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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 84-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages - 34
1 Mar 2002
Trichard T Rémy F Migaud H Besson A Feugas C Duquennoy A
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Purpose: The aims of this work were to assess very long-term outcome and to assess functional course of talocrural arthrodesis as well as to determine the clinical and radiological impact on adjacent joints.

Material and method: Fifty-two talocrural arthrodeses performed in 52 patients between 1963 and 1981 served as the reference population for this study. Clinical and radiological assessment of this series of patients was conducted in 1983, then again in 1999. Twenty-five talocrural arthrodeses in 25 patients were reviewed at a mean 23 years (19 to 36 years) (six patients were lost to follow-up, 20 had died, one had had leg amputation. The arthrodesis had been performed for advanced degenerative joint disease or to correct for post-traumatic deformity, or in two cases, for neurological varus equinus. Functional outcome was evaluated on the Duquennoy and Stahl score (100 points) that was also used for the intermediary assessment. Radiographic assessment included the position of the arthrodesis, the status of the adjacent joints (subtalar and mediotarsal), and residual motion of the forefoot.

Results: At 23 years follow-up, 13 patients (52%) had good (five patients) or very good (eight patients) function and 12 (48%) had fair function, according to the 100 point scale. There were no patients with poor function. Patients without intercurrent conditions (neurological or heart disease, obesity) had good or very good function in 80% of the cases. Patients were very satisfied in 48% of the cases, having “forgotten” their ankle. At the seven-year follow-up analysis, 15 patients (60%) had a very good (ten patients) or good (five patients) result, seven had a fair result, and three had a poor result. Comparing the 7-year and 23-year assessments did not disclose any significant degradation of the result (p = 0.07). Intercurrent conditions explained the two functional degradations, but there were also three functional improvements over the same period. Talocrural arthrodesis induced stiffness in the subtalar joint in all cases, associated with severe osteoarthritis with little clinical expression. There was a slow degradation of the mediotarsal joint but hypermobility useful for good function was maintained in 45% of the cases (mean 24°). Fair results were related to development of subtalar osteoarthritis, malposition of the arthrodesis in the frontal plane (rear foot varus) and presence of intercurrent conditions (cardiovascular, neurological disease).

Conclusion: Talocrural arthrodesis is a safe and reliable procedure for the treatment of destroyed joints. This palliative surgery can restore satisfactory function which persists in the long term.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 84-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 43 - 43
1 Mar 2002
Rémy F Gougeon F Eddine TA Migaud H Fontaine C Duquennoy A
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Purpose: A new radiographic classification of the femoral trochlea was proposed by David Dejour in 1998 to quantify the severity of bony dysplasia. The purpose of this work was to evaluate the reproducibility of this classification system and to determine its contribution to the identification of trochlea with a high-risk of femoropatellar instability.

Material and methods: Nine independent observers (one resident, four junior surgeons, four senior surgeons) with no knowledge of the patient’s history read 68 strict lateral views of knees with femoropatellar instability (53 objective instabilities (OI) and 15 potential instabilities (PI)). The classification system includes four types determined with three signs: crossing (defining the dysplasia and present in all four types), supratrochlear spike, double contour. The four types are: type A crossing alone, type B crossing and spike, type C crossing and double contour, type D crossing, spike and double contour. The kappa test was used to assess reproducibility and chi square test to analyse data by category.

Results: Twenty-one radiographs were excluded by one or several observers due to insufficient quality or the impossibility to identify the signs of the new classification. Interob-server reproducibility assess on 47 radiographs was fair (kappa = 0.48). The crossing sign was identified by the nine observers on the 47 radiographs. Reproducibility of identification of the spike was good (κ= 0.62), but was fair for the double contour (κ = 0.51). there was no difference in reproducibility by level of experience of the observers. The new classification system was not correlated with severity of femoropatellar instability: presence of spike 80% OI, absence of spike 67% OI; presence of double contour 74% OI, absence of double contour 75% OI.

Discussion, conclusion: This new classification system is more reproducibly than the former 3-type system proposed by Henri Dejour. The crossing sign and the spike are the most reproducible signs. There presence is however insufficient to quantify the dysplasia and predict the severity of the femoropatellar instability. A quantitative measure of the depth of the trochlea, which shows excellent reproducibility (interclass coefficient 0.65) could be added to better quantify the morphological anomaly and determine the most adapted treatment.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 84-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages - 52
1 Mar 2002
Eddine TA Rémy F Chantelot C Giraud F Migaud M Duquennoy A
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Purpose: The purpose of this prospective work was to determine: 1) the frequency of iliopsoas conflicts with prosthetic acetabular material in patients with a painful total hip arthroplasty, and 2) to determine the diagnostic features of this conflict and the results of an adapted therapeutic approach.

Material and methods: This prospective study was conducted between 1988 and 2000 in 206 painful total hip arthroplasties. Nine patients (4.%), mean age 50 years (38–65) had a highly suggestive clinical presentation (eight press-fit cups without cement, one metal-backed cemented cup). Mean delay to onset after implantation of the total hip arthroplasty was 7.3 months (1–48). The predominant clinical sign was groin pain triggered by active flexion of the hip with pain from 3° to 70°. For these nine patients, there was no sign of loosening and puncture had ruled out infection. The diagnosis was confirmed by sedation of the pain after extra-articular infiltration in contact with the anterior acetabular rim (rim overhang in six out of nine cases) under computed tomographic guidance.

Results: Therapeutic infiltration (xylocaine-slow release corticosteroids) under computed tomographic guidance provided complete sedation in four out of nine cases and partial sedation in one. Four patients experienced recurrence leading to terminal tenotomy of the iliopsoas which provided complete sedation in three and partial sedation in one. In all, seven of the nine patients achieved complete pain relief (four after infiltration including one recurrent case, and three after tenotomy). Physical examination at last follow-up did not disclose any loss of flexion amplitude of the thigh.

Discussion and conclusion: The delay to symptom onset was variable, but a symptom-free interval was always observed after implantation of the total hip arthroplasty. An anatomic factor (anterior cup rim) was not indispensable for diagnosis as it was confirmed in one of three cases with a positive infiltration test without rim overhang. The infiltration test was essential to confirm diagnosis and constituted the first therapeutic attempt which allowed complete cure in four of the nine patients. Tenotomy, indicated in case of recurrence, achieved complete cure in three of the four cases. The cup does not have to be changed necessarily to treat iliopsoas conflicts since infiltration or simple tenotomy provided complete cure in seven out of nine cases.