failure and their longevity. The Stryker® Trident acetabular insert is pre-assembled with its constrained ring. We believe this to be the largest series of constrained acetabular inserts with a minimum of 5 year follow-up. We retrospectively reviewed all Stryker® Trident ‘All-Poly’ constrained acetabular inserts cemented into bone in our unit between 2008 and 2016. We collated demographic details and reviewed all patients’ radiographs and clinical notes. Indications for surgery, latest Oxford Hip Scores (OHS) and clinical and radiographic complications were identified. 117 consecutive Stryker® Trident ‘All-Poly’ constrained inserts were cemented into bone in 115 patients during the study period with a mean age of 80 (47–97). Most common indications for surgery were recurrent dislocation (47), complex primary arthroplasty (23), revision arthroplasty (19) and failed hemiarthroplasty (12). 41 patients required revision of the acetabular component only. Follow-up was a minimum of 5 years (mean 8.6, range 5–13). There were three 30-day mortalities and six 1-year mortalities. The mean latest OHS was 37 (24–45). Four cups failed in three patients, one at the cement-bone interface, two at the cement-prosthesis interface and one at the bipolar interface. These were treated conservatively in three patient and with excision arthroplasty in one patient. There were four peri-prosthetic fractures, one Vancouver C distal femur fracture treated conservatively and three Vancouver B1 fractures, two treated conservatively and one treated with open reduction internal fixation. There was breakage of one constrained ring with no adverse effects and one superficial wound infection requiring oral antibiotics only. This series demonstrated that despite the elderly and complex nature of these patients’ clinical situations, constrained acetabular inserts offer a useful and pragmatic solution, with relatively low complications, including in our series a cup failure rate of 3% and peri-prosthetic fracture rate of 3%


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XLI | Pages 69 - 69
1 Sep 2012
McDougall CJ Gray HS Simpson PM Whitehouse SL Crawford R Donnelly W
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Bleeding related wound complications including deep infection, superficial infection and haematoma cause significant morbidity in lower limb joint arthroplasty surgery. It has been observed anecdotally that patients requiring therapeutic anti-coagulation within the peri-operative period have higher rates of bleeding related complications and those requiring intravenous heparin particularly appear to do poorly. The aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between post-operative bleeding and wound complications in the patient requiring therapeutic warfarin, plus or minus heparin, in total hip arthroplasty surgery. This is a retrospective cohort study reviewing 1047 primary total hip replacements performed in a single centre over a five year period and comparing outcomes of the patients on warfarin (89) with a double-matched control group of patients not on warfarin (179). Outcomes included rates of deep infection, excessive wound ooze or haematoma, superficial infection, return to OT for washout and need for revision operation. The study group was then sub analysed comparing those on IV heparin plus oral warfarin, to those on warfarin alone. The warfarin group had significantly higher risk of deep joint infection (9% vs 2.2% p= 0.023), haematoma/wound ooze (28% vs 4% p < 0.001) and superficial infection (13.5% vs 2.2% p < 0.001) compared to the control group. In the sub analysis of the study group, those on IV heparin had significantly higher risk of haematoma/wound ooze (44% vs 28% p= 0.023) than those on warfarin alone. The requirement of therapeutic anti-coagulation in the peri-operative period is a tenuous balance between the complications of thrombo-embolic disease and bleeding-related morbidity. In the past, perhaps the full burden of bleeding related complications has not been appreciated, but now improved understanding will enable the both the surgeon and the patient to make more informed decisions regarding therapeutic anticoagulation in elective arthroplasty surgery


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 135 - 135
1 Mar 2010
Kang S Han H Yoon K
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Wound complication including superficial infection is a concern after total knee arthroplasties (TKA) in diabetics. However, influence of glycoregulation before TKA has not been investigated in relationship to wound healing. Our hypothesis was that glycated hemoglobin (HbA1C), since it reflects long-term regulation of blood glucose, might be associated with incidence of wound complications after TKA in diabetic patients. We retrospectively reviewed 167 TKAs performed in 115 patients with diabetes mellitus between January 2001 and March 2007. All patients were diagnosed as type II DM and osteoarthritis. A wound complication was defined as a hematoma, bulla, drainage or superficial infection. Stepwise multivariate logistic regression was used to identify which variables had a significant effect on the risk of wound complications. Variables considered were age, gender, body mass index, histories of previous knee surgery, comorbidities, duration of diabetes, the methods of diabetes treatment, complications of diabetes, preoperative HbA1c level, operation time, antibiotics-impregnated cement use, the amount of blood transfusion, and postoperative blood glucose level. The overall incidence of wound complications was 6.6% (n=11) including superficial infection in 1.8% (n=3), hematoma or bullae in 3.6% (n=6), and drainage in 1.8% (n=3). There were seven cases (4.2%) of deep infection. A multivariate logistic regression revealed that independent risk factors for the development of wound complications were preoperative HbA1C ≥ 8% (odds ratio 6.074, 95% confidence interval 1.119–32.971) and operation time (odds ratio 1.013, 95% confidence interval 1.000–1.026). Poorly controlled hyperglycemia before surgery may increase the incidence of wound complications among diabetic patients receiving total knee arthroplasties. The correlation of glycemic control and wound complications may assist in the preoperative evaluation and selection of time for surgery


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 72 - 72
1 Jul 2020
Nicolay R Selley R Johnson D Terry M Tjong V
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Malnutrition is an important consideration during the perioperative period and albumin is the most common laboratory surrogate for nutritional status. The purpose of this study is to identify if preoperative serum albumin measurements are predictive of infection following arthroscopic procedures. Patients undergoing knee, shoulder or hip arthroscopy between 2006–2016 were identified in the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database. Patients with an arthroscopic current procedural terminology code and a preoperative serum albumin measurement were included. Patients with a history of prior infection, including a non-clean wound class, pre-existing wound infection or systemic sepsis were excluded. Independent t-tests where used to compare albumin values in patients with and without the occurrence of a postoperative infection. Pre-operative albumin levels were subsequently evaluated as predictors of infection with logistic regression models. There were 31,906 patients who met the inclusion criteria. The average age was 55.7 years (standard deviation (SD) 14.62) and average BMI was 31.7 (SD 7.21). The most prevalent comorbidities were hypertension (49.2%), diabetes (18.4%) and smoking history (16.9%). The average preoperative albumin was 4.18 (SD 0.42). There were 45 cases of superficial infection (0.14%), 10 cases of wound dehiscence (0.03%), 17 cases of deep infection (0.05%), 27 cases of septic arthritis or other organ space infection (0.08%) and 95 cases of any infection (0.30%). The preoperative albumin levels for patients who developed septic arthritis (mean difference (MD) 0.20, 95% CI, 0.038, 0.35, P = 0.015) or any infection (MD 0.14, 95% CI 0.05, 0.22, P = 0.002) were significantly lower than the normal population. Additionally, disseminated cancer, Hispanic race, inpatient status and smoking history were significant independent risk factors for infection, while female sex and increasing albumin were protective towards developing any infection. Rates of all infections were found to increase exponentially with decreasing albumin. The relative risk of infection with an albumin of 2 was 3.46 (95% CI, 2.74–4.38) when compared to a normal albumin of 4. For each albumin increase of 0.69, the odds of developing any infection decreases by a factor of 0.52. This study suggests that preoperative serum albumin is an independent predictor of septic arthritis and all infection following elective arthroscopic procedures. Although the effect of albumin on infection is modest, malnutrition may represent a modifiable risk factor with regard to preventing infection following arthroscopy


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 1 | Pages 62 - 68
1 Jan 2001
Bhandari M Guyatt GH Swiontkowski MF Schemitsch EH

We have systematically reviewed the effect of alternative methods of stabilisation of open tibial fractures on the rates of reoperation, and the secondary outcomes of nonunion, deep and superficial infection, failure of the implant and malunion by the analysis of 799 citations on the subject, identified from computerised databases. Although 68 proved to be potentially eligible, only eight met all criteria for inclusion. Three investigators independently graded the quality of each study and extracted the relevant data. One study (n = 56 patients) suggested that the use of external fixators significantly decreased the requirement for reoperation when compared with fixation with plates. The use of unreamed nails, compared with external fixators (five studies, n = 396 patients), reduced the risk of reoperation, malunion and superficial infection. Comparison of reamed with unreamed nails showed a reduced risk of reoperation (two studies, n = 132) with the reamed technique. An indirect comparison between reamed nails and external fixators also showed a reduced risk of reoperation (two studies) when using nails. We have identified compelling evidence that unreamed nails reduced the incidence of reoperations, superficial infections and malunions, when compared with external fixators. The relative merits of reamed versus unreamed nails in the treatment of open tibial fractures remain uncertain


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 5 - 5
1 Oct 2021
Bell K Balfour J Oliver W White T Molyneux S Clement N Duckworth A
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The primary aim was to determine the rate of complications and re-intervention rate in a consecutive series of operatively managed distal radius fractures. Data was retrospectively collected on 304 adult distal radius fractures treated at our institution in a year. Acute unstable displaced distal radius fractures surgically managed within 28 days of injury were included. Demographic and injury data, as well as details of complications and their subsequent management were recorded. There were 304 fractures in 297 patients. The mean age was 57yrs and 74% were female. Most patients were managed with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) (n=278, 91%), with 6% (n=17) managed with manipulation and Kirschner wires and 3% (n=9) with bridging external fixation. Twenty-seven percent (n=81) encountered a post-operative complication. Complex regional pain syndrome was most common (5%, n=14), followed by loss of reduction (4%). Ten patients (3%) had a superficial wound infection managed with oral antibiotics. Deep infection occurred in one patient. Fourteen percent (n=42) required re-operation. The most common indication was removal of metalwork (n=27), followed by carpal tunnel decompression (n=4) and revision ORIF (n=4). Increasing age (p=0.02), male gender (p=0.02) and high energy mechanism of injury (p<0.001) were associated with developing a complication. High energy mechanism was the only factor associated with re-operation (p<0.001). This study has documented the complication and re-intervention rates following distal radius fracture fixation. Given the increased risk of complications and the positive outcomes reported in the literature, non-operative management of displaced fractures should be considered in older patients


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Nov 2021
Nepple J Freiman S Pashos G Thornton T Schoenecker P Clohisy J
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Residual Legg-Calve-Perthes (LCP) deformities represent one of the most challenging disorders in hip reconstructive surgery. We assessed mid-term PRO. M. s, radiographic correction, complications and survivorship of combined surgical dislocation (SD) and periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) for the treatment of complex LCP deformities. A longitudinal cohort study was performed on 31 hips with complex LCP deformities undergoing combined SD/PAO. Treatment included femoral head reshaping, trochanteric advancement and relative neck lengthening, management of intra-articular lesions and PAO. Twenty-seven (87.1%) had minimum 5-year follow up. Average age was 19.8 years with 56% female and 44% having previous surgery. At a mean 8.4 years, 85% (23/27) of the hips remain preserved (no conversion to THA). The survivorship estimates at 5 and 10 years were 93% and 85%, respectively. The median and interquartile range for mHHS increased from 64 [55–67] to 92 [70–97] (p<0.001), the WOMAC-pain improved from 60 [45–75] to 86 [75–100] (p= 0.001). An additional 19% (n=5) reported symptoms (mHHS <70) at final follow-up. UCLA activity score increased from a median of 8 [6–10] to 9 [7–10] (p=0.207). Structural correction included average improvements of acetabular inclination 15.3. o. ± 7.6, LCEA 20.7° ± 10.8, ACEA 23.4° ± 16.3, and trochanteric height 18 mm ± 10 mm (all, p<0.001). Complications occurred in two (7%) patients including one deep and one superficial wound infection. At intermediate follow-up of combined SD/PAO for complex LCP deformities, 85% of hips are preserved. This procedure provides reliable deformity correction, major pain relief, improved function and acceptable complication/failure rates


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 7 | Pages 545 - 551
23 Jul 2021
Cherry A Montgomery S Brillantes J Osborne T Khoshbin A Daniels T Ward SE Atrey A

Aims. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic meant that proceeding with elective surgery was restricted to minimize exposure on wards. In order to maintain throughput of elective cases, our hospital (St Michaels Hospital, Toronto, Canada) was forced to convert as many cases as possible to same-day procedures rather than overnight admission. In this retrospective analysis, we review the cases performed as same-day arthroplasty surgeries compared to the same period in the previous 12 months. Methods. We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients undergoing total hip and knee arthroplasties over a three-month period between October and December in 2019, and again in 2020, in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic. Patient demographics, number of outpatient primary arthroplasty cases, length of stay for admissions, 30-day readmission, and complications were collated. Results. In total, 428 patient charts were reviewed for October to December of 2019 (n = 195) and 2020 (n = 233). Of those, total hip arthroplasties (THAs) comprised 60% and 58.8% for 2019 and 2020, respectively. Demographic data was comparable with no statistical difference for age, sex, contralateral joint arthroplasty, or BMI. American Society of Anesthesiologists grade I was more highly prevalent in the 2020 cohort (5.1-times increase; n = 13 vs n = 1). Degenerative disc disease and fibromyalgia were less significantly prevalent in the 2020 cohort. There was a significant increase in same day discharges for non-direct anterior approach THAs (two-times increase) and total knee arthroplasty (ten-times increase), with a reciprocal decrease in next day discharges. There were significantly fewer reported superficial wound infections in 2020 (5.6% vs 1.7%) and no significant differences in readmissions or emergency department visits (3.1% vs 3.0%). Conclusion. The COVID-19 pandemic meant that hospitals and patients were hopeful to minimize the exposure to the wards, and minimize strain on the already taxed inpatient beds. With few positives during the COVID-19 crisis, the pandemic was the catalyst to speed up the outpatient arthroplasty programme that has resulted in our institution being more efficient, and with no increase in readmissions or early complications. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(7):545–551


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 39 - 39
1 Dec 2018
Stefánsdóttir A Ylva B Gülfe A
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Aim. Reveal the rate of surgical site infection (SSI) after primary hip and knee arthroplasty in patients with inflammatory joint disease and analyse if the infection rate was correlated to the given anti-rheumatic treatment. The background is that since 2006 patients operated at the orthopaedic department at Skåne University hospital, Lund, Sweden, have continued treatment with TNF-alpha inhibitors during the perioperative period. Method. During 2006 to 2015 494 planned primary hip and knee arthroplasties were performed on 395 patients (236 hip arthroplasties and 239 knee arthroplasties). Data on age, sex, diagnosis, BMI, operation time, ASA-classification, treatment with cDMARDs (conventional disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs) and bDMARDs (biological disease modifying antirheumatic drugs) and use of prednisolone was collected. The primary outcome variable was prosthetic joint infection (PJI) within 1 year from surgery with a secondary outcome variable being superficial SSI. Results. In 32% (n=159) of the cases the patient was treated with a TNF-alpha inhibitor. The rate of PJI was 1.4% (n=7). The overall rate of infection, including superficial infections, was 2.4% (n=12). All the PJIs occurred after a knee arthroplasty and only 1 patient was treated with a TNF-alpha inhibitor (etanercept). Conclusions. We could not find that continuing treatment with TNF-inhibitors perioperatively led to a higher incidence of PJI or SSI than generally would be expected in a group of patients with an inflammatory joint disease. Based on these results there is no need to discontinue treatment with TNF-inhibitors when performing arthroplasty surgery


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 85-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 132 - 132
1 Feb 2003
Synnott K Kelly E Kelly P Quinlan W
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Introduction: The red, hot swollen knee is commonly seen in the A& E department and can present a diagnostic dilemma for the casualty officer. While superficial cellulites and bursitis are the most common diagnoses, anxiety is induced by the spectre of septic arthritis. The potential sequalae from aspirating a knee through infected superficial tissues further emphasise the importance of making an accurate clinical diagnosis. The lymph drainage of the superficial tissues of the lower limb is via lymphatics that accompany the long saphenous vein and drain to the lower group of the superficial inguinal nodes. Drainage from the knee joint is to a popliteal node situated between the knee joint capsule and the popliteal artery. Efferents from this node ascend in close relation to the femoral vessels and drains to the deep inguinal nodes. We hypothesise that the differences in lymphatic drainage mean that palpable inguinal nodes are more likely with superficial infections than with septic arthritis. We reviewed the clinical findings in a group of patients with superficial or deep infections to test this theory. Patients and Methods: From January 1995 until June 2000, twenty-seven patients were admitted with septic arthritis of the knee and fifty-one with superficial cellulites or bursitis about the knee. The former were diagnosed on the basis of clinical findings and a knee aspirate, the latter on clinical findings and response to treatment. The presence or absence of palpable inguinal lymph nodes was determined and compared for each diagnostic group. Results: Joint aspirates from the group with septic arthritis grew organisms in twenty patients (staph aureus in 19, strep pneumoniae in one). The remaining seven patients had no growth but purulent fluid on aspirate with leukocyte counts in excess of 50,000/mm. 3. Six patients had rheumatoid arthritis and two were HIV positive IVDA’s but the rest had no pre-disposing factors. The average age was 52 (range 16–83). All were treated with arthroscopic washout (average 2.2/patient) and antibiotic chemotherapy. In the superficial infection group 28 (56%) had pre-patellar bursitis and 23 (54%) cellulites. All were treated with antibiotics while eight of the bursitis group required incision and drainage. In the patients with superficial infection 32 (63%) had palpable inguinal lymphadenopathy while no patient with septic arthritis of the knee had palpably enlarged inguinal lymph nodes. This result is highly statistically significant (p< 0.01). Discussion: It is well recognised that neoplastic or inflammatory conditions of the superficial tissues of the lower limb may be associated with inguinal lymphadenopathy. A similar association for septic arthritis of the knee has not to our knowledge been described. Our study would suggest that palpably enlarged lymph nodes are unusual in this condition. While it is worth emphasizing that the presence of lymph nodes does not rule out absolutely the possibility of septic arthritis, their presence or absence may be useful in differentiating superficial from deep infections about the knee


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 40 - 40
1 Aug 2013
Mackie A Kazi Z Shah K
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The incidence of wound complications after a hip or a knee replacement is well established, but there is no such data about foot/ankle surgery. Without this data it is difficult to compare performance between different care-providers. It is also difficult to benchmark services that could potentially be provided by a wide range of care providers (chiropodists, podiatrists, podiatric surgeons, general orthopaedic surgeons with a small foot/ankle practice, etc). Our aim was to establish the incidence of wound complications after foot/ankle surgery and provide a baseline for future comparison. Our study was done in two parts. First part was to conduct an opinion-survey of BOFAS members with a substantial foot/ankle practice, on wound complications from foot/ankle surgery in their own practice. Second part was to conduct a prospective study on the incidence of wound complications from our own foot/ankle practice. The study was registered as an audit and did not require ethical approval. All wound complications (skin necrosis, wound dehiscence, superficial and deep infections) were recorded prospectively. Record of such data was obtained by an independent observer, and from multiple sources, to avoid under-reporting. 60 % of the responders to our survey had a predominant foot/ankle practice (exclusive or at least 75 % of their practice was foot/ankle surgery) and were included for further analysis of their responses. A large majority of these responders (64%) reported a rate of 2–5 % for superficial infection, and a significant majority (86 %) reported a deep infection rate of less than 2 %. Results from our own practice showed an incidence of superficial infection of 2.8 % and deep infection of 1.5 %. With increasing focus on clinical outcome measures as an indicator of quality, it is imperative to publish data on wound complications/ infection after foot/ankle surgery, and in the absence of such data, our two-armed study (survey-opinion and prospective audit) provides a useful benchmark for future comparisons


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XLI | Pages 90 - 90
1 Sep 2012
Wood A Davis A Keenan A Arthur C Brenkel I
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Current literature comparing the effect on body mass index (BMI) on the outcome of total hip replacements (THR) is inconclusive. To describe the effect of BMI on THR over the first five years. We prospectively recruited 1,617 patients undergoing primary THR for osteoarthritis and followed them up at 5 years, recording, dislocations, revisions, deep and superficial infections, Harris Hip scores (HHS) and SF-36. A multivariate analysis was performed to identify if BMI is an independent predictor of adverse outcome. 148 (9%) patients had a BMI >35. 6.8% of patients with a BMI >35 had a dislocation by 5 year post op compared with 3.2%BMI 30–34.9, 2% BMI 25–29.9 and 1.5% BMI<25 (p=0.03) Superficial infections 14.2% BMI >35, 4.4% BMI <25. In SF 36 scores only Mental Health and change in health had no significant differences with an increase in BMI having a statistically significant decrease in all other SF scores. HHS had a mean improvement of 45.1 at five years with an expected loss of 0.302 HHS points (95% CI0.440–0.163) per 1 point BMI increase. There was no significant difference in deep infections, mortality <3 months, revision rates or length of stay. The most significant risk in increasing BMI is the dislocation rate, possibly representing increased technical difficulty in larger patients. Whilst increasing BMI has a reduced HHS and SF16 score, the overall benefit is still positive


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 98-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1106 - 1111
1 Aug 2016
Duckworth AD Jefferies JG Clement ND White TO

Aims. The aim of this study was to report the outcome following primary fixation or a staged protocol for type C fractures of the tibial plafond. Patients and Methods. We studied all patients who sustained a complex intra-articular fracture (AO type C) of the distal tibia over an 11-year period. The primary short-term outcome was infection. The primary long-term outcome was the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS). Results. There were 102 type C pilon fractures in 99 patients, whose mean age was 42 years (16 to 86) and 77 were male. Primary open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) was performed in 73 patients (71.6%), whilst 20 (19.6%) underwent primary external fixation with delayed ORIF. There were 18 wound infections (17.6%). A total of nine (8.8%) were deep and nine were superficial. Infection was associated with comorbidities (p = 0.008), open fractures (p = 0.008) and primary external fixation with delayed ORIF (p = 0.023). At a mean of six years (0.3 to 13; n = 53) after the injury, the mean FAOS was 76.2 (0 to 100) and 72% of patients were satisfied. Conclusion. This is currently the largest series reporting the outcome following fixation of complex AO type C tibial pilon fractures. Despite the severity of these injuries, we have demonstrated that a satisfactory outcome can be achieved in the appropriate patients using primary ORIF. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2016;98-B:1106–11


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 2 - 2
1 May 2021
Tofighi M Somerville C Lahoti O
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Introduction. Open fractures are fortunately rare but pose an even greater challenge due to poor soft tissues, in addition to poor bone quality. Co-morbidities and pre-existing medical conditions, in particular, peripheral vascular diseases make them often unsuitable for free flaps. We present our experience in treating severe open fractures of tibia with Acute Intentional Deformation (AID) to close the soft tissues followed by gradual correction of deformity to achieve anatomical alignment of the tibia and fracture healing with Taylor Spatial Frame. Materials and Methods. We treated 4 geriatric (3 female and 1 male) patients with Gustillo-Anderson III B fractures of the tibia between 2017–18. All were unfit to undergo orthoplastic procedures (free flap or local flaps). The age range is 69 yrs to 92 years. Co-morbidities included severe rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis and heart failure. The procedure involved wound debridement, application of two ring Taylor Spatial Frame, acute deformation of the limb on the table to achieve soft-tissue closure/approximation. Regular neurovascular assessments were performed in the immediate post-operative period to monitor for compartment syndrome and nerve compression symptoms. After 7–10 days of latent period, the frame was gradually manipulated, according to a method we had previously published, to achieve anatomical alignment. The frame was removed in clinic after fracture healing. Results. Time in frame ranged from 1.5 months to 7 months. In one patient (92 yr old with an open fracture of the ankle) hindfoot nail was inserted after soft-tissue closure was achieved at 1.5 months, and frame removed. We achieved complete healing of soft tissue wounds without any input from plastic surgeons in all patients. All fractures healed in anatomical alignment. 3 patients had one episode of superficial pin infection each requiring 5 days of oral antibiotics. None of the patients developed a deep infection. Conclusions. Acute intentional deformation (AID) with Taylor Spatial Frame achieves good closure of soft tissues in physiologically compromised geriatric patients who were deemed unfit for plastic surgery. We also achieved fracture healing in all four cases without any major complications


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 5 | Pages 526 - 533
1 May 2023
Harmer JR Wyles CC Duong SQ Morgan III RJ Maradit-Kremers H Abdel MP

Aims

The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of depressive and anxiety disorders prior to total hip (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and to assess their impact on the rates of any infection, revision, or reoperation.

Methods

Between January 2000 and March 2019, 21,469 primary and revision arthroplasties (10,011 THAs; 11,458 TKAs), which were undertaken in 15,504 patients at a single academic medical centre, were identified from a 27-county linked electronic medical record (EMR) system. Depressive and anxiety disorders were identified by diagnoses in the EMR or by using a natural language processing program with subsequent validation from review of the medical records. Patients with mental health diagnoses other than anxiety or depression were excluded.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 96 - 96
1 Nov 2016
Aoude A Aldebeyan S Nooh A Weber M Tanzer M
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Computer assisted surgery (CAS) has gained popularity in orthopaedics for both total knee (TKA) and total hip arthroplasty (THA) in the past decades as a stereotactic device that provides the surgeon with real-time feedback on implant position based on electromagnetic or infrared based instruments. The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of CAS on 30-day complication rates following THA and TKA. The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) database was used to identify all patients that underwent THA and TKA from 2011 to 2013, as well as any complication they had within 30-days of their surgery. Univariate and multivariate regression analysis was used to compare the post-operative complications in patients whose surgery involved the use of CAS with those by conventional surgical techniques. We identified 104,550 patients who had THA (42,275 patients) and TKA (62,275 patients) procedures in the database between 2011 and 2013. Computer Assisted Surgery was used in 1,120 THA and 2,173 TKA procedures. There were higher overall adverse events (OR 1.40, CI: 1.22–1.59) in the Conventional group when compared to CAS for TKA. The rate of overall minor events (OR 1.38, CI: 1.21–1.58) and requirements for blood transfusion (OR 1.44, CI: 1.25–1.67) were higher in the Conventional group compared to the CAS group for TKA. However, rate of re-operation was significantly higher in the CAS group for TKA (OR 1.60, CI: 1.15–2.25). The results also showed higher overall adverse events (OR 2.61, CI: 2.09–3.26) in the Conventional group when compared to CAS for THA. The rate of overall minor events (OR 2.72, CI: 2.16–3.42) and requirements for blood transfusion (OR 3.27, CI: 2.52–4.25) was higher in the Conventional group whereas superficial wound infections (OR 0.46, CI: 0.46–0.81) were shown to be higher in the CAS group. The result also showed slightly longer operative times in CAS for both THA and TKA. This study analysed a large patient database involving multiple institutions and surgeons and found that, overall, the use off CAS in primary total hip and total knee arthroplasty reduced the number of adverse events in the first 30-days postoperatively, compared to conventional surgical techniques. However, CAS was associated with an increased number of reoperations, superficial infections and operating time. The clinical benefits and disadvantages of CAS should be considered by arthroplasty surgeons when determining the potential benefit-cost ratio of this technology


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 303 - 304
1 May 2009
Desai A Sreekumar R Raut V
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To assess the incidence of infection in cases of Primary Total Knee Arthroplasty with prior steroid injection into the knee joint. Steroid injection into the arthritic joint is a well-known modality of treatment of arthritic joints. Its efficacy is well-documented. Increased incidence of infection secondary to steroid injection as compared to uninjected joints is reported in recent literature. A retrospective study was conducted. Four hundred and forty patients underwent Total Knee Replacement by the senior author during 1997–2005 at Wrightington hospital. Ninety patients had intraarticular steroid injection prior to surgery of which 35 patients had injection within 1 year prior to surgery. All patients had at least one year follow-up. Infection rate was assessed by case note, x-rays and microbiology review till last follow-up. One hundred and eighty patients of matched cohort who had Total Knee Replacement without steroid injection were compared for infection rate. Two cases of superficial infection were noted in the infection group and 5 cases of superficial infection in the non-injection group. No case of deep infection was noted in either group. Statistical analysis showed no significant difference in incidence of infection in either group. Steroids are useful adjuncts in the management of patients with arthritic joints. This study shows no increased incidence of infection in patients who were given steroid injection prior to arthroplasty


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 411 - 411
1 Sep 2009
Sreekumar R Desai AS Board TN Raut VV
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Aims & Objectives: To assess whether the incidence of infection in Primary Total knee Arthroplasty is increased as a result of previous steroid infiltration into the knee joint. Introduction: Steroid injection into the arthritic joint is a well-known modality of treatment of the arthritic joints. Its efficacy is well documented. Increased incidence of Infection secondary to steroid injection as compared to uninjected joints is reported in recent literature. Material & Methods: 440 patients underwent Total Knee replacement (PFC SIGMA-Depuy) by senior author during 1997–2005 at Wrightington hospital. 90 patients had intraarticular steroid injection prior to surgery of which 45 patients had injection with in 1 year prior to surgery. All patients had at least one year follow up. Infection rate was assessed by case note, x-rays and microbiology review till last follow up.180 patients of a matched cohort who had total knee replacement without steroid injection were compared for infection rate. Results: 2 cases of superficial infection were noted in Injection group and 5 cases of superficial infection in Non Injection group. No cases of Deep infection noted in either group. Stastical analysis showed no significant difference in incidence of infection in either group. Conclusion: Steroids are useful adjuncts in the management of patients with arthritic joints. This study shows no increased incidence of infection in patients given steroid injection prior to arthroplasty


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 17 - 17
1 May 2018
Kontoghiorghe C Khaleel A
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Background. The circular Ilizarov frame is a well-established method of external fixation used in the acute treatment of fractures. In our unit, based on our experience, we have changed practice from an all-wire construct to a hybrid, incorporating one 5mm titanium half-pin in the distal reference construct. We were able to compare the all-wire construct against this hybrid in terms of time to union and complications. Methods. All patients who underwent circular frame fixation between 2009 and 2016 for Schatzker IV-VI tibial plateau fractures at one district general hospital were included in the study. The date of union was noted and time to union was calculated. Results. A total of 151 patients were identified for the study. Of these, 17 were excluded due to loss to follow up. In total, 134 patients were included, 74 in the all-wire group and 60 in the hybrid group. Mean time to union was 155.5 days and 114.3 days respectively (p<0.01). Time spent in frame was therefore shorter in the hybrid group. There was no incidence of deep infection in either group and rates of superficial infection were comparable amongst both groups. Previously published data shows there is no difference between the groups in functional scores and SF scores. Conclusions. These results suggest that the hybrid method of Ilizarov fixation is superior to the classical all-wire method. Use of the hybrid construct will reduce time to union, thus improve patient tolerance and reduce associated complications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 68 - 68
1 Oct 2018
Lombardi AV Berend KR Morris MJ Crawford DA Adams JB
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Total hip arthroplasty (THA) continues moving to the outpatient arena, and may be feasible for some conversion and revision scenarios. Controversy surrounds appropriate patient selection. The purpose of this study is to report complications associated with outpatient revision and conversion THA, and to determine if comorbidities are associated with complications or overnight stay. From June 2013 through March 2018, 43 patients (44 hips) underwent conversion (n=9) or revision (n=35) THA at a free-standing ambulatory surgery center. Mean patient age was 58.4 years, and 52% of patients were male. Conversion procedures were failed fracture fixation with retained hardware and all involved both femoral and acetabular replacement. Revision procedures involved head only in one, head and liner in 20, cup and head in 8, stem only in one, stem and liner in 4, and full revision in one. Forty-one (93%) were discharged same day without incident, none required transfer to acute facility, and 3 required overnight stay with 2 of these for convenience and only one for a medical reason, urinary retention. Three patients with early superficial infection, including 2 diagnosed by positive intraoperative cultures, were successfully treated with oral antibiotics. There were no major complications, readmissions, or subsequent surgeries within 90 days. One or more major comorbidities were present in 15 patients (34%) including 1 valvular disease, 7 arrhythmia, 2 thromboembolism history, 3 obstructive sleep apnea, 3 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, 2 asthma, 4 frequent urination, and 1 renal disease. The single patient who stayed overnight for a medical reason had no major medical comorbidities. Outpatient arthroplasty, including revision THA in some scenarios, is safe for many patients. Presence of medical comorbidities was not associated with risk of complications. The paradigm change of patient education, medical optimization, and a multimodal program to mitigate risk of blood loss and reduce need for narcotics facilitates performing arthroplasty safely in an outpatient setting


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 68 - 68
1 Oct 2018
Bergen M Ryan S Politzer C Green C Hong C Bolognesi M Seyler T
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Introduction. Hypoalbuminemia has previously been identified as an independent predictor of postoperative complications following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Given the morbidity and financial burden associated with TKA complications, significant effort has gone into identifying patients at increased risk for perioperative complications. The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status score has been utilized for risk stratification of surgical patients for many years and is a measure of overall health. However, it is unclear how measures like albumin compare to the prognostic ability of this type of global health measure. This study aims to elucidate the utility of preoperative albumin compared with that of the ASA score in predicting complications following TKA. Methods. Patients undergoing TKA between 2005 and 2015 were identified using the American College of Surgeons-National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) database. Patients were stratified based on preoperative hypoalbuminemia (<3.5 g/dL) and ASA score (≤ 2 vs. > 2). Multivariable regression analysis adjusted for age, sex, BMI, and smoking status was utilized to determine predictive potential of hypoalbuminemia and ASA score on each postoperative complication. Results. Of the 79,661 patients included in the cohort, 4.3% had preoperative hypoalbuminemia. Univariate regression analysis found significant predictive abilities of both serum albumin and ASA score on numerous postoperative complications, such as superficial infection, deep infection, MI, pneumonia, renal insufficiency, reintubation, transfusion, readmission, reoperation, and death. Interestingly, multivariable regression analysis demonstrated that hypoalbuminemia more robustly predicted postoperative deep infection than ASA. Discussion and Conclusion. Hypoalbuminemia and ASA each individually predict numerous postoperative complications following TKA. However, this study suggests that while ASA score more accurately predicts post-operative medical complications, hypoalbuminemia may be a more accurate predictor of periprosthetic infection following TKA. Ultimately, preoperative albumin should be incorporated in the pre-operative work-up routine to stratify patient risk, especially regarding postoperative infection


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 554 - 554
1 Sep 2012
Sukeik M Ashby E Sturch P Aboelmagd K Wilson A Haddad F
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Introduction. Wound surveillance has been reported to result in a significant fall in the incidence of wound sepsis in total knee arthroplasty (TKA). However, there is currently little guidance on the definition of surgical wound infection that is best to be used for surveillance. The purpose of this study was to assess the agreement between three common definitions of surgical wound infection as a performance indicator in TKA; (a) the CDC 1992 definition, (b) the NINSS modification of the CDC definition and (c) the ASEPSIS scoring method applied to the same series of surgical wounds. Methods. A prospective study of 500 surgical wounds in patients who underwent knee arthroplasties between May 2002 and December 2004 from a single tertiary centre were assessed according to the different definitions of surgical wound infection. Results. A total of 500 wounds were assessed in 482 patients. Mean age of patients was 70+/−11 years, 61.6% were females, duration of surgery was 101+/−49 minutes and mean follow-up was 35.2+/−25.7 months. The most commonly isolated species were Coagulase negative staphylococci (33.3%), Staphylococcus aureus (25%) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (16.6%). The mean percentage of wounds classified as infected differed substantially with different definitions: 5.8% with the CDC definition, 3.6% with the NINSS version and 2.2% with an ASEPSIS score > 20. When superficial infections (according to CDC category) were included, 5.2% (26) of all observed wounds received conflicting diagnoses, and 1.4% (7) were classified as infected by both ASEPSIS and CDC definitions. When superficial infections were excluded, the two definitions estimated about the same overall percentage infection (2.2% and 2.6% respectively), but there were almost three times as many conflicting infection diagnoses (n=14) as concordant ones (n=5). Conclusion. Distinctions in surgical wound infection definitions contribute to notable differences in how infections are classified after TKA. Even small changes made to the CDC definition, as with the NINSS version, caused major variation in estimated percentage of wound infection. A single definition used consistently can show changes in wound infection rates over time at a single centre. However, differences in interpretation prevent comparison between different centres


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Dec 2018
Honkanen M Jämsen E Karppelin M Huttunen R Syrjänen J
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Aim. Patients use antibiotics for various reasons before elective joint replacement surgery, but it is not known how common this is. The aim of this study was to investigate patients' use of oral antibiotics before elective joint replacement surgery and how this affects the risk for periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) in a one-year follow-up. Method. Patients with a primary hip or knee replacement performed in a tertiary care hospital between September 2002 and December 2013 were identified (23 171 joint replacements, 10 200 hips and 12 971 knees). Information on oral antibiotics purchased within 90 days before the operation was gathered from a national database. The occurrence of a PJI, identified by prospective infection surveillance, in a one-year follow-up was the primary outcome. The occurrence of any surgical site infection was analyzed as a secondary outcome. The association between antibiotic use and subsequent infection was examined using a multivariable logistic regression model that included information on the operated joint, age, gender, body mass index and patients' chronic diseases (according to medication data). Results. During the one-year follow-up, 158 (0.68%) PJIs were identified. 4 106 (18%) of the joint replacement operations were preceded by one or more courses of oral antibiotics. The most commonly prescribed group of antibiotics was 1st generation cephalosporins. The incidence of PJI for patients with preoperative oral antibiotic use was 0.29% (12/4 106), compared to 0.77% (146/19 065) in patients without preoperative antibiotics. A preoperative oral antibiotic course decreased the risk for subsequent PJI both in the univariate (OR 0.38, 95% CI 0.21 – 0.69) and multivariable model (OR 0.40, 95% CI 0.22–0.73). When superficial infection cases were included in the analysis, preoperative antibiotic use did not affect the overall risk for surgical site infection. Conclusions. The use of oral antibiotics before elective joint replacement surgery is common and is associated with a lower risk for subsequent PJI. Further studies are needed in order to confirm this finding and to evaluate factors affecting this result. Meanwhile, the indiscriminate use of antibiotics before elective joint replacement surgery cannot be recommended, even though the treatment of active infections remains important in the prevention of surgical site infections


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 1 | Pages 72 - 81
1 Jan 2023
Stake IK Ræder BW Gregersen MG Molund M Wang J Madsen JE Husebye EE

Aims

The aim of this study was to compare the functional and radiological outcomes and the complication rate after nail and plate fixation of unstable fractures of the ankle in elderly patients.

Methods

In this multicentre study, 120 patients aged ≥ 60 years with an acute unstable AO/OTA type 44-B fracture of the ankle were randomized to fixation with either a nail or a plate and followed for 24 months after surgery. The primary outcome measure was the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) Ankle-Hindfoot score. Secondary outcome measures were the Manchester-Oxford Foot Questionnaire, the Olerud and Molander Ankle score, the EuroQol five-dimension questionnaire, a visual analogue score for pain, complications, the quality of reduction of the fracture, nonunion, and the development of osteoarthritis.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Aug 2018
Lombardi A Berend K Morris M Crawford D Adams J
Full Access

Total hip arthroplasty (THA) continues moving to the outpatient arena, and may be feasible for some conversion and revision scenarios. Controversy surrounds appropriate patient selection. The purpose of this study is to report complications associated with outpatient revision and conversion THA, and to determine if comorbidities are associated with complications or overnight stay. From June 2013 through March 2018, 43 patients (44 hips) underwent conversion (n=12) or revision (n=32) THA at a free-standing ambulatory surgery center. Mean patient age was 58.4 years, and 52% of patients were male. Conversion procedures were for failed resurfacing in two, failed hemiarthroplasty in one, and failed fracture fixation with retained hardware in 9. Revision procedures involved head only in one, head and liner in 20, cup and head in 7, stem only in 2, and stem and liner in 2. Forty-four (93%) were discharged same day without incident, none required transfer to acute facility, and 3 required overnight stay with 2 of these for convenience and only one for a medical reason, urinary retention. Three patients with early superficial infection were successfully treated with oral antibiotics. There were no major complications, readmissions, or subsequent surgeries within 90 days. One or more major comorbidities were present in 17 patients (39%) including 1 valvular disease, 8 arrhythmia, 2 thromboembolism history, 3 obstructive sleep apnea, 6 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, 2 asthma, 4 frequent urination, and 1 renal disease. The single patient who stayed overnight for a medical reason had no major medical comorbidities. Outpatient arthroplasty, including revision THA in some scenarios, is safe for many patients. Presence of medical comorbidities was not associated with risk of complications. The paradigm change of patient education, medical optimization, and a multimodal program to mitigate risk of blood loss and reduce need for narcotics facilitates performing arthroplasty safely in an outpatient setting


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 217 - 217
1 May 2011
Serra JT Ferre SA Hernandez JT Gurrera LB Maled I Garcia VM Rodriguez JMN Nardi J Caceres E
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Background: Tibial plafond fractures are caused by severe axial compression forces and are associated with soft tissue injuries. These fractures are difficult to treat and the risk of complications is high. Methods and Materials: A retrospective study of tibial plafond fractures was performed at our hospital between 2003 and 2009 and 51 patients were evaluated (51 fractures). The fracture type was classified according to the OTA classification system. 10 fractures were described as type A fractures (A1 = 3, A2 = 3, A3 = 4) (19.60%), 15 were type B fractures (B1 = 0, B2 = 9, B3 = 6) (29.4%) and 26 were type C fractures (C1= 3, C2=13, C3 = 10) (51%). Results: The average age was 47.8 years. Cases comprised 25 accidental falls (49%), 13 traffic accidents, (2.5%), 7 autolysis attempts (13.7%), 4 sports accidents (7.8%) and 2 industrial accidents (3.9%). 15 patients were initially treated with external fixators, mainly those who had type C fractures and fractures where the soft tissues were seriously damaged (21.6%). Subsequently the tibia was treated with plate fixation. Mean follow-up period was 87.78 months. Patients were required to fill in 2 quality life questionnaires after the surgical treatment. results obtained with both scales (AOFAS and FFI) were compared. The complications rate was 14%. The main complications were superficial infections, posttraumatic arthritis and non-union fractures. One case presented a superficial infection (2%) and 6 patients suffered deep infections (11.8%). Worst scores were observed in both scales with patients treated with type C fractures of the AO classification. Conclusions:. - Type C fractures have a worse prognosis. - Using external fixators as initial stabilisation method improves the healing of soft tissues. - It is important to perform a CT scan in the preoperative planification. - Tibial plafond fractures are still a challenge for the surgeon


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 6_Supple_B | Pages 77 - 83
1 Jun 2019
Roberts HJ Tsay EL Grace TR Vail TP Ward DT

Aims. Increasingly, patients with bilateral hip arthritis wish to undergo staged total hip arthroplasty (THA). With the rise in demand for arthroplasty, perioperative risk assessment and counselling is crucial for shared decision making. However, it is unknown if complications that occur after a unilateral hip arthroplasty predict complications following surgery of the contralateral hip. Patients and Methods. We used nationwide linked discharge data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project between 2005 and 2014 to analyze the incidence and recurrence of complications following the first- and second-stage operations in staged bilateral total hip arthroplasty (BTHAs). Complications included perioperative medical adverse events within 30 to 60 days, and infection and mechanical complications within one year. Conditional probabilities and odds ratios (ORs) were calculated to determine whether experiencing a complication after the first stage of surgery increased the risk of developing the same complication after the second stage. Results. A total of 13 829 patients (5790 men and 8039 women) who underwent staged BTHAs were analyzed. The mean age at first operation was 62.9 years (14 to 95). For eight of the 12 outcomes evaluated, patients who experienced the outcome following the first arthroplasty had a significantly increased probability and odds of developing that same complication following the second arthroplasty, compared with those who did not experience the complication after the first surgery. This was true for digestive complications (OR 25.67, 95% confidence interval (CI) 13.86 to 46.08; p < 0.001), urinary complications (OR 6.48, 95% CI 1.7 to 20.73; p = 0.01), haematoma (OR 12.17, 95% CI 4.55 to 31.14; p < 0.001), deep vein thrombosis (OR 4.82, 95% CI 2.34 to 9.65; p < 0.001), pulmonary embolism (OR 12.03, 95% CI 2.02 to 46.77; p = 0.01), deep hip infection (OR 534.21, 95% CI 314.96 to 909.25; p < 0.001), superficial hip infection (OR 1574.99, 95% CI 269.83 to 9291.81; p < 0.001), and mechanical malfunction (OR 117.49, 95% CI 91.55 to 150.34; p < 0.001). Conclusion. The occurrence of certain complications after unilateral THA is associated with an increased risk of the same complication occurring after staged arthroplasty of the contralateral hip. Patients who experience these complications after unilateral hip arthroplasty should be appropriately counselled regarding their risk profile prior to undergoing staged contralateral hip arthroplasty. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B(6 Supple B):77–83


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 466 - 466
1 Aug 2008
Ferrao P Mohideen M Frey C
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Liquiband is a new tissue adhesive: It works like super glue – it is attached to the wound edges, it sets within seconds and lasts for about two weeks. The glue then flakes off automatically as the skin regenerates. There is no need for suture removal. A second step forms a waterproof layer over the wound. We compared in a prospective randomized trial the Liquiband glue to skin staples. Over a 9 month period (May 2005 to January 2006) we enrolled a total of 80 patients, 40 in each group. The patients were booked for elective limb surgery and agreed to participate in the study. The surgical wounds were closed in layers. The skin was then either closed with Liquiband or skin staples. A follow up was a weeks 2, 6 and 18. The wound healing was photographically documented. The wounds were assessed according to the Hollander wound scoring system and a patient satisfaction score. Ethical approval was obtained. The two groups were matched for sex, age, body-mass index and smoking. There was a similar total wound length in both groups. All wounds healed. In the Liquiband group 4 superficial infections occurred, one dehiscence due to glue removal by the patient. In the skin staples group we had 6 superficial infections. The patient satisfaction score was lower in the skin staple group (7.0 compared to 8.3 in the Liquiband group) and on the Hollander wound scoring system there were 10% more step-off borders and 12% more edge inversions in the skin staple group. The glue did not stain the skin or leave visible marks. The authors conclude that the Liquiband skin glue is safe and effective for elective surgery. The Liquiband skin glue does not require staple removal after wound healing and the waterproof closure of the wound provides additional safety


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 51 - 51
1 Dec 2018
Papadia D Odorizzi G Buccelletti F Bertoldi L
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Aim. The optimal treatment of displaced intra-articular calcaneal fractures (DIACF) remains controversial. The operative treatment group has better anatomical recovery, functional outcome scores and less pain than non operative treatment patients, but it may lead to a higher incidence of complications, such as delayed wound healing and surgical site infections. The aim of this study was to analyze the prophylactic effect using a biphasic bone substitute (BS) eluting antibiotic on calcaneal implant-related infections. Methods. We conducted a retrospective non-randomized review of all patients with DIACF (type Sanders 2, 3, 4) from 2009 to 2017; 103 calcaneal fractures of 90 patients (13 bilaterally) were treated with plates. All cases received the same systemic antibiotic prophylaxis; BS was used on more complex cases with large bone defect and BS was added with antibiotic on higher risk patients. We collected data including complications: major (deep infections, osteomyelitis) and minor complications (wound dehiscence, superficial infection). We considered the absence of deep infections after 6 months. We compared statistically the outcomes of 3 operative groups: the first was treated with plates only (A), the second with plates and BS (B) and the third with plates added with BS eluting antibiotic (vancomicine or gentamicine) (C). Results. We examined 99 cases (group A: n33, B: n52, C: n14), 4 patients were lost; the mean age was 47,8 years (range 18–83 years). Minimal follow up was 6 months (range: 6 – 42 months). We have observed 8 (8,1%) implant-related infection (A:4, 12,1%; B:4, 7,7%), 2 (2%) superficial infection (B:2, 3,8%), 20 (20,2%) wound healing defects (A:11, 33,3%; B:7, 13,5%; C:2, 14,2%). We found a relevant reduction of the rates in the group C regarding the major complications without a statistic evidence. Conclusion. The three groups are uneven; particularly the group C has a high concentration of more severe risk patients. The low number of cases in the group C, which limited the statistic evidence, represents a second limit. The absence of major infection on group C found in this study, needs larger data to confirm this result. The open surgery has an intrinsic rate of skin complications but the use of BS eluting local antibiotic is an additional tool to manage difficult complex fractures and to prevent implanted-related infection, inhibiting bacterial colonization and biofilm protection, particularly in those patients that have suffered from a minor complication, which could lead to a deep infection


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Dec 2018
Kosola J Huotari K Helkamaa T
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Aim. Prosthetic joint infections (PJI) are devastating complications after hip arthroplasty and infection rates varies internationally between 0.76% to 1.24%. Hemi-arthroplasty (HA) is the gold standard treatment for dislocated femoral neck fractures. Recently, total hip arthroplasty (THA) has been suggested to generate even better outcomes. However, little is known about PJIs after hip fractures. The purpose of this study was to investigate PJIs after femoral neck fracture in a population-based sample. Methods. Clinical databases were harvested for all THA or HA procedures done for the treatment of femoral neck fractures at our hospital district (HUS) of 1.6 million inhabitants. Altogether, 3693 arthroplasty procedures for hip fractures were performed between 2011 to 2015. The original patient records of each case were reviewed. Complication(s) leading to readmission(s), the microbe(s), and the treatment protocol of each infection was recorded until the closing date (31.12.2016). The definition of PJI according to Musculosceletal Infection Society modified at the International Consensus meeting was used. Results. We detected 111 infections (10 THAs;101 HAs):42 superficial infections (1.1%) and 69 PJIs (1.9%). The PJI rate after THA was 3.7% (8/219) and 1.8% after HA (61/3474) (p=0.04;OR 2.12, 95%CI 1.00–4.49). Most PJIs in THA group (6/8) were treated by debridement, antimicrobials, and implant retention (DAIR) and two by 2-stage exchange. In the HA group the DAIR was the first surgical treatment for 51 PJIs (84%). Other treatment options used were girdlestone (n=3), one-stage exchange (n=2), lavation (n=2), and conservative treatment (n=3). The bacteria cultured at THA group were: Staphylococcus epidermidis (n=4), Staphylococcus aureus (n=3), Streptococcus agalactiae (n=2), and Staphylococcus haemolyticus and at the HA group Staphylococcus aureus (n=25, including 1 MRSA), Staphylococcus epidermidis (n=11), other coagulase negative staphylococci (n=7), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (n=6), Enterococcus faecalis (n=6), Escherichia coli (n=2), and streptococci (n=2). Multiple bacteria were cultured from seven PJIs. The causative microbe was unknown in five PJIs. Conclusion. THA patients had higher rate of PJIs compared to HA, however, the small sample size of the THA group may limit the statistical power of this study. The PJIs after hip fractures were usually treated by DAIR, which is also main PJI treatment after elective THAs. The overall PJI rate was higher among hip fracture than after elective THAs in the literature. The existing trend of treating more dislocated hip fractures with THA may thus lead to increased rated of PJIs in the future


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 501 - 501
1 Sep 2009
Brown K Clasper J
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Extremity injuries on the battlefield are commonly secondary to high energy mechanisms. These cause significant injury to soft tissue and bone and are contaminated. Evacuation to medical care can be difficult in the operational environment and may delay the time to initial surgery. There is already substantial literature on the complications of such injuries but this is the first report from UK forces. Our aim was to assess the complications, but specifically infections, in relation to delay in surgery and also the method of fracture stabilisation. Military patients who had ballistic mangled extremity injuries were identified from the database (courtesy of ADMEM). Using both the trauma audit and the hospital notes, demographics were assessed. The injuries sustained (including the fractured bones), time to theatre, associated injuries, method of stabilisation at Role 3, definitive fixation and complications were noted. 81 patients were identified with 95 limbs injured (68 lower limb, 27 upper limb). The most commonly fractured bones were the tibia, radius/ulna, femur and humerus. Primary stabilisation was either ExFix (53%) or plaster (44%). Of those stabilised by ExFix, the definitive stabilisation was mainly by either a nail (44%) or plate (17%). Those stabilised by plaster mainly stayed in plaster. 72% of patients developed at least one complication, the most common of which was superficial infections. Other complications were deep infections, delayed union, haematomas, neuropathic pain and flap failures. The main organisms involved were Acinetobacter, Bacillus and Pseudomonas. There was no association between delay to theatre and decision to amputate. There was an association between the use of plaster for definitive stabilisation and superficial infection and plates for definitive stabilisation and deep infections. There was no association between time delay to theatre and infections. This provides the first report of complications from extremity injuries secondary to ballistic missile devices in UK forces. It allows for comparison with reports from other sources on similar injuries and helps to guide further management of patients. In particular it agrees with recent civilian data that initial surgery does not have to be carried out as soon as possible, which has implications for military planning


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1174 - 1179
1 Oct 2022
Jamshidi K Bagherifard A Mirzaei A

Aims

Osteoarticular reconstruction of the distal femur in childhood has the advantage of preserving the tibial physis. However, due to the small size of the distal femur, matching the host bone with an osteoarticular allograft is challenging. In this study, we compared the outcomes and complications of a resurfaced allograft-prosthesis composite (rAPC) with those of an osteoarticular allograft to reconstruct the distal femur in children.

Methods

A retrospective analysis of 33 skeletally immature children with a malignant tumour of the distal femur, who underwent resection and reconstruction with a rAPC (n = 15) or osteoarticular allograft (n = 18), was conducted. The median age of the patients was ten years (interquartile range (IQR) 9 to 11) in the osteoarticular allograft group and nine years (IQR 8 to 10) in the rAPC group (p = 0.781). The median follow-up of the patients was seven years (IQR 4 to 8) in the osteoarticular allograft group and six years (IQR 3 to 7) in the rAPC group (p = 0.483). Limb function was evaluated using the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society (MSTS) score.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 328 - 328
1 May 2010
Smith I Elton R Brenkel I
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Introduction: In Scotland, the number of primary total knee replacements has been steadily increasing since 1992. It has been predicted that the number of total knee replacements performed annually will soon outstrip the number of hip replacements. The price of the implant is fixed but the length of hospital stay, and associated cost, is variable. An understanding of what currently influences length of hospital stay may be of paramount importance in order that we can influence some of these parameters, with resulting benefit to our patients as well as contributing significantly and favourably towards the health economics of this procedure. Materials and Methods: All patients who underwent primary unilateral total knee replacement in the region of Fife, Scotland, UK, during the period December 1994 to February 2007 were prospectively investigated. The following information was gathered: age, sex, body mass index (BMI), year of operation, day of operation, diagnosis, surgeon grade, consultant performing the operation, walking score, walking aids score, stair score, American Knee Society score (pain, stability and range of motion), length of operation, need for lateral release, patella replacement, urinary catheterisation, blood transfusion, presence of deep or superficial infection, pre and post-operative haemoglobin values, haemoglobin drop, and length of hospital stay. All the data was analysed using univariate and multiple linear regression statistical analysis. Results: Data on length of hospital stay was available from a total of 2105 unilateral total knee replacements. Length of stay varied from 4 to 70 days, with a mean of 9.4 and a median of 8.0. There were numerous highly significant predictors of increased length of hospital stay, when considered separately. Many of these independently significant factors remained significant when adjusted for the effects of the others. These included age of the patient, year of admission, consultant performing the operation, use of a walking aid, lateral release, deep and superficial infection, pre and post-operative haemoglobin values, urinary catheterisation and blood transfusion. Of note, the day of operation and high BMI did not influence the length of stay. Conclusion: Prolonged hospital stay following total knee replacement is associated with demographic, preoperative, intra-operative and post-operative factors. An awareness of these factors gives us the opportunity to make attempts to influence them favourably with resulting reduction in length of hospital stay and, therefore, the associated costs


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 24 - 24
1 Mar 2021
Sephton B Cruz N Kantharuban S Naique S
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Blood management protocols attempt to reduce blood loss by strategies including autologous blood donation, red cell salvage, normovolaemic haemodilution and haemostatic agents such as tranexamic acid (TXA). TXA usage in particular has become increasingly commonplace with numerous studies demonstrating a significant reduction in peri-operative blood loss and proportion of patients requiring transfusion, without increasing the risk of venous thromboembolism. Tourniquet usage has now become ubiquitous in TKA operations with reported benefits of improved visualization, shorter operative time and decreased intra-operative bleeding. However, its use is not without considerable complications including wounding dehiscence, increased venous thromboembolism, superficial wound infection and skin blistering. It is therefore imperative that we review tourniquet usage in light of ever evolving blood management strategies. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of stopping tourniquet usage in primary TKRs, performed by an experienced surgeon, in light of new blood reduction measures, such as a TXA. A retrospective analysis identified a total of 31 patients who underwent primary TKR without the use of a tourniquet from January 2018 to March 2019. This was compared to an earlier group of patients from the same surgeon undergoing TKR with the use of a tourniquet; dating from July 2016 to November 2017. All surgeries were performed within the same hospital (CXH). Peri-operative factors and outcome measures were collected for analysis. There was no significant difference in post-operative haemoglobin drop (Tourniquet, 23.1 g/L; No Tourniquet, 24.4 g/: p=0.604) and fall in haematocrit (Tourniquet, 0.082; No Tourniquet, 0.087: p=0.604). Allogenic blood transfusion rates were the same in both groups at 12.9% (2 patients) and blood loss was not found to be significantly different (Tourniquet, 1067ml; No tourniquet, 1058mls). No significant difference was found in operative time (Tourniquet, 103 minutes; No Tourniquet, 111.7 minutes: p=0.152) or length of stay (Tourniquet, 5.5 days; No Tourniquet, 5.2 days: p=0.516). Tranexamic acid usage was not found to be significant (p=1.000). ROM of motion and analgesia requirement was significantly better in the no tourniquet group on one post-operative day out of five analysed (p=0.025, p=00.011). No post-operative thromboembolic events were reported in either group. There was no significant difference in readmission rates (p=0.492) or complications (p=0.238). The increase in minor complications and potential increased VTE risk with tourniquet usage must be balanced against an improved visual field and reduced blood loss in TKR patients. Our study found no difference in post-operative blood loss and transfusion rates between tourniquet and no tourniquet groups. With ever evolving and improving blood loss management strategies, including the use of TXA, the application of tourniquet may not be needed. Further prospective RCTs are needed to assess the impact of tourniquet usage in light of this


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 11, Issue 6 | Pages 37 - 40
1 Dec 2022

The December 2022 Trauma Roundup360 looks at: Anterior approach for acetabular fractures using anatomical plates; Masquelet–Ilizarov for the management of bone loss post debridement of infected tibial nonunion; Total hip arthroplasty – better results after low-energy displaced femoral neck fracture in young patients; Unreamed intramedullary nailing versus external fixation for the treatment of open tibial shaft fractures in Uganda: a randomized clinical trial; The Open-Fracture Patient Evaluation Nationwide (OPEN) study: the management of open fracture care in the UK; Cost-utility analysis of cemented hemiarthroplasty versus hydroxyapatite-coated uncemented hemiarthroplasty; Unstable ankle fractures: fibular nail fixation compared to open reduction and internal fixation; Long-term outcomes of randomized clinical trials: wrist and calcaneus; ‘HeFT’y follow-up of the UK Heel Fracture Trial.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 6 | Pages 770 - 777
1 Jun 2008
Edwards C Counsell A Boulton C Moran CG

Prospective data on hip fracture from 3686 patients at a United Kingdom teaching hospital were analysed to investigate the risk factors, financial costs and outcomes associated with deep or superficial wound infections after hip fracture surgery. In 1.2% (41) of patients a deep wound infection developed, and 1.1% (39) had a superficial wound infection. A total of 57 of 80 infections (71.3%) were due to Staphylococcus aureus and 39 (48.8%) were due to MRSA. No statistically significant pre-operative risk factors were detected. Length of stay, cost of treatment and pre-discharge mortality all significantly increased with deep wound infection. The one-year mortality was 30%, and this increased to 50% in those who developed an infection (p < 0.001). A deep infection resulted in doubled operative costs, tripled investigation costs and quadrupled ward costs. MRSA infection increased costs, length of stay, and pre-discharge mortality compared with non-MRSA infection


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 7 | Pages 743 - 750
1 Jul 2023
Fujii M Kawano S Ueno M Sonohata M Kitajima M Tanaka S Mawatari D Mawatari M

Aims

To clarify the mid-term results of transposition osteotomy of the acetabulum (TOA), a type of spherical periacetabular osteotomy, combined with structural allograft bone grafting for severe hip dysplasia.

Methods

We reviewed patients with severe hip dysplasia, defined as Severin IVb or V (lateral centre-edge angle (LCEA) < 0°), who underwent TOA with a structural bone allograft between 1998 and 2019. A medical chart review was conducted to extract demographic data, complications related to the osteotomy, and modified Harris Hip Score (mHHS). Radiological parameters of hip dysplasia were measured on pre- and postoperative radiographs. The cumulative probability of TOA failure (progression to Tönnis grade 3 or conversion to total hip arthroplasty) was estimated using the Kaplan–Meier product-limited method, and a multivariate Cox proportional hazard model was used to identify predictors for failure.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 5 | Pages 299 - 305
2 May 2023
Shevenell BE Mackenzie J Fisher L McGrory B Babikian G Rana AJ

Aims

Obesity is associated with an increased risk of hip osteoarthritis, resulting in an increased number of total hip arthroplasties (THAs) performed annually. This study examines the peri- and postoperative outcomes of morbidly obese (MO) patients (BMI ≥ 40 kg/m2) compared to healthy weight (HW) patients (BMI 18.5 to < 25 kg/m2) who underwent a THA using the anterior-based muscle-sparing (ABMS) approach.

Methods

This retrospective cohort study observes peri- and postoperative outcomes of MO and HW patients who underwent a primary, unilateral THA with the ABMS approach. Data from surgeries performed by three surgeons at a single institution was collected from January 2013 to August 2020 and analyzed using Microsoft Excel and Stata 17.0.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1067 - 1072
1 Sep 2022
Helenius L Gerdhem P Ahonen M Syvänen J Jalkanen J Charalampidis A Nietosvaara Y Helenius I

Aims

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether, after correction of an adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS), leaving out the subfascial drain gives results that are no worse than using a drain in terms of total blood loss, drop in haemoglobin level, and opioid consumption.

Methods

Adolescents (aged between 10 and 21 years) with an idiopathic scoliosis (major curve ≥ 45°) were eligible for inclusion in this randomized controlled noninferiority trial (n = 125). A total of 90 adolescents who had undergone segmental pedicle screw instrumentation were randomized into no-drain or drain groups at the time of wound closure using the sealed envelope technique (1:1). The primary outcome was a drop in the haemoglobin level during first three postoperative days. Secondary outcomes were 48-hour postoperative oxycodone consumption and surgical complications.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 3 | Pages 239 - 246
1 Mar 2023
Arshad Z Aslam A Al Shdefat S Khan R Jamil O Bhatia M

Aims

This systematic review aimed to summarize the full range of complications reported following ankle arthroscopy and the frequency at which they occur.

Methods

A computer-based search was performed in PubMed, Embase, Emcare, and ISI Web of Science. Two-stage title/abstract and full-text screening was performed independently by two reviewers. English-language original research studies reporting perioperative complications in a cohort of at least ten patients undergoing ankle arthroscopy were included. Complications were pooled across included studies in order to derive an overall complication rate. Quality assessment was performed using the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine levels of evidence classification.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 91-B, Issue 2 | Pages 217 - 224
1 Feb 2009
Rajasekaran S Dheenadhayalan J Babu JN Sundararajan SR Venkatramani H Sabapathy SR

Between June 1999 and May 2003 we undertook direct primary closure of the skin wounds of 173 patients with Gustilo and Anderson grade-IIIA and grade-IIIB open fractures. These patients were selected from a consecutive group of 557 with type-III injuries presenting during this time. Strict criteria for inclusion in the study included debridement within 12 hours of injury, no sewage or organic contamination, no skin loss either primarily or secondarily during debridement, a Ganga Hospital open injury skin score of 1 or 2 with a total score of ten or less, the presence of bleeding skin margins, the ability to approximate wound edges without tension and the absence of peripheral vascular disease. In addition, patients with polytrauma were excluded. At a mean follow-up of 6.2 years (5 to 7), the outcome was excellent in 150 (86.7%), good in 11 (6.4%) and poor in 12 (6.9%). A total of 33 complications occurred in 23 patients including superficial infection in 11, deep infection in five and the requirement for a secondary skin flap in three. Six patients developed nonunion requiring further surgery, one of whom declined additional measures to treat an established infected nonunion. Immediate skin closure when performed selectively with the above indications proved to be a safe procedure


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 72 - 72
1 Dec 2020
PEHLIVANOGLU T BEYZADEOGLU T
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Introduction. Simultaneous correction of knee varus malalignment with medial open wedge high tibial osteotomy (MOWHTO) combined with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) surgery aims to address symptomatic unicompartmental osteoarthritis in addition to restore knee stability in order to improve outcomes. The aim of this study is to present at least 5 years results of 32 patients who underwent simultaneous knee realignment osteotomy with ACL surgery. Methods. Patients with symptomatic instability due to chronic ACL deficiency or failed previous ACL surgery together with a varus malalignment of ≥6°, previous medial meniscectomy and symptomatic medial compartment pain who were treated with MOWHTO combined with ACL surgery were enrolled. ACL surgery was performed with the anatomical single bundle all-inside technique using TightRope. ®. RT (Arthrex, Naples, FL, USA) and MOWHTO using TomoFix. ®. medial high tibia plate (DePuy Synthes, Raynham, MA, USA) in all cases. Patients were evaluated preoperatively and at 6 months, 12 months and annually postoperatively using the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS), Oxford Knee Score (OKS) and Euroqol's Visual Analogue Score (VAS) for pain. Results. 32 patients (22 men and 10 women) with a mean age of 41.2 years and mean BMI of 28.6 kg/m. 2. , underwent the combined procedures. Tibiofemoral neutral re-alignment was achieved in all patients with HTO. Complete subjective and objective scores have been obtained in 84.4% of patients with at least 5 years of follow-up (mean 8.7 years). An improvement in total KOOS of 27.1 points (p<0.003), OKS of 15.1 (p<0.003) and VAS for pain of 24.7 points (p<0.001) were detected. No ACL reconstruction failure was noted. Complications consisted of one superficial wound infection and one delayed union. Plate removal was needed in 20 (62.5%) patients due to pes anserinus pain. Conclusions. Simultaneous restoration of coronal knee axis by applying HTO and stability by ACL reconstruction/revision were reported to offer excellent improvement in early outcomes in patients with ACL rupture and symptomatic unicompartmental osteoarthritis. The combined procedure requires careful pre-operative planning and is therefore technically challenging. However, by restoring the neutral axis and providing stability, it represents a good joint preserving alternative to arthroplasty for active middle-aged patients


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 6 | Pages 596 - 602
1 Jun 2024
Saarinen AJ Sponseller P Thompson GH White KK Emans J Cahill PJ Hwang S Helenius I

Aims

The aim of this study was to compare outcomes after growth-friendly treatment for early-onset scoliosis (EOS) between patients with skeletal dysplasias versus those with other syndromes.

Methods

We retrospectively identified 20 patients with skeletal dysplasias and 292 with other syndromes (control group) who had completed surgical growth-friendly EOS treatment between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2018. We compared radiological parameters, complications, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) at mean follow-up of 8.6 years (SD 3.3) in the dysplasia group and 6.6 years (SD 2.6) in the control group.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 94 - 94
1 Mar 2008
Moola F Jacks D Reindl R Berry G Harvey EJ
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To determine if immediate closure of open wounds is safe, we examined our results over a five year period. Of the two hundred and ninety-seven open fractures, two hundred and fifty-five (86 %) were closed immediately. Grade III open fractures accounted for 24.2% of cases. The superficial infection rate was 10.9%. The combined deep infection and osteomyelitis rate was 4.7%. Neither region of injury, Gustilo grade, velocity of trauma, nor time to primary closure had a significant influence on the incidence of infection. Primary closure may be a safe practice and could be accepted as a viable treatment plan in the care of most open fractures. The purpose of this study was to determine if immediate primary closure of open fracture wounds is a safe practice without increased deep infections and delayed/ nonunions?. There was neither an increase in deep infection nor delayed union/non-union. Benefits include a decreased requirement for repeat debridements and soft tissue procedures, minimized surgical morbidity, hospital stay, and cost of treatment. Primary closure may be a safe practice in the care of most open fractures. The standard of care has been to leave traumatic wounds open after initial emergent surgical debridement. Due to orthopedic advancements and current resource limitations, treatment at our institution has evolved to immediate closure of all open wounds after adequate irrigation and debridement. Of the two hundred and ninety-seven open fractures, two hundred and fifty-five (86 %) were closed immediately after irrigation and debridement. Grades 3a, 3b and 3c open fractures accounted for 24.2% of cases. The superficial infection rate of primary closure was 10.9 %. All cases resolved with oral antibiotics. The combined deep infection and osteomyelitis rate was 4.7%. Neither region of injury, Gustilo grade, velocity of trauma, nor time to primary closure had a significant influence on the incidence of infection. The study reviewed all open fractures presenting to a Level One Trauma center over a five-year study period. Patients were followed until fracture union or complication resolution. Multiple variables were examined including patient demographics, injury mechanism, fracture location, Gustilo classification, time to antibiotic administration, surgical debridement and wound closure, and method of wound closure. Outcome measurement included infection or union problems


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_21 | Pages 25 - 25
1 Dec 2017
Ring J Davenport J Karski M Smith R Divercha H Clough T
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Introduction. Traditional treatment for end-stage ankle arthritis has been ankle arthrodesis, however ankle arthroplasty is becoming an accepted alternative. The Zenith Ankle (Corin, UK) is 3rd generation implant with a mobile bearing design. In the NJR 2016 report, the Zenith was the commonest ankle prosthesis implanted in the UK. However, compared to other ankle implants, there's little published data on its performance and survival. The aim of this study was to analyse outcome in a consecutive series from a non-designer centre. Method. We conducted a retrospective review of a consecutive series of 118 Zenith Ankle replacements implanted in our Unit (December 2010 to May 2016). Data was collected from our National Joint Registry entries, research databases, patient notes, PACS and PROMS. Results. Average age was 68.2 years (range 46–46 years; 75M:43F; 97 Osteoarthritis, 20 inflammatory arthritis, 1 haemophilia). Results show a 95.8% survivorship at average 3.5 years follow up (range 0.6–6.3 years). 5 patients (4.2%) required revision. Average pre- and post-op MOXFQ scores were 85.0/100 and 32/100 respectively with improvements in VAS from 7.0/10 to 3.6/10, with an average range of movement of 20.4 degrees. Overall satisfaction rate was 89%. There were 65 complications in 55 patients, but only 7.7% of these led to detrimental effects on the implant. The commonest were malleolar fracture (14.4%), wound problems (13.6%) and superficial infection (12.7%), medial gutter pain (10.2%). There were no cases of deep infection. Five patients required revision (all were revised to revision arthroplasty), for component loosening, or pain and stiffness. Conclusions. This is largest non-designer centre series examining the outcomes of the Zenith implant. Survival figures for this implant are comparable to NJR averages (6.8% revision at 5 years), with high levels of patient functional outcome and satisfaction. The data highlights the risks associated with this procedure


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 13, Issue 4 | Pages 40 - 42
2 Aug 2024

The August 2024 Research Roundup360 looks at: Effect of vitamin D deficiency on periprosthetic joint infection and complications after primary total joint replacement; Postoperative angiotensin receptor blocker use associated with decreased rates of manipulation under anaesthesia in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty; Central sensitization: the missing link between psychological distress and poor outcome following primary total knee arthroplasty; Thromboprophylaxis for the trauma and orthopaedic surgeon; Life expectancy after treatment of metastatic bone disease: an international trend analysis.