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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 5 | Pages 646 - 651
1 May 2014
Mutch J Laflamme GY Hagemeister N Cikes A Rouleau DM

In this study, we describe a morphological classification for greater tuberosity fractures of the proximal humerus. We divided these fractures into three types: avulsion, split and depression. We retrospectively reviewed all shoulder radiographs showing isolated greater tuberosity fractures in a Level I trauma centre between July 2007 and July 2012. We identified 199 cases where records and radiographs were reviewed and included 79 men and 120 women with a mean age of 58 years (23 to 96). The morphological classification was applied to the first 139 cases by three reviewers on two occasions using the Kappa statistic and compared with the AO and Neer classifications. The inter- and intra-observer reliability of the morphological classification was 0.73 to 0.77 and 0.69 to 0.86, respectively. This was superior to the Neer (0.31 to 0.35/0.54 to 0.63) and AO (0.30 to 0.32/0.59 to 0.65) classifications. The distribution of avulsion, split and depression type fractures was 39%, 41%, and 20%, respectively. This classification of greater tuberosity fractures is more reliable than the Neer or AO classifications. These distinct fracture morphologies are likely to have implications in terms of pathophysiology and surgical technique. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B:646–51


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1229 - 1241
14 Sep 2020
Blom RP Hayat B Al-Dirini RMA Sierevelt I Kerkhoffs GMMJ Goslings JC Jaarsma RL Doornberg JN

Aims. The primary aim of this study was to address the hypothesis that fracture morphology might be more important than posterior malleolar fragment size in rotational type posterior malleolar ankle fractures (PMAFs). The secondary aim was to identify clinically important predictors of outcome for each respective PMAF-type, to challenge the current dogma that surgical decision-making should be based on fragment size. Methods. This observational prospective cohort study included 70 patients with operatively treated rotational type PMAFs, respectively: 23 Haraguchi Type I (large posterolateral-oblique), 22 Type II (two-part posterolateral and posteromedial), and 25 (avulsion-) Type III. There was no standardized protocol on how to address the PMAFs and CT-imaging was used to classify fracture morphology and quality of postoperative syndesmotic reduction. Quantitative 3D-CT (Q3DCT) was used to assess the quality of fracture reduction, respectively: the proportion of articular involvement; residual intra-articular: gap, step-off, and 3D-displacement; and residual gap and step-off at the fibular notch. These predictors were correlated with the Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) at two-years follow-up. Results. Bivariate analyses revealed that fracture morphology (p = 0.039) as well as fragment size (p = 0.007) were significantly associated with the FAOS. However, in multivariate analyses, fracture morphology (p = 0.001) (but not fragment size (p = 0.432)) and the residual intra-articular gap(s) (p = 0.009) were significantly associated. Haraguchi Type-II PMAFs had poorer FAOS scores compared with Types I and III. Multivariate analyses identified the following independent predictors: step-off in Type I; none of the Q3DCT-measurements in Type II, and quality of syndesmotic reduction in small-avulsion Type III PMAFs. Conclusion. PMAFs are three separate entities based on fracture morphology, with different predictors of outcome for each PMAF type. The current debate on whether or not to fix PMAFs needs to be refined to determine which morphological subtype benefits from fixation. In PMAFs, fracture morphology should guide treatment instead of fragment size. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2020;102-B(9):1229–1241


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 4 - 4
1 Jun 2022
Hoban K Downie S Adamson D MacLean J Cool P Jariwala AC
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Mirels’ score predicts the likelihood of sustaining pathological fractures using pain, lesion site, size and morphology. The aim is to investigate its reproducibility, reliability and accuracy in upper limb bony metastases and validate its use in pathological fracture prediction. A retrospective cohort study of patients with upper limb metastases, referred to an Orthopaedic Trauma Centre (2013–18). Mirels’ was calculated in 32 patients; plain radiographs at presentation scored by 6 raters. Radiological aspects were scored twice by each rater, 2-weeks apart. Inter- and intra-observer reliability were calculated (Fleiss’ kappa test). Bland-Altman plots compared variances of individual score components &total Mirels’ score. Mirels’ score of ≥9 did not accurately predict lesions that would fracture (11% 5/46 vs 65.2% Mirels’ score ≤8, p<0.0001). Sensitivity was 14.3% &specificity was 72.7%. When Mirels’ cut-off was lowered to ≥7, patients were more likely to fracture (48% 22/46 versus 28% 13/46, p=0.045). Sensitivity rose to 62.9%, specificity fell to 54.6%. Kappa values for interobserver variability were 0.358 (fair, 0.288–0.429) for lesion size, 0.107 (poor, 0.02–0.193) for radiological appearance and 0.274 (fair, 0.229–0.318) for total Mirels’ score. Values for intraobserver variability were 0.716 (good, 95% CI 0.432–0.999) for lesion size, 0.427 (moderate, 95% CI 0.195–0.768) for radiological appearance and 0.580 (moderate, 0.395–0.765) for total Mirels’ score. We showed moderate to substantial agreement between &within raters using Mirels’ score on upper limb radiographs. Mirels’ has poor sensitivity &specificity predicting upper limb fractures - we recommend the cut-off score for prophylactic surgery should be lower than for lower limb lesions


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 4 | Pages 106 - 115
1 Apr 2016
Gruber HE Ode G Hoelscher G Ingram J Bethea S Bosse MJ

Objectives. The biomembrane (induced membrane) formed around polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) spacers has value in clinical applications for bone defect reconstruction. Few studies have evaluated its cellular, molecular or stem cell features. Our objective was to characterise induced membrane morphology, molecular features and osteogenic stem cell characteristics. Methods. Following Institutional Review Board approval, biomembrane specimens were obtained from 12 patient surgeries for management of segmental bony defects (mean patient age 40.7 years, standard deviation 14.4). Biomembranes from nine tibias and three femurs were processed for morphologic, molecular or stem cell analyses. Gene expression was determined using the Affymetrix GeneChip Operating Software (GCOS). Molecular analyses compared biomembrane gene expression patterns with a mineralising osteoblast culture, and gene expression in specimens with longer spacer duration (> 12 weeks) with specimens with shorter durations. Statistical analyses used the unpaired student t-test (two tailed; p < 0.05 was considered significant). Results. Average PMMA spacer in vivo time was 11.9 weeks (six to 18). Trabecular bone was present in 33.3% of the biomembrane specimens; bone presence did not correlate with spacer duration. Biomembrane morphology showed high vascularity and collagen content and positive staining for the key bone forming regulators, bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) and runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2). Positive differentiation of cultured biomembrane cells for osteogenesis was found in cells from patients with PMMA present for six to 17 weeks. Stem cell differentiation showed greater variability in pluripotency for osteogenic potential (70.0%) compared with chondrogenic or adipogenic potentials (100% and 90.0%, respectively). Significant upregulation of BMP2 and 6, numerous collagens, and bone gla protein was present in biomembrane compared with the cultured cell line. Biomembranes with longer resident PMMA spacer duration (vs those with shorter residence) showed significant upregulation of bone-related, stem cell, and vascular-related genes. Conclusion. The biomembrane technique is gaining favour in the management of complicated bone defects. Novel data on biological mechanisms provide improved understanding of the biomembrane’s osteogenic potential and molecular properties. Cite this article: Dr H. E. Gruber. Osteogenic, stem cell and molecular characterisation of the human induced membrane from extremity bone defects. Bone Joint Res 2016;5:106–115. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.54.2000483


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Jan 2019
Martin J Murphy C Gregory J Aspden R Riemen A Saunders F
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An increased prevalence of osteoarthritis (OA) in post-menopausal women has led to the suggestion that hormonal factors may play a role in the pathogenesis. This study aims to examine if undergoing a hysterectomy, both with retention and removal of ovaries, predisposes women to OA and secondly if the development is influenced by hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Statistical shape modelling (SSM) is a method of image analysis allowing for detection of subtle shape variation described by landmark points. Through the generation of linearly independent modes of variation, each image can be described in terms of numerical scores. 149 radiographs from female participants of the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) were examined to compare hip morphology in those who had undergone hysterectomies compared to controls. No differences were observed in BMI, age, height or weight between groups. ANOVA and Games-Howell post-hoc analysis showed that modes 3 and 5 were statistically significant. Lower mode 3 scores were associated with hysterectomy (p=0.019), with narrowing of the femoral neck and increased acetabular coverage. Lower mode 5 scores were associated with hysterectomy and oophorectomy (p=0.049), displaying reduced coverage of the femoral head, superolateral migration of the femoral head and larger greater trochanter. No associations were observed between HRT use and OA. The subtle morphologic features of hip OA present in only hysterectomised women suggests undergoing a hysterectomy may be a predisposing factor and a clinical consideration. The use of HRT was not observed to influence the development of OA and thus cannot be suggested as a protective measure


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 6 | Pages 524 - 531
24 Jun 2024
Woldeyesus TA Gjertsen J Dalen I Meling T Behzadi M Harboe K Djuv A

Aims

To investigate if preoperative CT improves detection of unstable trochanteric hip fractures.

Methods

A single-centre prospective study was conducted. Patients aged 65 years or older with trochanteric hip fractures admitted to Stavanger University Hospital (Stavanger, Norway) were consecutively included from September 2020 to January 2022. Radiographs and CT images of the fractures were obtained, and surgeons made individual assessments of the fractures based on these. The assessment was conducted according to a systematic protocol including three classification systems (AO/Orthopaedic Trauma Association (OTA), Evans Jensen (EVJ), and Nakano) and questions addressing specific fracture patterns. An expert group provided a gold-standard assessment based on the CT images. Sensitivities and specificities of surgeons’ assessments were estimated and compared in regression models with correlations for the same patients. Intra- and inter-rater reliability were presented as Cohen’s kappa and Gwet’s agreement coefficient (AC1).


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 1 | Pages 46 - 52
19 Jan 2024
Assink N ten Duis K de Vries JPM Witjes MJH Kraeima J Doornberg JN IJpma FFA

Aims

Proper preoperative planning benefits fracture reduction, fixation, and stability in tibial plateau fracture surgery. We developed and clinically implemented a novel workflow for 3D surgical planning including patient-specific drilling guides in tibial plateau fracture surgery.

Methods

A prospective feasibility study was performed in which consecutive tibial plateau fracture patients were treated with 3D surgical planning, including patient-specific drilling guides applied to standard off-the-shelf plates. A postoperative CT scan was obtained to assess whether the screw directions, screw lengths, and plate position were performed according the preoperative planning. Quality of the fracture reduction was assessed by measuring residual intra-articular incongruence (maximum gap and step-off) and compared to a historical matched control group.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1196 - 1200
1 Nov 2023
Parker MJ Chatterjee R Onsa M Cawley S Gurusamy K

Aims

The aim of this study was to report the three-year follow-up for a series of 400 patients with a displaced intracapsular fracture of the hip, who were randomized to be treated with either a cemented polished tapered hemiarthroplasty or an uncemented hydroxyapatite-coated hemiarthroplasty.

Methods

The mean age of the patients was 85 years (58 to 102) and 273 (68%) were female. Follow-up was undertaken by a nurse who was blinded to the hemiarthroplasty that was used, at intervals for up to three years from surgery. The short-term follow-up of these patients at a mean of one year has previously been reported.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 8 | Pages 997 - 1008
1 Aug 2022

Aims

The aim of this study was to describe the management and associated outcomes of patients sustaining a femoral hip periprosthetic fracture (PPF) in the UK population.

Methods

This was a multicentre retrospective cohort study including adult patients who presented to 27 NHS hospitals with 539 new PPFs between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2018. Data collected included: management strategy (operative and nonoperative), length of stay, discharge destination, and details of post-treatment outcomes (reoperation, readmission, and 30-day and 12-month mortality). Descriptive analysis by fracture type was performed, and predictors of PPF management and outcomes were assessed using mixed-effects logistic regression.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 4 | Pages 530 - 533
1 Apr 2005
O’Sullivan REM White TO Keating JF

The identification of high-risk factors in patients with fractures of the pelvis at the time of presentation would facilitate investigation and management. In a series of 174 consecutive patients with unstable fractures of the pelvic ring, clinical data were used to calculate the injury severity score (ISS), the triage-revised trauma score (T-RTS), and the Glasgow coma scale (GCS). The morphology of the fracture was classified according to the AO system and that of Burgess et al. The data were analysed using univariate and multivariate methods in order to determine which presenting features were identified with high risk. Univariate analysis showed an association between mortality and an ISS over 25, a T-RTS below eight, age over 65 years, systolic blood pressure under 100 mmHg, a GCS of less than 8, blood transfusion of more than ten units in the first 24 hours and colloid infusion of more than six litres in the first 24 hours. Multivariate analysis showed that age, T-RTS and ISS were independent determinants of mortality. A T-RTS of eight or less identified the cohort of patients at greatest risk (65%). The morphology of the fracture was not predictive of mortality. We recommend the use of the T-RTS in the acute situation in order to identify patients at high risk


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 98-B, Issue 7 | Pages 884 - 891
1 Jul 2016
Elliott DS Newman KJH Forward DP Hahn DM Ollivere B Kojima K Handley R Rossiter ND Wixted JJ Smith RM Moran CG

This article presents a unified clinical theory that links established facts about the physiology of bone and homeostasis, with those involved in the healing of fractures and the development of nonunion. The key to this theory is the concept that the tissue that forms in and around a fracture should be considered a specific functional entity. This ‘bone-healing unit’ produces a physiological response to its biological and mechanical environment, which leads to the normal healing of bone. This tissue responds to mechanical forces and functions according to Wolff’s law, Perren’s strain theory and Frost’s concept of the “mechanostat”. In response to the local mechanical environment, the bone-healing unit normally changes with time, producing different tissues that can tolerate various levels of strain. The normal result is the formation of bone that bridges the fracture – healing by callus. Nonunion occurs when the bone-healing unit fails either due to mechanical or biological problems or a combination of both. In clinical practice, the majority of nonunions are due to mechanical problems with instability, resulting in too much strain at the fracture site. In most nonunions, there is an intact bone-healing unit. We suggest that this maintains its biological potential to heal, but fails to function due to the mechanical conditions. The theory predicts the healing pattern of multifragmentary fractures and the observed morphological characteristics of different nonunions. It suggests that the majority of nonunions will heal if the correct mechanical environment is produced by surgery, without the need for biological adjuncts such as autologous bone graft. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2016;98-B:884–91


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 221 - 221
1 Sep 2012
Steppacher S Albers C Tannast M Siebenrock K Ganz R
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Traumatic hip dislocation is a rare injury in orthopaedic practice and typically occures in high energy trauma. The goal of this study was to analyze hip morphology in patients with low energy traumatic hip dislocations and to compare it with a control group. We performed a retrospective comparative study. The study group included 45 patients with 45 traumatic posterior hip dislocation. Inclusion criteria were traumatic hip dislocation with simple acetabular rim or Pipkin I or II fracture. Traumatic dislocations combined with other acetabular or femoral fractures were excluded. The control group consisted of 90 patients (180 hips) that underwent radiographic examination for urogenital indication and had no history of hip pain. Hip morphology was assessed on antero-posterior and axial views. The study group showed significantly increased incidence (p<0.001) of positive cross-over sign (82% vs. 27%) with a increased retroversion index (26 ± 17 [0–56] vs. 6 ± 12 [0–53]), positive ischial spine sign (70% vs. 34%), and positive posterior wall sign (79% vs. 21). Hips that underwent an low energy posterior traumatic hip dislocation show significanly more radiographic signs for acetabular retroversion compared to a control group. Therefore, acetabular retroversion seems to be a contributing factor for posterior traumatic hip dislocation


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 1 | Pages 178 - 183
1 Jan 2021
Kubik JF Rollick NC Bear J Diamond O Nguyen JT Kleeblad LJ Wellman DS Helfet DL

Aims

Malreduction of the syndesmosis has been reported in up to 52% of patients after fixation of ankle fractures. Multiple radiological parameters are used to define malreduction; there has been limited investigation of the accuracy of these measurements in differentiating malreduction from inherent anatomical asymmetry. The purpose of this study was to identify the prevalence of positive malreduction standards within the syndesmosis of native, uninjured ankles.

Methods

Three observers reviewed 213 bilateral lower limb CT scans of uninjured ankles. Multiple measurements were recorded on the axial CT 1 cm above the plafond: anterior syndesmotic distance; posterior syndesmotic distance; central syndesmotic distance; fibular rotation; and sagittal fibular translation. Previously studied malreduction standards were evaluated on bilateral CT, including differences in: anterior, central and posterior syndesmotic distance; mean syndesmotic distance; fibular rotation; sagittal translational distance; and syndesmotic area. Unilateral CT was used to compare the anterior to posterior syndesmotic distances.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1063 - 1069
1 Jun 2021
Amundsen A Brorson S Olsen BS Rasmussen JV

Aims

There is no consensus on the treatment of proximal humeral fractures. Hemiarthroplasty has been widely used in patients when non-surgical treatment is not possible. There is, despite extensive use, limited information about the long-term outcome. Our primary aim was to report ten-year patient-reported outcome after hemiarthroplasty for acute proximal humeral fractures. The secondary aims were to report the cumulative revision rate and risk factors for an inferior patient-reported outcome.

Methods

We obtained data on 1,371 hemiarthroplasties for acute proximal humeral fractures from the Danish Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry between 2006 and 2010. Of these, 549 patients (40%) were alive and available for follow-up. The Western Ontario Osteoarthritis of the Shoulder (WOOS) questionnaire was sent to all patients at nine to 14 years after primary surgery. Revision rates were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Risk factors for an inferior WOOS score were analyzed using the linear regression model.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 426 - 426
1 Sep 2012
Keck J Kienle K Siebenrock K Steppacher S Werlen S Mamisch TC
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Purpose. The purpose of this retrospective study was to investigate the acetabular morphology of pincer impingement hips in order to better understand damage pattern in these patients. We compared MRI measurements made at different postions from anterior to posterior on the acetbulum in patients with pure pincer type FAI to those made in patients with pure cam-type to collect parameters that may be useful in the diagnosis and classification of pincer impingement. Material and Methods. From an initial consecutive retrospective population of 1022 patients that underwent MRI with clinical impingement signs 78 hips which were selected with as clear cam (n=57) or pincer (n=21) impingement on plain radiographics. On these MR Imaging was performed with a 1.5-Tesla system. For analysis, a lateral angle of overcoverage on coronal MRI (MR_LCE), the MR extrusion index and the alpha angle (after Nötzli) were used. In addition to these the gamma angle, the acetabular depth and the angle of lateral acetabular overcoverage were described clock-wise on 7 radial slides from anterior to posterior. These were compared between the cam and pincer population using students-t-test. Measurements were obtained by two observers and inter-observer variability was assessed. Results. The acetabular depth showed in all 7 positions significant smaller values for pincer-type in comparison to cam-type impingement. Highest difference was found is superior-posterior position. The acetabular angle is also significant smaller for pincer than for cam in all radial positions. Highest difference of the acetabular angle is located in superior (pincer −102.93°/cam 109.62°) and anterior-superior position (pincer 102.48°/cam 108.77 °). The gamma angle showed significant differences in all radial positions except anterior position. The highest difference is located in superior-posterior position (pincer 86.18 °/cam 08.77°). The mean MR extrusion index was significant lower for pincer type (12.73%) compared to cam-type patients (17.76%) (p=0.004). LCE angle and extrusion index on MRI displayed a Person correlation coefficient of 0.920. The correlation of the acetabular depth and angle was 0.638. Conclusion. There are several morphological differences between pincer and cam acetabuli: They are significantly deeper in all radial positions than cam hips. They tend to have greater retroversion and have smaller gamma angles. Our results suggest that the superior-posterior quadrant displays greater coverage in pincer hips than cam hips, and therefore damage to the labrum and cartilage surface may extend further into the posterior portion of the acetabulum in pincer hips than in cam hips


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 436 - 436
1 Sep 2012
Aarvold A Smith J Tayton E Jones A Briscoe A Lanham S Dunlop D Oreffo R
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Background. Skeletal stem cells (SSCs) have been used for the treatment of osteonecrosis of the femoral head to prevent subsequent collapse. In isolation SSCs do not provide structural support but an innovative case series in Southampton, UK, has used SSCs in combination with impaction bone grafting (IBG) to improve both the biological and mechanical environment and to regenerate new bone at the necrotic site. Aims. Analysis of retrieved tissue-engineered bone as part of ongoing follow-up of this translational case series. Methods. With Proof-of-Concept established in vitro and in vivo, the use of a living bone composite of SSCs and allograft has been translated to four patients (five hips) for treatment of osteonecrosis of their femoral heads. Parallel in vitro culture of the implanted cell-graft construct was performed. Patient follow-up was by serial clinical and radiological examination. In one patient collapse occurred in both hips due to more advanced disease than was originally appreciated. This necessitated bilateral hip arthroplasty, but allowed retrieval of the femoral heads. These were analyzed for Type 1 Collagen production, bone morphology, bone density and mechanical strength by micro computed tomography (CT), histology (A/S stain, Collagen Type 1 immunostain, biorefringence) and mechanical testing. Representative sections of cortical, trabecular and tissue engineered bone were excised from the femoral heads using a diamond-tipped saw-blade and tested to failure by axial compression. Results. Parallel in vitro analysis demonstrated sustained cell growth and viability on the allograft. Three patients currently remain asymptomatic at up to three year follow-up. Histological analysis of the two retrieved femoral heads demonstrated, critically, Type 1 collagen production in the regenerated tissue as well as mature trabecular architecture, indicative of de novo tissue engineered bone. The trabecular morphology of regenerated bone was evident on CT, and this had a bone density of 1400 Grey scale units, (compared to 1200 for natural trabecular bone and 1800 for cortical bone). On axial compressive testing the regenerated bone on the left showed a 24.8% increase in compressive strength compared to ipsilateral normal trabecular bone, and a 22.9% increase on the left. Conclusions. Retrieval analysis data has demonstrated the translational potential of a living bone composite, while ongoing clinical follow-up shows this to be an effective new treatment for osteonecrosis of the femoral head. Regeneration of the necrotic bone may prevent subsequent collapse, thereby delaying, or possibly avoiding, the need for hip arthroplasty in early stage osteonecrosis. Evaluation of this tissue engineering construct has confirmed the potential for clinical treatment of bone defects using SSC based strategies


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 127 - 127
1 Sep 2012
Corten K Etsuo C Leunig M Ganz R
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Introduction. Ectopic ossification (EO) at the acetabular rim has been suggested to be associated with pincer impingement and to lead to ossification of the labrum. However, this has never been substantiated with histological, radiographic and MRI findings in large cohorts of patients. We hypothesized that it is more a bone apposition of the acetabular rim and that it occurs more frequently in coxa profunda (CP) hips. Materials and Methods. In the first part, a cohort of 20 hips with this suspected ectopic rim ossification (EO) pattern were identified. The radiographic features that could be associated with this ossification pattern were described and evaluated by a histologic examination of intra-operative samples taken from the rim trimming. In the second part, we assessed the prevalence of this ectopic ossification process in a cohort of 203 patients treated for FAI. Results. Histologic examination revealed that new acetabular bone formation was either overgrowing the non-ossified labrum or moving it away from the native rim. Radiologically, this was associated with an “indentation sign” and/or a “double line sign”. There were no specimens that had shown any evidence of labral ossification. EO was found in 26 hips (18%) of the second cohort. Twenty of 26 hips (77%) with EO had CP morphology and 29% of CP hips had EO signs. In contrast, only 6 non-profunda hips (8%) were associated with EO. There was a high correlation between XR and MRI findings as >80% of XR findings were confirmed on MRI. Sixty-nine hips had CP morphology. The double line sign (N = 13), the indentation sign (N = 12) and a prominent lateral rim (N = 11) were found. Hips with an EO pattern were found in patients that were significantly older than those without EO (p = 0.01). The acetabular characteristics of the EO groups were not significantly different from the CP hips without EO. The femoral characteristics were significantly different between groups with lower neck shaft angles (128° vs 134°;p = 0,0002) and shorter femoral necks lengths (62mm vs 65mm; p = 0,04)) in the EO group. The mean Tonnis classification was not significantly different (p = 0,18). In addition, the mean acetabular cartilage degeneration status was not different between both groups (p = 0,9). Rim trimming down to the native acetabular bone was done in all cases either by arthroscopy (N = 40) or open surgical dislocation (N = 17). Discussion. Ectopic ossification of the acetabular rim predominantly occurs in CP and is associated with specific anatomic features of the proximal femur. This type of impingement seems to be different and less aggressive than other described impingement processes. The double line sign and indentation sign are highly indicative for this EO process and are indicative for a longstanding impingement problem. Trimming of the acetabular rim should be conducted


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 488 - 488
1 Sep 2012
Chan O Coathup M Hing K Buckland T Campion C Blunn G
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INTRODUCTION. Autologous bone grafts are considered gold standard in the repair of bone defects. However they are limited in supply and are associated with donor site morbidity. This has led to the development of synthetic bone graft substitute (BGS) materials, many of which have been reported as being osteoinductive. The structure of the BGS is important and bone formation has been observed in scaffolds with a macroporous morphology. Smaller pores termed ‘strut porosity’ may also be important for osteoinduction. The aim of this study was to compare the osteoinductive ability of one silicate-substituted calcium phosphate (SiCaP) with differing strut porosities in an ectopic ovine model. Our hypothesis was that SiCaP with greater strut porosity would be more osteoinductive. METHODS. The osteoinduction of SiCaP BGS with two different strut porosities (AF and AF++) was investigated. The materials had an identical chemical composition and morphological structure but differing strut porosity (AF=22.5%, AF++=47%). Implants were inserted into the paraspinal muscles in skeletally mature sheep. Procedures were carried out in compliance with UK Home Office regulations. There were 12 implants in each group. Implants remained in vivo for 8 and 12 weeks and on retrieval were prepared for undecalcified histology. Sections were stained and examined using light microscopy. A line intersection method was used to quantify bone, implant and implant surface/bone contact within seven random regions of interest along each implant. A Mann-Whitney U test was used for statistical analysis where p values < 0.05 were considered significant. RESULTS. Bone formation was observed to be greater in the AF++ group at 8 (AF=0.2%+/−0.15; AF++=0.44%+/−0.12) and significantly higher at 12 weeks (AF=1.33% +/−0.84; AF++=6.17%+/−1.51) (p=0.04). Significantly higher implant surface/bone contact was observed in the AF++ group at 8 (AF=0.67%+/−0.52; AF++=3.30%+/−1.17) (p=0.04) and 12 weeks (AF=3.06%+/−1.89; AF++=21.82%+/−5.59) (p=0.01). The % implant measured was less in the AF++ group at 8 (AF=39.06%+/−1.26; AF++=33.09%+/−2.14) and 12 weeks (AF=36.05% +/−3.55; AF++=30.60%+/−2.29) but this was not significant. Histology revealed bone formation within BGS strut pores measuring < 50um. Endochondral and intramembranous ossification were also observed in both groups. DISCUSSION. The results indicate that higher strut porosity promotes greater osteoinduction in SiCaP materials. This could be attributed to the micropores providing a greater surface area for the action of growth factors and osteoblasts leading to the formation of bone at an earlier time point. Endochondral ossification was an unusual finding as this is usually associated with bone formation secondary to Bone Morphogenetic proteins (BMPs). This suggests that the osteoinductive mechanisms by SiCaP may involve cytokines such as BMPs


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 2 - 2
1 Sep 2012
Wuestemann T Bastian A Parvizi J Nessler J Kolisek F Nevelos J
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Introduction. The origins of the uncemented tapered wedge hip stem design currently offered by several orthopaedic device companies can be linked back to the cemented Straight Mueller type stem design first used in 1977. The design, a wedge shape with a taper angle of 6 degrees, maintains a single medial curvature for all sizes and increases laterally in the width to accommodate different size femurs. Although evolutionary improvements have been made over the years the basic body geometry of the stem has stayed mainly unchanged with excellent clinical survivorship. Over the past decade, the demographics of hip replacement have changed, with a large increase in younger male patients in the age range of 40 to 60 years. In this study the femoral fit of a novel tapered stem, designed to fit a wide array of patient types, is compared to a standard predicate tapered stem design. Methods. A bone morphology study was performed on a patient population of 556 patients using three dimensional digital data from CT-scans. To characterize the fit of the stem designs we analyzed the ratio of a distal (60mm below lesser trochanter) and a proximal (10mm above lesser trochanter) cross section. The same measurements were taken with the standard tapered stem design and the novel tapered stem design, with a given constant implantation height of 20mm above the lesser trochanter. The fit of the stems was classified as Type 1, where there was both proximal and distal engagement, Type 2, proximal engagement only, Type 3, distal engagement only. The distal and proximal engagement, Type 1, was specified with a maximum engagement difference of 2mm proximal to distal. Results. The standard tapered stem showed a well balanced distal to proximal ratio in the median sizes. However, with increasing stem size the distal engagement increases. The novel tapered stem design showed a well balanced proximal to distal ratio throughout the complete size range. With respect to Type 3 fit classification the novel tapered stem design showed a reduced percentage of distal engagements (2.8%) compared to the predicate standard stem (17.2%). In the 40 to 60 year old male group the distal engagements for the standard stem increases (28.2%), whereas the distal engagements for the novel stem remains unchanged (1.3%). Discussion. The cementless, tapered wedge stem design is used in large numbers globally due to its ease of use and reproducibility. However, changing patient demographics and associated bone morphology represents a challenge for existing designs to achieve a proximal fit. The novel tapered stem design presented here was adapted to these influencing factors by optimizing the proximal to distal ratio with respect to the whole patient group resulting in a particularly marked improvement in proximal fit in the male 40–60 age group compared to predicate stem designs


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 2 | Pages 249 - 253
1 Feb 2014
Euler SA Hengg C Kolp D Wambacher M Kralinger F

Antegrade nailing of proximal humeral fractures using a straight nail can damage the bony insertion of the supraspinatus tendon and may lead to varus failure of the construct. In order to establish the ideal anatomical landmarks for insertion of the nail and their clinical relevance we analysed CT scans of bilateral proximal humeri in 200 patients (mean age 45.1 years (. sd. 19.6; 18 to 97) without humeral fractures. The entry point of the nail was defined by the point of intersection of the anteroposterior and lateral vertical axes with the cortex of the humeral head. The critical point was defined as the intersection of the sagittal axis with the medial limit of the insertion of the supraspinatus tendon on the greater tuberosity. The region of interest, i.e. the biggest entry hole that would not encroach on the insertion of the supraspinatus tendon, was calculated setting a 3 mm minimal distance from the critical point. This identified that 38.5% of the humeral heads were categorised as ‘critical types’, due to morphology in which the predicted offset of the entry point would encroach on the insertion of the supraspinatus tendon that may damage the tendon and reduce the stability of fixation. We therefore emphasise the need for ‘fastidious’ pre-operative planning to minimise this risk. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B:249–53