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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 84-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 269 - 269
1 Nov 2002
Jones DG Lane J Howie C Abernethy P
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Aim: To report our experience of revision knee arthroplasty with respect to surgical technique, joint line restoration and clinical outcome.

Methods: A clinical and radiological review was made of 45 knee revisions performed between 1996 to1998 using the Kinemax system. The reasons for revisions were infection (19), wear (11), loosening (seven), base-plate fracture (four) and instability (five). A primary prosthesis was used in 10 (22%), a posterior stabiliser in 24 (53%) and a superstabiliser in 11 (24%). WOMAC pain and function scores, arc of motion and measurements of joint line and patellar height were made.

Results: Three patients had died. Three knees had been revised a second time for instability and one had been arthrodesed for infection. The mean joint line elevation was 1.3mm compared with the primary and depressed 1.6mm when compared with the natural knee. Twenty-seven percent had patella infera and 13% had patella alta. A significant correlation was found between the change in patellar tendon length and the change in the joint line. The flexion arc was significantly improved from 83 degrees to 95 degrees. No relationship was found between the clinical outcomes and the changes in the joint-line. There were two deep infections (4.4%) and five knees were unstable. The three cases of flexion instability were due to failure to reconstruct adequately the antero-posterior (AP) diameter of the femur.

Conclusions: By restoring the level of the joint-line, a less constrained prostheses can be used in revision surgery with good functional results. The AP diameter of the femur must also be reconstructed to avoid flexion instability.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 1 | Pages 64 - 68
1 Feb 1979
Abernethy P Dennyson W

Simple decompression of the extensor tendons at the wrist was carried out on fifty-four wrists in a total of forty-one patients with rheumatoid disease. This procedure was combined with excision of the ulnar head in forty-five wrists. Complete resolution of the synovitis occurred in 81.5 per cent of the wrists. In two patients the tendons ruptured soon after operation and in both cases this was due to prolapse of the ulnar stump after an associated Darrach procedure. The clinical results of decompression compare favourably with those of the widely accepted operation of dorsal tenosynovectomy.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 2 | Pages 205 - 210
1 May 1978
Abernethy P Townsend P Rose R Radin E

The articular cartilage of the patella was studied in 100 knees at necropsy. In twenty-one of these knees the cartilage changes were related to the trabecular architecture of the underlying bone. It would appear that the initiation and location of cartilage damage and its rate and degree of progression are related to the relative stiffness of the underlying cancellous bone. On the basis of our observations we suggest that the diagnosis "chondromalacia of the patella" should be reserved for patients with asymptomatic or transiently symptomatic fibrillation of the articular cartilage of the central medial patellar facet. Those patients with persistent patellofemoral pain should be considered to have some other syndrome.