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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Feb 2013
Scally M Van't Hoff W Bockenhauer D Eastwood D
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Aim

To assess the efficacy of combined medical and surgical management in obtaining normal lower limb mechanical alignment in a patient cohort with genotypically similar hypophosphataemic rickets.

Methods

A notes and radiograph audit was performed of all patients attending our institution with hypophosphataemic rickets: a subset with PHEX gene anomalies was studied further. Lower limb radiographs were assessed at two points during childhood and note made of treatment start, compliance; indication, timing and result of surgery. Standing leg alignment radiographs were measured at skeletal maturity or at latest review.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 86-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 407 - 407
1 Apr 2004
Komistek R Dennis D Mahfouz M Hoff W Haas B Anderson D
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Introduction: Understanding the in vivo motions of human joints has become increasingly important. Researchers have used in vitro (cadavers), non-invasive (gait labs), and in vivo (RSA, fluoroscopy) approaches to assess human knee motion. The objective of this study was to use fluoroscopy and computer tomography (CT) to accurately determine the 3D, in vivo, weight-bearing kinematics of normal knees.

Methods: Five normal knees clinically assessed as having no pain or ligamentous laxity were analyzed. Using CT scanning, slices were obtained six inches proximal to the joint line on the femur and six inches of the proximal tibia. Three-dimensional CAD models of each subject’s femur, tibia and patella were recreated from the 3D bone density data. Each subject was then asked to perform five weight-bearing activities while under fluoroscopic surveillance: (1) deep knee bend, (2) normal gait, (3) chair rise, (4) chair sit, and (5) stair descent. The computer-generated 3D models of each subject’s femur and tibiaon (> 1


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 6 | Pages 884 - 889
1 Nov 1995
Stiehl J Komistek R Dennis D Paxson R Hoff W

We used fluoroscopy to study the kinematics of the knee in 47 patients with total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and four control subjects with normal knees while performing a single-leg deep-knee bend. The videos were analysed using still photographs taken at 5 degrees increments of flexion. Femorotibial contact points, patellar ligament rotation, and patellar rotation were calculated from each image. Maximum weight-bearing flexion was determined for each knee. Compared with the control group, posterior-cruciate-retaining TKA did not reproduce normal knee kinematics in any case, but showed a starting point posterior to the tibial midline which translated anteriorly with flexion. The curves from successive knee bends could not be consistently reproduced. Under weight-bearing conditions, the maximum flexion for any PCR TKA was 98 degrees and several patients could not flex beyond 70 degrees.