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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 54 - 54
17 Nov 2023
Bishop M Zaffagnini S Grassi A Fabbro GD Smyrl G Roberts S MacLeod A
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Abstract. Background. Distal femoral osteotomy is an established successful procedure which can delay the progression of arthritis and the need for knee arthroplasty. The surgery, however, is complex and lengthy and consequently it is generally the preserve of highly experienced specialists and thus not widely offered. Patient specific instrumentation is known to reduce procedural complexity, time, and surgeons’ anxiety levels. 1. in proximal tibial osteotomy procedures. This study evaluated a novel patient specific distal femoral osteotomy procedure (Orthoscape, Bath, UK) which aimed to use custom-made implants and instrumentation to provide a precision correction while also simplifying the procedure so that more surgeons would be comfortable offering the procedure. Presenting problem. Three patients (n=3) with early-stage knee arthritis presented with valgus malalignment, the source of which was predominantly located within the distal femur, rather than intraarticular. Using conventional techniques and instrumentation, distal femoral knee osteotomy cases typically require 1.5–2 hours surgery time. The use of bi-planar osteotomy cuts have been shown to improve intraoperative stability as well as bone healing times. 2. This normally also increases surgical complexity; however, multiple cutting slots can be easily incorporated into patient specific instrumentation. Clinical management. All three cases were treated at a high-volume tertiary referral centre (Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna) using medial closing wedge distal femoral knee osteotomies by a team experienced in using patient specific osteotomy systems. 3. Virtual surgical planning was conducted using CT-scans and long-leg weight-bearing x-rays (Orthoscape, Bath, UK). Patient specific surgical guides and custom-made locking plates were design for each case. The guides were designed to allow temporary positioning, drilling and bi-planar saw-cutting. The drills were positioned such that the drills above and below the osteotomy became parallel on closing following osteotomy wedge removal. This gave reassurance of the achieved correction allowed the plate to be located precisely over the drills. All screw lengths were pre-measured. Discussion. The surgical time reduced to approximately 30 minutes by the third procedure. It was evident that surgical time was saved because no intraoperative screw length measurements were required, relatively few x-rays were used to confirm the position of the surgical guide, and the use of custom instrumentation significantly reduced the surgical inventory. The reduced invasiveness and ease of surgery may contribute to faster patient recovery compared to conventional techniques. The final post-operative alignment was within 1° of the planned alignment in all cases. Declaration of Interest. (a) fully declare any financial or other potential conflict of interest


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 67 - 67
1 Nov 2021
Zaffagnini S
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The medial opening-wedge high tibial osteotomy (OW-HTO) is an accepted option to treat the isolated medial compartment osteoarthritis (OA) in varus knee. Despite satisfactory outcomes were described in literature, consistent complication rate has been reported and the provided accuracy of coronal alignment correction using conventional HTO techniques falls short. Patient specific instrumentations has been introduced with the aim to reduce complications and to improve the intra-operative accuracy according to the pre-operative plan, which is responsible for the clinical result of the surgery. In this talk, an overview of the clinical results of HTO patient specific instrumentation available in literature will be performed. Moreover, preliminary intra-operative and clinical results of a new customised 3-D printed cutting guide and fixation plate for OW-HTO will be presented


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 60 - 60
4 Apr 2023
MacLeod A Mandalia V Mathews J Toms A Gill H
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High tibial osteotomy (HTO) is an effective surgical treatment for isolated medial compartment knee osteoarthritis; however, widespread adoption is limited due to difficulty in achieving the planned correction, and patient dissatisfaction due to soft tissue irritation. A new HTO system – Tailored Osteotomy Knee Alignment (TOKA®, 3D Metal Printing Ltd, Bath, UK) could potentially address these barriers having a custom titanium plate and titanium surgical guides featuring a unique mechanism for precise osteotomy opening as well as saw cutting and drilling guides. The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of this novel HTO system using cadaveric specimens; a preclinical testing stage ahead of first-in-human surgery according to the ‘IDEAL-D’ framework for device innovation. Local ethics committee approval was obtained. The novel opening wedge HTO procedure was performed on eight cadaver leg specimens. Whole lower limb CT scans pre- and post-operatively provided geometrical assessment quantifying the discrepancy between pre-planned and post-operative measurements for key variables: the gap opening angle and the patient specific surgical instrumentation positioning and rotation - assessed using the implanted plate. The average discrepancy between the pre-operative plan and the post-operative osteotomy correction angle was: 0.0 ± 0.2°. The R2 value for the regression correlation was 0.95. The average error in implant positioning was −0.4 ± 4.3 mm, −2.6 ± 3.4 mm and 3.1 ± 1.7° vertically, horizontally, and rotationally respectively. This novel HTO surgery has greater accuracy and smaller variability in correction angle achieved compared to that reported for conventional or other patient specific methods with published data available. This system could potentially improve the accuracy and reliability of osteotomy correction angles achieved surgically


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 83 - 83
1 Dec 2020
Shah DS Taylan O Labey L Scheys L
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Understanding the long-term effects of total knee arthroplasty (TKA) on joint kinematics is vital to assess the success of the implant design and surgical procedure. However, while in vitro cadaveric studies quantifying post-operative biomechanics primarily reflect joint behaviour immediately after surgery,. 1. in vivo studies comprising of follow-up TKA patients often reflect joint behaviour a few months after surgery. 2. Therefore, the aim of this cadaveric study was to explore the long-term effects of TKA on tibiofemoral kinematics of a donor specimen, who had already undergone bilateral TKA, and compare them to post-operative kinematics reported in the literature. Two fresh-frozen lower limbs from a single donor (male, age: 83yr, ht: 1.83m, wt: 86kg), who had undergone bilateral TKA (Genesis II, Smith&Nephew, Memphis, USA) 19 years prior to his demise, were obtained following ethical approval from the KU Leuven institutional board. The specimens were imaged using computed tomography (CT) and tested in a validated knee simulator. 3. replicating active squatting and varus-valgus laxity tests. Tibiofemoral kinematics were recorded using an optical motion capture system and compared to various studies in the literature using the same implant – experimental studies based on cadaveric specimens (CAD). 1,4. and an artificial specimen (ART). 5. , and a computational study (COM). 6. . Maximum tibial abduction during laxity tests for the left leg (3.54°) was comparable to CAD (3.30°), while the right leg exhibited much larger joint laxity (8.52°). Both specimens exhibited valgus throughout squatting (left=2.03±0.57°, right=5.81±0.19°), with the change in tibial abduction over the range of flexion (left=1.89°, right=0.64°) comparable to literature (CAD=1.28°, COM=2.43°). The left leg was externally rotated (8.00±0.69°), while the right leg internally rotated (−15.35±1.50°), throughout squatting, with the change in tibial rotation over the range of flexion (left=2.61°, right=4.79°) comparable to literature (CAD=5.52°, COM=4.15°). Change in the femoral anteroposterior translation over the range of flexion during squatting for both specimens (left=14.88mm, right=6.76mm) was also comparable to literature (ART=13.40mm, COM=20.20mm). Although TKA was reportedly performed at the same time on both legs of the donor by the same surgeon, there was a stark difference in their post-operative joint kinematics. A larger extent of intraoperative collateral ligament release could be one of the potential reasons for higher post-operative joint laxity in the right leg. Relative changes in post-operative tibiofemoral kinematics over the range of squatting were similar to those reported in the literature. However, differences between absolute magnitudes of joint kinematics obtained in this study and findings from the literature could be attributed to different surgeons performing TKA, with presumable variations in alignment techniques and/or patient specific instrumentation, and the slightly dissimilar ranges of knee flexion during squatting. In conclusion, long-term kinematic effects of TKA quantified using in vitro testing were largely similar to the immediate post-operative kinematics reported in the literature; however, variation in the behaviour of two legs from the same donor suggested that intraoperative surgical alterations might have a greater effect on joint kinematics over time


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Apr 2018
Yabuno K Sawada N Hirohaku D
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Introduction. With the development of 3D printing technology, there are many different types of PSI in the world. The accuracy of patient specific instrumentation (PSI) in primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is dependent on appropriate placement of the cutting blocks. However, previous reports on one type of PSI measured the difference between postoperative prosthetic alignment and postoperative mechanical axis and thus these reports did not evaluate intraoperative comparison of PSIs between two different designs. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the intraoperative accuracy of two different designed PSIs (My knee, Medacta International, Castel San Pietro, Switzerland) with two examiners using CT free navigation system (Stryker, Mahwar, NJ, USA) in regards to sagittal and coronal alignment. Methods. We enrolled 78knees (66 patients) with a primary cemented TKA using two different designed CT-based PSIs (My knee, Medacta International, Castel San Pietro, Switzerland). All operations were performed by two senior surgeons who have experience with greater than 500 TKAs and greater than 200 navigated TKAs. Two examiners were same two surgeons. The study period was between June 2015 and November 2016. The local ethics' committee approved the study prior to its initiation, and informed consent was obtained from all patients. After placement of the PSI on the femur and tibia, the position of the PSI was evaluated by s intraoperative navigation. Two examiners placed two different types (STD(standard) and MIS(minimum invasive surgery)) of PSI on same joint. As required by the PSI, only soft- tissue was removed and osteophytes were left in place. Femoral MIS PSI was required partial remove of lateral cartilage. For the femur, the coronal position in relation to the mechanical axis were documented. For the tibia, the coronal alignment and the tibial slope were documented. Of note, intraoperative modifications to the PSI were not made based upon the results of the navigation. Rather, the findings of the intraoperative navigation were simply documented. Results. The mean age of the cohort was 72.9±7.5years (range, 55–85years). The study included 11men and 55women, with a mean height of 151±8.2cm (range, 135–175cm), mean weight of 59.4±4.3kg (range, 42–82kg), and a mean of Body Mass Index of 25.9±3.6 (range, 17.2–36.4). HKA angle (supine position) measured by CT was 170.8 ±4.4 degree(range, 162.5–182degree). Diagnosis was osteoarthritis in all patient. There was no statistically significant difference in PSI position alignment for femoral flexion, tibial coronal angle, tibial slope between the two groups with two examiners. However, the intraoperative coronal position using the femoral STD PSI significantly deviated from using femoral MIS PSI from both examiners. (PSI vs. MIS, examiner1 p = 0.02, examiner2 p=0.04)