Purpose of the study: Proximal
Modern microsurgery has allowed severed digits to be salvaged by
From January 2000 to March 2004 16 thumbs after total avulsion-amputation were replanted in our hospitals. In 15 cases this was successful. In one case the thumb was lost 28 hours after
The fingertips are important for not only the function of the hand but also cosmetic reasons. In distal phalanx, arteries especially in zone …Ÿ are less than 0.5 mm in diameter however they can be anastomosed ultramicro-surgically with 11-0 suture. From 1976 to 1999, I have replanted 463 digits in 337 male and 126 female patients whose ages ranged from 4 months to 80 years, with an average of 32.7 years. There were 312 digits with complete amputation, 151 digits of incomplete amputation, 277 digits with trauma in zone …Ÿ and 186 digits in zone … in which more than six months had passed since the
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study were to present a new surgical classification, based on types of injuries, and to evaluate significance of our post-operative protocol for fingertip
A successful
The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether
the serum level of interleukin 6 (IL-6) could be used to identify the
persistence of infection after the first stage of a two-stage revision
for periprosthetic joint infection. Between 2010 and 2011, we prospectively studied 55 patients (23
men, 32 women; mean age 69.5 years; 36 to 86) with a periprosthetic
joint infection. Bacteria were identified in two intra-operative
tissue samples during re-implantation in 16 patients. These cases
were classified as representing persistent infection. To calculate a precise cut-off value which could be used in everyday
clinical practice, a 3 x 2 contingency table was constructed and
manually defined. We found that a serum IL-6 ≥ 13 pg/mL can be regarded as indicating
infection: its positive-predictive value is 90.9%. A serum IL-6 ≤ 8
pg/mL can be regarded as indicating an absence of infection: its
negative predictive value is 92.1%. The serum IL-6 level seems to be a reasonable marker for identifying
persistent infection after the first stage of a revision joint arthroplasty
and before attempting re-implantation. Cite this article:
The December 2023 Wrist & Hand Roundup. 360. looks at: Volar locking plate for distal radius fractures with patient-reported outcomes in older adults; Total joint replacement or trapeziectomy?;
The June 2024 Wrist & Hand Roundup. 360. looks at: One-year outcomes of the anatomical front and back reconstruction for scapholunate dissociation; Limited intercarpal fusion versus proximal row carpectomy in the treatment of SLAC or SNAC wrist: results after 3.5 years; Prognostic factors for clinical outcomes after arthroscopic treatment of traumatic central tears of the triangular fibrocartilage complex; The rate of nonunion in the MRI-detected occult scaphoid fracture: a multicentre cohort study; Does correction of carpal malalignment influence the union rate of scaphoid nonunion surgery?; Provision of a home-based video-assisted therapy programme in thumb carpometacarpal arthroplasty; Is
The June 2024 Oncology Roundup. 360. looks at: Chondrosarcoma of the femur: is local recurrence influenced by the presence of an extraosseous component?; Diagnostic challenges in low-grade central osteosarcoma; Single osteotomy technique for frozen autograft (pedicled freezing) in patients with malignant bone tumours; Unplanned resection for small superficial soft-tissue sarcomas: disastrous or simply bad?; Inactivation and
Aim. Due to medical and organizational factors, it occurs in everyday practice that spacers are left in place longer than originally planned during a two-stage prosthesis exchange in the case of prosthetic joint infections. Patients are severely restricted in their mobility and, after initial antibiotic administration, the spacer itself only acts as a foreign body. The aim of this study is to analyze whether the duration of the spacer in situ has an influence on the long-term success of treatment and mortality. Method. We retrospectively studied all 204 two-stage prosthesis replacements of the hip and knee from 2012 to 2016 with a minimum follow-up of two years at an arthroplasty center with 3 main surgeons. The duration of the spacer interval was divided into two groups. Patients replanted within ten weeks (as is standard in multiple algorithms) after systemic antibiotic treatment were assigned to the ‘Regular Spacer Interval (< 70 days)’ group. If the spacer interval was longer, they were assigned to the ‘Long Spacer Interval (≥ 70 days)’ group. Results. Patients were on average 67.69 years old (SD 12.3). The mean duration of the spacer-interval was 100.9 days (range: 423.0; SD, 60.0). In 62 patients reimplantation could be performed within 70 days after explantation, in 142 patients this took longer (max. 438 days). In 26 patients, the spacer had to be changed at least once during this period (11 patients in the hip group, and 15 patients in the knee group). In the remaining cases, other medical or organizational reasons delayed
Aims. Calprotectin (CLP) is produced in neutrophils and monocytes and released into body fluids as a result of inflammation or infection. The aim of this study was to evaluate the utility of blood and synovial CLP in the diagnosis of chronic periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). Methods. Blood and synovial fluid samples were collected prospectively from 195 patients undergoing primary or revision hip and knee arthroplasty. Patients were divided into five groups: 1) primary total hip and knee arthroplasty performed due to idiopathic osteoarthritis (OA; n = 60); 2) revision hip and knee arthroplasty performed due to aseptic failure of the implant (AR-TJR; n = 40); 3) patients with a confirmed diagnosis of chronic PJI awaiting surgery (n = 45); 4) patients who have finished the first stage of the PJI treatment with the use of cemented spacer and were qualified for
In amputation or amputation-like injuries of lower limbs, only in a few cases reconstructive treatment with microsurgery is encouraged, according to evaluation of lesion by Mangled Extremity Severity Score (MESS).
We have studied the restoration of sensation in 24 patients after operations involving the digital nerves of the thumb. These comprised 10 neurorrhaphies, two nerve graftings, five
We studied the effects of irradiation on the reintegration of autologous osteoarticular grafts over a period of 24 weeks in a canine model. In 16 foxhounds the medial femoral condyle was resected, irradiated and immediately replanted. In the control group resection and
The aim of this study was to investigate the safety and efficacy of 3D-printed modular prostheses in patients who underwent joint-sparing limb salvage surgery (JSLSS) for malignant femoral diaphyseal bone tumours. We retrospectively reviewed 17 patients (13 males and four females) with femoral diaphyseal tumours who underwent JSLSS in our hospital.Aims
Methods
The present study was undertaken to investigate the effect of fluorocarbon on the preservation of an amputated limb. The hind limbs of dogs were completely amputated through the mid-thigh; some were perfused with fluorocarbon, others with lactated Ringer's solution and some were not perfused at all. After six hours of ischaemia, all the limbs were replanted. Perfusion with fluorocarbon had an inhibitory effect on the anaerobic metabolism of an amputated limb, thus increasing the survival rate. Leakage of creatine phosphokinase from the replanted limb also was inhibited by perfusion with fluorocarbon. These effects were more striking when the amputated limb was perfused continuously rather than intermittently and when it was preserved in iced water rather than at room temperature; these measures helped to prevent
Endoprosthetic replacement following oncological conditions has shown to be at higher risk of sceptical complications due to the use of implants of unusual size, major soft tissue loss and immunsupression. 373 patients have been treated at our institution for malignant tumours of the bone or soft tissue around the knee with a modular tumour-prostheses of the knee joint since their availability from 1978. Infection or septic complications were identified in 78 patients (20.9%). In 15 cases of superficial wound healing disturbances with a fistula simple excision and revision of the wound was performed. In 48 cases of deep periprosthetic infections patients underwent one-stage revision with explantation of the total prosthetic material except femoral and tibial stems, extensive debridement of the wound and