Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 2 of 2
Results per page:
Applied filters
General Orthopaedics

Include Proceedings
Dates
Year From

Year To
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_22 | Pages 61 - 61
1 Dec 2016
Rosenberg A
Full Access

The following papers will be discussed during this session: 1) Staph Screening and Treatment Prior to Elective TJA; 2) Unfulfilled Expectations Following TJA Procedures; 3) Thigh Pain in Short Stem Cementless Components in THR; 4) Is the Direct Anterior Approach a Risk Factor for Early Failure?; 5) THA Infection - Results of a 2nd 2-Stage Re-implantation - Clinical Trial of Articulating and Static Spacers; 6) THA Revision - Modular vs. Non Modular Fluted Tapered Stems-Total Femoral Replacement for Femoral Bone Loss - Cage + TM Augment vs. Cup Cage for Acetabular Bone Loss; 7) Do Injections Increase the Risk of Infection Prior to TKA?; 8) Long-Acting Opioid Use Predicts Perioperative Complication in TJA; 9) UKA vs. HTO in Patients Under 55 at 5–7 years; 10) Stemming Tibial Component in TKA Patients with a BMI > 30; 11) The Effect of Bariatric Surgery Prior to Total Knee Arthroplasty; 12) Oral Antibiotics and Reinfection Following Two-Stage Exchange; 13) Two-Stage Debridement with Prosthetic Retention for Acute TKA Infections; 14) Patient-Reported Outcomes Predict Meaningful Improvement after TKA; 15) Contemporary Rotating Hinge TKA; 16) Liposomal Bupivacaine in TKA; and 17) Noise Generation in Modern TKA: Incidence and Significance


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 133 - 133
1 Feb 2015
Windsor R
Full Access

Rotating Hinge total knee replacement designs are currently more frequently used for revision total knee replacement. As the designs of these implants have improved over time, the threshold for using them has been lowered. Cases of global instability and severe bone loss have not been adequately addressed by the standard use of unlinked constrained designs. Recurrent dislocation and polyethylene post failure due to cold flow and wear make the use of the unlinked designs insufficient to address the mechanical forces developed in a grossly unstable knee. The linked rotating hinge designs have been able to address global ligamentous instability in four planes. Medial-lateral instability is well addressed by these implants. In cases of severe ankylosis with large flexion contractures, it is often necessary to resect the distal femur above the femoral insertions of the medial and lateral collateral ligaments. The absence of the tethering effect of severely contracted collateral ligaments demand the need for linked designs, although there has been reported success with the use of unlinked designs. Rotating hinges are particularly important for use in cases of recurvatum where an extension stop is incorporated in the design. The design permits slight hyperextension which permits application to clinical situations with incompetent quadriceps strength or paralysis. The clinical results are quite acceptable even though most reports present 65–75% success rates. However, it should also be stated that these patient cohorts represent the most severe cases of revision surgery. Current hinged designs should continue to lower the threshold for use