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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 88 - 88
1 May 2012
Kulikov Y Griffin D
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Study aim

There is an ever increasing demand for quality clinical trials in surgery. Surgeons' co-operation and enthusiasm to participate are important, if not crucial in success of such studies, especially if they are multi-centred. Clinician's individual uncertainty (equipoise) about a case has been often cited as an ethical basis for inviting a patient to take part in a clinical trial. This study aims to establish current attitudes of surgeons participating in a national multi-centred randomised controlled trial and explores an on line tool for instant assessment of collective uncertainty (equipoise) for individual clinical cases eligible for a trial.

Study design

Surgeons taking part in the UK Heel Fracture Trial were invited to take part. If agreed, they were asked to evaluate treatment prognosis for eligible for the trial anonymised cases of calcaneal fractures online by means of specially designed system. The cases were published on a password protected website on ad-hoc basis during the three years course of the trial. Their responses were submitted instantly on line.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 59 - 59
17 Nov 2023
Yang I Buchanan R Al-Namnam N Li X Lucas M Simpson AH
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Abstract

Background

Ultrasonic cutting of bone boasts many advantages over alternatively powered surgical instruments, including but not limited to: elimination of swarf, reduced reaction forces, increased precision in cutting and reduced adjacent soft tissue damage, reduced post-operative complications such as bleeding and bone fracture, reduced healing time, reduced intra-operative noise and ease of handling. Despite ultrasonic cutting devices being well established in oral and maxillofacial surgery, applications in orthopaedic surgery are more niche and are not as well understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the cutting speed (mm/s) and cutting forces (N) of orthopaedic surgeons using a custom-designed state of the art ultrasonic cutting tool to cut fresh human bone samples.

Methods

A setup based on the Robot Operating System (ROS) and AprilTag was designed to track and to record the real time position of the ultrasonic cutting tool in space. Synchronised load cell axial force readings of three separate orthopaedic surgeons during ultrasonic cutting were recorded. Each surgeon was asked to find a comfortable position that reflects as close as possible their clinical handling of a cutting instrument used in surgery, and to perform two cuts in each of three samples of human cortical bone. Bone samples were obtained following ethical approval from an institutional review board (ethics approval number: SR1342) and prior informed consent was obtained from all patients. Bone samples were extracted from the femoral neck region of three hip osteoarthritis patients. During cutting, surgeons were allowed a total cutting time of one minute and cutting was conducted using an ultrasonic tool with frequency of a 35kHz (35.7 µm peak to peak displacement amplitude) under constant irrigation using a MINIPULS® 3 Peristaltic pump (38 revolutions per minute) using Phosphate-Buffered Saline (PBS) at 25°C. From the recorded data, the average instantaneous cutting velocity was calculated and the maximum cutting force was identified.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 117 - 117
1 Nov 2021
Longo UG
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The function of the upper extremity is highly dependent on correlated motion of the shoulder. The shoulder can be affected by several diseases. The most common are: rotator cuff tear (RCT), shoulder instability, shoulder osteoarthritis and fractures. Rotator cuff disease is a common disorder. It has a high prevalence rate, causing high direct and indirect costs. The appropriate treatment for RCT is debated. The American Academy Orthopaedic Surgeons guidelines state that surgical repair is an option for patients with chronic, symptomatic full-thickness RCT, but the quality of evidence is unconvincing. Thus, the AAOS recommendations are inconclusive. We are performing a randomized controlled trial to compare surgical and conservative treatment of RCT, in term of functional outcomes, rotator cuff integrity, muscle atrophy and fatty degeneration. Shoulder instability occurs when the head of the upper arm bone is forced out of the shoulder socket. Shoulder instabilities have been classified according to the etiology, the direction of instability, or on combinations thereof. The Thomas and Matsen classification, which is currently the most commonly utilized classification, divides shoulder instability events into the traumatic, unidirectional, Bankart lesion, and surgery (TUBS) and the atraumatic, multidirectional, bilateral, rehabilitation, and capsular shift (AMBRI) categories. The acquired instability overstress surgery (AIOS) category was then added. Surgical procedures for shoulder instability includes arthroscopic capsuloplasty, remplissage, bone block procedure or Latarjet procedure. Reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (RTSA) represents a good solution for the management of patients with osteoarthritis or fracture of the proximal humerus, with associated severe osteoporosis and RC dysfunction


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 155 - 155
1 Nov 2021
Edwards T Daly C Donovan R Whitehouse M
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Introduction and Objective. The most common paediatric orthopaedic injury requiring hospital admission is a femoral fracture. There is debate regarding the optimal surgical technique for fixing femoral diaphyseal fractures in children aged 4 to 12 years. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) have issued relevant guidelines, however, there is limited evidence to support these. The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis to compare the complication rate following flexible intramedullary nailing (FIN), plate fixation and external fixation (EF) for traumatic femoral diaphyseal fractures in children aged 4 to 12. Materials and Methods. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE and CENTRAL databases for interventional and observational studies. Two independent reviewers screened, assessed quality and extracted data from the identified studies. The primary outcome was the risk of any complication. Secondary outcomes assessed the risk of pre-specified individual complications. Results. Nine randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and 19 observational studies (six prospective and 13 retrospective) fulfilled the eligibility criteria. Within the RCTs, five analysed FIN (n=161), two analysed plates (n=51) and five analysed EF (n=168). Within the observational studies, 13 analysed FIN (n=610), seven analysed plates (n=214) and six analysed EF (n=153). The overall risk of complications was lower following plate fixation when compared to FIN fixation (RR 0.45, 95% CI 0.28 to 0.73, p=0.001) in the observational studies. The overall risk of complications was higher following EF when compared to FIN fixation in both RCTs (RR 1.94, 95% CI 1.25 to 3.01, p=0.003) and observational studies (RR 1.97, 95% CI 1.50 to 2.58, p<0.001). The overall risk of complications was higher following EF when compared to plate fixation in both RCTs (RR 7.42, 95% CI 1.84 to 29.98, p=0.005) and observational studies (RR 4.39, 95% CI 2.64 to 7.30, p<0.001). Conclusions. Although NICE and the AAOS recommend FIN for femoral diaphyseal fractures in children aged 4 to 12, this study reports a significantly decreased relative risk of complications when these injuries are managed with plates. Our findings provide valuable information to healthcare professionals who are involved in discussing the risk and benefits of different management options with patients and their families. The overall quality of evidence is low, highlighting the need for a rigorous prospective multicentre randomised trial at low risk of bias due to randomisation and outcome measurement to identify if any fixation technique is superior


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 13 - 13
1 Apr 2014
Shields D Marsh M Aldridge S Williams J
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The management of displaced forearm diaphyseal fractures in adults is predominantly operative. Anatomical reduction is necessary to infer optimal motion and strength. The authors have observed an intraoperative technique where passive pronosupination is examined to assess quality of reduction as a surrogate marker for active movement. We aimed to assess the value of this technique, but intentionally malreducing a simulated diaphyseal fracture of a radius in a cadaveric model, and measuring the effect on pronosupination. A single cadaveric arm was prepared and pronation/supination was examined according to American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons guidance. A Henry approach was then performed and a transverse osteotomy achieved in the radial diaphysis. A volar locking plate was used to hold the radius in progressive amounts of translation and rotation, with pronosupaintion measured with a goniometer. The radius could be grossly malreduced with no effect on pronation and supination until the extremes of deformity. The forearm showed more tolerance with rotational malreduction than translation. Passive pronation was more sensitive for malreduction than supination. The use of passive pronosupination to assess quality of reduction is misleading


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXVIII | Pages 47 - 47
1 Jun 2012
Donaldson D Shaw L Huntley J
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Ponseti first advocated his treatment for idiopathic clubfoot in the early 1950's. The method has only gained popularity and widespread use since the 1990's. Despite publications showing favourable results, there is little published data scrutinising the change in modes of talipes treatment. This study sought to define the trends in treatment for Idiopathic Clubfoot in Scotland over a twelve-year period (1997 – 2008). (i) A review was performed to identify the number of publications referencing the Ponseti method over the past 40 years. (ii) A structured questionnaire was sent to all Paediatric Orthopaedic practitioners in Scotland to ascertain the treatment methods used and over the time period. (iii) Data from the National Census for number of live births were combined with that obtained from the Scottish Morbidity Record (SMR01) for number of peritalar clubfoot surgeries performed over the study period. (iv) Similar data was also obtained for non-Talipes related peritalar surgeries, and data colleceted for the number of Tibialis Anterior transfer operations for this period. Clubfoot incidence data was measured indirectly by means of sample from the database of a tertiary referral Paediatric Orthopaedic Unit. Regression analysis was used to evaluate the trends over time. Review of the literature referencing the Ponseti method over the past 40 years showed an exponential increase from the late 1990's. The survey of Clubfoot management of Paediatric Orthopaedic Surgeons in Scotland showed a marked increase in use of the method over with this period. Over this period, the number of operations for clubfoot dropped substantially, from 55 releases in 1997 to 1 release in 2008. The linear equation estimated a decrease of approximately 5 surgical releases per year (R²= 0.87, p<0.05). In Scotland, most Tibialis Anterior transfers are performed at age 3years, the frequency of the procedure has increased in the latter half of the study period. In Scotland between 1997 and 2008, the number of peritalar (posterior, medial, posteromedial release) operations used in the primary treatment of idiopathic clubfoot has dropped substantially. This correlates with a marked increase in reference to the method within the literature and increased usage of the Ponseti technique by Paediatric Orthopaedic Consultants


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 39 - 39
1 May 2012
Ramasamy A Hill AM Gibb I Masouros SD Bull AM Clasper JC
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Introduction. Civilian fractures have been extensively studied with in an attempt to develop classification systems, which guide optimal fracture management, predict outcome or facilitate communication. More recently, biomechanical analyses have been applied in order to suggest mechanism of injury after the traumatic insult, and predict injuries as a result of a mechanism of injury, with particular application to the field so forensics. However, little work has been carried out on military fractures, and the application of civilian fracture classification systems are fraught with error. Explosive injuries have been sub-divided into primary, secondary and tertiary effects. The aim of this study was to 1. determine which effects of the explosion are responsible for combat casualty extremity bone injury in 2 distinct environments; a) in the open and b) enclosed space (either in vehicle or in cover) 2. determine whether patterns of combat casualty bone injury differed between environments Invariably, this has implications for injury classification and the development of appropriate mitigation strategies. Method. All ED records, case notes, and radiographs of patients admitted to the British military hospital in Afghanistan were reviewed over a 6 month period Apr 08-Sept 08 to identify any fracture caused by an explosive mechanism. Paediatric cases were excluded from the analysis. All radiographs were independently reviewed by a Radiologist, a team of Military Orthopaedic Surgeons and a team of academic Biomechanists, in order to determine the fracture classification and predict the mechanism of injury. Early in the study it became clear that due to the complexity of some of the injuries it was inappropriate to consider bones separately and the term ‘Zone of Insult’ (ZoI) was developed to identify separate areas of injury. Results. 62 combat casualties with 115 ZoIs (mean 1.82 zones) were identified in this study. 34 casualties in the open sustained 56 ZoIs (mean 1.65); 28 casualties in the enclosed group sustained 59 ZoIs (mean 2.10). There was no statistical difference in the mean ZoIs per casualty in the open vs enclosed group (Student t-test, p=0.24). Open fractures were more prevalent in the open group compared to the enclosed group (48/59 vs 20/49, Chi-squared test p<0.001). Of the casualties in the open, 1 zone of injury was due to the primary effects of blast, 10 a combination of primary and secondary blast zones, 23 due to secondary effects and 24 from the tertiary effects of blast. In contrast, there were no primary or combined primary and secondary blast zones and only 2 secondary blast zones in the enclosed group. Tertiary blast effects predominated in the enclosed group, accounting for 96% of injury zones (57/59). Analysis of the pattern of injury revealed that there were a higher proportion of lower limb injuries in the Enclosed group (54/59) compared to the Open group (40/58, Chi-squared p<0.05). In the Open group the mechanism of lower limb injury was more evenly distributed amongst mixed primary and secondary blast effects (10), secondary (10) and tertiary (20). In the enclosed group, lower limb injuries were almost exclusively caused by tertiary blast effects (47/48). A similar pattern was also seen in the Upper limb with 4/5 in the enclosed group was injured by tertiary effects compared to 4/18 in the Open Group. In the open group fragmentation injury was the predominant cause of injury (13/18). Conclusions. This data clearly demonstrates two distinct injury groups based upon the casualties' environment. The enclosed environment afforded by buildings and vehicles appears to mitigate the primary and secondary effects of the explosion. However, tertiary blast effects were the predominant mechanism of injury, with severe axial loading to the lower extremity being a characteristic of the fractures seen. In contrast, secondary fragments from the explosion were more likely to result in fractures of casualties caught in the open. The development of future mitigation strategies must be focused on reducing all the different mechanisms of injury caused by an explosion. This will require a better understanding on the effects of bone in high strain environments. This method of forensic biomechanics involving clinicians and engineers, combined with accurate physical and numerical simulations can form the basis in reducing the injury burden to the combat soldier


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1578 - 1585
1 Dec 2014
Rankin KS Sprowson AP McNamara I Akiyama T Buchbinder R Costa ML Rasmussen S Nathan SS Kumta S Rangan A

Trauma and orthopaedics is the largest of the surgical specialties and yet attracts a disproportionately small fraction of available national and international funding for health research. With the burden of musculoskeletal disease increasing, high-quality research is required to improve the evidence base for orthopaedic practice. Using the current research landscape in the United Kingdom as an example, but also addressing the international perspective, we highlight the issues surrounding poor levels of research funding in trauma and orthopaedics and indicate avenues for improving the impact and success of surgical musculoskeletal research.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014; 96-B:1578–85.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 4, Issue 4 | Pages 65 - 69
1 Apr 2015
Kearney RS Parsons N Underwood M Costa ML

Objectives

The evidence base to inform the management of Achilles tendon rupture is sparse. The objectives of this research were to establish what current practice is in the United Kingdom and explore clinicians’ views on proposed further research in this area. This study was registered with the ISRCTN (ISRCTN68273773) as part of a larger programme of research.

Methods

We report an online survey of current practice in the United Kingdom, approved by the British Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society and completed by 181 of its members. A total of ten of these respondents were invited for a subsequent one-to-one interview to explore clinician views on proposed further research in this area.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 3, Issue 4 | Pages 35 - 38
1 Aug 2014
Hammerberg EM


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 2, Issue 3 | Pages 58 - 65
1 Mar 2013
Johnson R Jameson SS Sanders RD Sargant NJ Muller SD Meek RMD Reed MR

Objectives

To review the current best surgical practice and detail a multi-disciplinary approach that could further reduce joint replacement infection.

Methods

Review of relevant literature indexed in PubMed.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 1, Issue 11 | Pages 297 - 309
1 Nov 2012
McIlwraith CW Frisbie DD Kawcak CE

Osteoarthritis (OA) is an important cause of pain, disability and economic loss in humans, and is similarly important in the horse. Recent knowledge on post-traumatic OA has suggested opportunities for early intervention, but it is difficult to identify the appropriate time of these interventions. The horse provides two useful mechanisms to answer these questions: 1) extensive experience with clinical OA in horses; and 2) use of a consistently predictable model of OA that can help study early pathobiological events, define targets for therapeutic intervention and then test these putative therapies. This paper summarises the syndromes of clinical OA in horses including pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment, and details controlled studies of various treatment options using an equine model of clinical OA.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 6 | Pages 832 - 836
1 Jun 2006
Barker R Takahashi T Toms A Gregson P Kuiper JH

The use of impaction bone grafting during revision arthroplasty of the hip in the presence of cortical defects has a high risk of post-operative fracture. Our laboratory study addressed the effect of extramedullary augmentation and length of femoral stem on the initial stability of the prosthesis and the risk of fracture.

Cortical defects in plastic femora were repaired using either surgical mesh without extramedullary augmentation, mesh with a strut graft or mesh with a plate. After bone impaction, standard or long-stem Exeter prostheses were inserted, which were tested by cyclical loading while measuring defect strain and migration of the stem.

Compared with standard stems without extramedullary augmentation, defect strains were 31% lower with longer stems, 43% lower with a plate and 50% lower with a strut graft. Combining extramedullary augmentation with a long stem showed little additional benefit (p = 0.67). The type of repair did not affect the initial stability. Our results support the use of impaction bone grafting and extramedullary augmentation of diaphyseal defects after mesh containment.