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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Aug 2021
Seewoonarain S Stavri R Behforootan S Abel R
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Hip fractures are associated with poor outcomes and high mortality rates of 30%. The current gold standard to measure bone fragility is a Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DEXA) scan measuring bone mineral density. Yet DEXA under-diagnoses bone fragility by 50% (1). To combat the burden of bone fragility, this experimental study combined ultrasound (US) with a sophisticated computational algorithm, namely full wave inversion (FWI), to evaluate femoral bone structure. The aims were to assess the association of bone structure between the proximal femoral diaphysis and femoral neck; secondly to evaluate whether transverse ultrasound could assess bone structure of the proximal femoral diaphysis. Bone structure of 19 ex vivo human femora was assessed by micro-CT analysis (mean age 88.11 years, male:female 13:6)(Nikon HMXST 225). Using ImageJ/BoneJ, three 10.2mm subsections of proximal diaphysis and femoral neck underwent analysis: the total bone volume fraction, cortical parameters (bone volume fraction, porosity, thickness) and trabecular parameters (porosity, thickness, spacing and connectivity). A unique US prototype was developed to analyse fifteen femoral diaphyseal subsections using two P4-1 transducers with a novel tomography sequence (Verasonics, Matlab ver R2019a, FWI TRUST protocol). Comparative quantitative analysis of US and Micro-CT measurements was assessed (Graphpad Prism 8.3.1). Micro-CT analysis of the proximal femoral diaphysis demonstrated low correlation to the femoral neck (Pearson r −0.54 to 0.55). US was able to capture cortical structure, though a wide limit of agreement seen when compared to micro-CT analysis (Bland-Altman range 36–59% difference). This novel US technique was able to capture cortical bone structure. Improvements in methodology and technology are required to improve the analysis of trabecular bone and overall accuracy. Further evaluation of US and FWI is required to develop the technique and determine its role in clinical practice


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 13, Issue 6 | Pages 272 - 278
5 Jun 2024
Niki Y Huber G Behzadi K Morlock MM

Aims

Periprosthetic fracture and implant loosening are two of the major reasons for revision surgery of cementless implants. Optimal implant fixation with minimal bone damage is challenging in this procedure. This pilot study investigates whether vibratory implant insertion is gentler compared to consecutive single blows for acetabular component implantation in a surrogate polyurethane (PU) model.

Methods

Acetabular components (cups) were implanted into 1 mm nominal under-sized cavities in PU foams (15 and 30 per cubic foot (PCF)) using a vibratory implant insertion device and an automated impaction device for single blows. The impaction force, remaining polar gap, and lever-out moment were measured and compared between the impaction methods.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 3 | Pages 301 - 305
1 Mar 2005
Carlier RY Safa DML Parva P Mompoint D Judet T Denormandie P Vallée CA Judet T Denormandie P

Neurogenic myositis ossificans is a disabling condition affecting the large joints of patients with severe post-traumatic impairment of the central nervous system. It can result in ankylosis of the joint and vascular or neural compression. Surgery may be hazardous with potential haemorrhage, neurovascular injury, iatrogenic fracture and osteochondral injury. We undertook pre-operative volumetric CT assessment of 45 ankylosed hips with neurogenic myositis ossificans which required surgery. Helical CT with intravenous contrast, combined with two- and three-dimensional surface reconstructions, was the only pre-operative imaging procedure. This gave good differentiation of the heterotopic bone from the adjacent vessels. We established that early surgery, within 24 months of injury, was neither complicated by peri-operative fracture nor by the early recurrence of neurogenic myositis ossificans. Surgical delay was associated with a loss of joint space and a greater degree of bone demineralisation. Enhanced volumetric CT is an excellent method for the pre-operative assessment of neurogenic myositis ossificans and correlates well with the operative findings.