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Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 8 | Pages 679 - 684
2 Aug 2021
Seddigh S Lethbridge L Theriault P Matwin S Dunbar MJ

Aims. In countries with social healthcare systems, such as Canada, patients may experience long wait times and a decline in their health status prior to their operation. The aim of this study is to explore the association between long preoperative wait times (WT) and acute hospital length of stay (LoS) for primary arthroplasty of the knee and hip. Methods. The study population was obtained from the provincial Patient Access Registry Nova Scotia (PARNS) and the Canadian national hospital Discharge Access Database (DAD). We included primary total knee and hip arthroplasties (TKA, THA) between 2011 and 2017. Patients waiting longer than the recommended 180 days Canadian national standard were compared to patients waiting equal or less than the standard WT. The primary outcome measure was acute LoS postoperatively. Secondarily, patient demographics, comorbidities, and perioperative parameters were correlated with LoS with multivariate regression. Results. A total of 11,833 TKAs and 6,627 THAs were included in the study. Mean WT for TKA was 348 days (1 to 3,605) with mean LoS of 3.6 days (1 to 98). Mean WT for THA was 267 days (1 to 2,015) with mean LoS of 4.0 days (1 to 143). There was a significant increase in mean LoS for TKA waiting longer than 180 days (2.5% (SE 1.1); p = 0.028). There was no significant association for THA. Age, sex, surgical year, admittance from home, rural residence, household income, hospital facility, the need for blood transfusion, and comorbidities were all found to influence LoS. Conclusion. Surgical WT longer than 180 days resulted in increased acute LoS for primary TKA. Meeting a shorter WT target may be cost-saving in a social healthcare system by having shorter LoS. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(8):679–684


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 1 | Pages 31 - 39
1 Feb 1960
Shiers LGP

1. The results of twenty-eight "hinge" arthroplasties of the knee are described. 2. Failure was most often due to breaking of the prosthesis. 3. The design of the prosthesis has been modified as a result of experience in cases of mechanical failure. 4. The results suggest that with the use of the modified hinge good results may be obtainable in three out of four cases


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 7 | Pages 765 - 766
1 Jul 2022
Haddad FS Malchau H


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 36-B, Issue 4 | Pages 553 - 560
1 Nov 1954
Shiers LGP

If conclusions are to be of any value they must be definite and one cannot draw definite conclusions from less than, say, fifty cases followed up for at least five years. However, few surgeons will ever see fifty patients requiring arthroplasty of the knee, let alone operate of them, even in five years. Accordingly, this account of a new approach to the problem of knee arthroplasty is submitted in the hope that other surgeons may care to try it and thereby learn, and thus be able to teach, tile modifications and improvements that all new techniques seem so surely to need


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 1 | Pages 53 - 60
1 Feb 1949
Speed JS Trout PC

1. Arthroplasty of the knee joint should be performed only in carefully selected cases. Criteria for the operation are outlined. 2. In our experience, 70 per cent. of properly selected patients secure good or fair results. An additional 12 per cent., whose anatomical or functional results were classified as poor, preferred the movement which had been gained to ankylosis of the joint. 3. The major functional adaptation of the knee joint takes place during the first five years after arthroplasty. Several patients who had a poor range of movement after one or two years developed an excellent range by the end of five years. 4. Instability, when present, usually became apparent within the first five years. 5. Joints which were still stable at the end of five years usually remained so over a long period of time. Four patients have been traced for twenty to twenty-five years, and three have been traced for over twenty-five years. 6. Since the incidence of ankylosis of the knee joint from gonococcal and pyogenic infections has been reduced by the use of antibiotics, fewer patients are suitable subjects for arthroplasty


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 3 | Pages 300 - 304
1 Aug 1976
Watson Wood H Hill R

Thirty-one patients with rheumatoid arthritis were reviewed after Shiers arthroplasty of the knee joint for which the main indication was intractable pain. Seven patients had the operation done to both knees. This review was done to assess the long-term results two to seven years later. All patients were clinically and radiologically assessed, and our results showed that pain and instability recurred within eighteen months. Thus it is likely that a prosthesis which allows rotation, and in which the bearing surfaces are metal on plastic, will replace the Shiers prosthesis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 1 | Pages 76 - 87
1 Feb 1969
Platt G Pepler C

1. Stainless steel mould arthroplasty of the knee is described and a ten-year follow-up study of sixty-two operations is reported. Fifty-four were for rheumatoid arthritis and eight for osteoarthritis. 2. Forty-nine of the sixty-two joints retained mobility, six had become ankylosed and five were later arthrodesed ; two limbs were amputated. The forty-nine mobile knees included twenty-seven which were painless at all times, and fourteen in which only an occasional twinge was felt. 3. The range of movement was increased in twenty-two joints as compared with the state before operation, diminished in twelve and unaltered in five. In ten knees measurements before operation were not available. 4. Flexion deformity, swelling, stability and function were improved in a significant number of joints. 5. Patients suffering from active rheumatoid arthritis often found that the joint operated upon no longer took part in generalised flares of the disease


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 3 | Pages 505 - 510
1 Aug 1968
Jones GB

1. Forty-five arthroplasties of the knee with the Walldius prosthesis are reported in forty-two patients, thirty-seven with rheumatoid arthritis and five with osteoarthritis. 2. There has been no structural failure of the prosthesis. 3. Sepsis required removal of the prosthesis in three cases, but arthrodesis was obtained in two of the three. 4. Serious loosening of the prosthesis occurred in one case only. Varus deformity occurred in one patient. 5. Radiological evidence of some movement of the prosthesis was present in six other cases but this did not seem to affect function. 6. It is concluded that this operation has a place in the treatment of the more seriously disabled patient, but should not be used when heavy demands are likely to be made on the joint


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 2 | Pages 289 - 291
1 Mar 1986
Johnson D Bannister G

In order to define the predisposing factors and outcome of infected arthroplasty of the knee, a retrospective analysis of a consecutive series of 471 knee arthroplasties was performed. There were 23 cases of superficial wound infection and 25 of deep infection. Superficial wound infection alone resulted in a painfree gait, with little limitation of movement. Rheumatoid arthritis, the use of constrained prostheses and the presence of a superficial wound infection, all predisposed to deep infection. Deep infection was eradicated by long-term antibiotics in only two patients in whom skin cover was successfully provided by a gastrocnemius musculocutaneous flap. Excision of a sinus track, wound debridement and exchange arthroplasty were universally unsuccessful. Arthrodesis, however, in 11 out of 12 cases, provided the painfree gait these patients desire


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 6 - 6
1 Jul 2022
Hamilton T Knight R Stokes J Rombach I Cooper C Davies L Dutton S Barker K Cook J Lamb S Murray D Poulton L Wang A Strickland L Duren BV Leal J Beard D Pandit H
Full Access

Abstract

Introduction

This multi-centre randomised controlled trial evaluated the clinical and cost effectiveness of liposomal bupivacaine for pain and recovery following knee replacement.

Methodology

533patients undergoing primary knee replacement were randomised to receive either liposomal bupivacaine (266mg) plus bupivacaine hydrochloride (100mg) or control (bupivacaine hydrochloride 100mg), administered at the surgical site. The co-primary outcomes were pain visual analogue score (VAS) area under the curve (AUC) 6 to 72hours and the Quality of Recovery 40 (QoR-40) score at 72hours.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 5 | Pages 787 - 789
1 Nov 1987
Johnson D

A randomised prospective trial was undertaken of antibiotic prophylaxis given at various intervals before inflation of the tourniquet for arthroplasty of the knee. Cefuroxime assays of bone and subcutaneous fat from samples collected throughout the operation demonstrated that an interval of 10 minutes was necessary to obtain adequate prophylaxis. Improvement in the timing of antibiotic prophylaxis may result in a reduction in the incidence of infection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 5 | Pages 812 - 814
1 Nov 1986
Johnson D Houghton T Radford P

Early mobilisation after arthroplasty of the knee sometimes results in wound breakdown. The two commonly used incisions, the anterior midline and the medial parapatellar incisions, were compared in order to determine which had the best potential for wound healing. Study of the cleavage lines around the knee demonstrated that the medial parapatellar incision lies parallel to the lines, whilst the anterior midline incision lies perpendicular to them. In addition, the medial parapatellar wound was found to be subjected to significantly less tension during flexion; after arthroplasty it can be expected to heal faster and to be less liable to disruption during early mobilisation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 3 | Pages 333 - 338
1 Aug 1978
Sheehan J

Arthrodesis of the knee is a simple and safe operation that ensures stability and freedom from pain. But it is achieved at the expense of movement and occasionally of social acceptability. If arthroplasty is to be recommended, the advantages of arthrodesis must be retained, with the added bonus of a functional arc of movement.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 1 | Pages 50 - 52
1 Feb 1949
Samson JE

These statistics show that some movement was gained, with good stability and painlessness, in thirty-five of the fifty operations (70 per cent.) and that there was failure, with reankylosis, instability, or persistent pain, in fifteen (30 per cent.).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 7 | Pages 937 - 942
1 Sep 2003
Ackroyd CE


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 3 | Pages 339 - 344
1 Aug 1978
Freeman M Todd R Bamert P Day W

The essentially satisfactory results from the ICLH implant as used until 1975 were marred by examples of loosening and sinking of the tibial implant, by patellar pain of varying severity, by wear of the tibial implant caused by fragments of cement and by failure consistently to control the alignment of the leg. This report describes the methods now being used to overcome these complications and gives an account of the success so far achieved.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 5 | Pages 682 - 684
1 Nov 1984
Inglis G

A retrospective review of medial compartment arthroplasty in 22 patients (22 knees) is reported. The operations were performed between 1973 and 1978. Eighty-six per cent were rated good or excellent using the knee rating system devised by the Hospital for Special Surgery, New York. Excellent or good results were achieved in six patients who had previously had a high tibial osteotomy. At the time of follow-up significant loosening had not occurred, although progression of patellofemoral disease was noted. This study supports the promising results reported for unicompartmental resurfacing arthroplasty in the elderly.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 157 - 157
1 Mar 2008
Barker K Isaac S Danial I Beard D Gill H Gibbons C Dodd C Murray D
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Proprioception protects joints against injurious movements and is critical for joint stability maintenance under dynamic conditions. Knee replacement effect on proprioception in general remains elusive. This study aimed to evaluate the changes in proprioceptive performance after knee replacement; comparing Total (TKA) to Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty (UKA).

Thirty-four patients with osteoarthritis were recruited; 15 patients underwent TKA using the AGC prosthesis and 19patients underwent UKA using the Oxford prosthesis. Both cruciate ligaments were preserved in the UKA group, while only the PCL was preserved in TKA patients. Patients’ age was similar in both groups.> Joint Position Sense (JPS) and postural sway were used as measures of proprioception. Both groups were assessed pre- and 6 months post-operatively in both limbs. JPS was measured as the error in actively and passively reproducing five randomly ordered knee flexion angles between 30 and 70°using an isokinetic dynamometer. Postural sway (area and path) was measured during single leg stance using a Balance Performance Monitor. Functional outcome was assessed using the Oxford Knee Score (OKS).

Pre-operatively, no differences in JPS or sway were found between limbs in either group. No differences existed between the two groups. Post-operatively, both groups had significant improvement of JPS in the operated limb (UKA mean4.64°, SD1.44° and TKA mean5.18°, SD1.35°). No changes in JPS were seen in the control side. A significant improvement (P< 0.0001) in sway area and path was found in the UKA group only in both limbs. No significant changes in sway occurred in either limb of TKA patients. The OKS improved from 21.4 to 35.5 for TKA patients and from 23.9 to 38for UKA patients.

Both UKA and TKA improve proprioception as assessed by JPS. However, UKA alone improves postural sway in both limbs. This may impart explain why UKA patients function better than TKA patients


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 387 - 388
1 Oct 2006
Isaac S Barker K Danial I Beard D Gill H Gibbons C Dodd C Murray D
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Introduction: Knee joint arthroplasty (total or unicompartmental) is the standard operative treatment for osteoarthritis (OA). Survival rate is good for both types but functional outcome is different. The function of unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) is substantially better than that of total knee arthroplasty (TKA). As function can be strongly influenced by proprioceptive ability, it is possible that improved outcome seen in patients with UKA results from retaining proprioceptive function associated with the cruciate ligaments. This prospective longitudinal study aimed to evaluate the change in proprioceptive performance after knee replacement; comparing TKA to UKA. Methods and Materials: Two groups of patients with OA as diagnosed clinically and by X-ray were recruited. Group 1 consisted of 15 patients (mean age 65.8 years range 57–72 years, 10 females and 5 males) listed for TKA with the AGC prosthesis (Biomet, UK). Group 2 consisted of 19 patients (mean age 65.5 years range 52–75 years; 9 females and 10 males) listed for UKA with the Oxford UKA (Biomet, UK) for medial compartment OA. The ACL and PCL were present and preserved in all patients in Group 2, while only the PCL was preserved in Group 1 patients. Joint Position Sense (JPS) and postural sway were used as measures of proprioception performance. Both groups were assessed pre-and 6 months post-operatively in both limbs. JPS was measured using a dynamometer (KinCom, Chatanooga Ltd) as the error in actively and passively reproducing five randomly ordered knee flexion angles (30°, 40°, 50°, 60° and 70°). Postural sway (area, path and velocity) was measured during single leg stance using a Balance Performance Monitor (SMS Medical) for 30 seconds interval. Functional outcome was assessed using the Oxford Knee Score (OKS). Results: Pre-operatively, no differences in JPS or sway were found between limbs in either group. No differences existed between the two groups. Post-operatively, both groups had significant improvement of JPS in the operated limb only (Mean ± standard deviation for UKA 4.64±1.44° and for TKA 5.18±1.35°). No changes in JPS were seen in the control side. An improvement in sway was found in the UKA group only. UKA patients showed significant improvement in both sway area and path (p< .0001) for both limbs post-operatively. No significant post-operative changes in sway occurred in either limb of TKA patients. The OKS improved postoperatively in both groups, rising from 21.4 to 35.5 for TKA patients and from 23.9 to 38 for UKA patients. Conclusion: Interestingly, joint position sense improved for both groups but did not seem to show any difference between UKA and TKA. Postural sway was influenced by joint replacement type. Ligament retention may contribute to improved global postural control seen after unicompartmental knee arthroplasty and may explain the higher level of function seen in these patients


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 87-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 146 - 146
1 Apr 2005
Isaac SM Barker K Danial I Beard D Gill HS Gibbons M Dodd C Murray D
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Purpose of the study Function is strongly infl uenced by proprioceptive ability, this prospective longitudinal study aimed to evaluate the change in proprioceptive performance after knee replacement; comparing total to unicompartment replacement.

Methods and Results Two groups of patients with OA as diagnosed clinically and by X-ray were recruited. Group 1 consisted of 15 patients (mean age 65.8yrs range 57-72yrs, 10 females & 5 males) listed for Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) with the AGC (Biomet, UK). Group 2 consisted of 19 patients (mean age 65.5yrs range 52–75yrs; 9 females & 10 males) listed for Oxford Uni-compartmental Knee Arthroplasty (OUKA) for medial compartment OA. The ACL and PCL were present and preserved in all patients in Group 2, while only the PCL was preserved for Group 1 patients.

Joint Position Sense (JPS) & sway were used as measures of proprioception performance. Both groups were assessed pre- and 6 months post-op. JPS was measured using an isokinetic dynamometer (KinCom, Chatanooga Ltd) as the error in actively and passively reproducing fi ve randomly ordered knee fl exion angles (30°, 40°, 50°, 60° and 70°). Sway (area, path and velocity) was measured during single leg stance using a Balance Performance Monitor (SMS Medical) for 30-second interval. Functional outcome was assessed using the Oxford Knee Score (OKS).

Pre-operatively, no differences in JPS or sway were found between limbs in either group. No differences existed between the two groups.

Post-operatively, both groups had signifi cant improvement of JPS in the operated limb only (Mean ± standard deviation for UKA 4.64±1.44° and for TKA 5.18±1.35°). No changes in JPS were seen in the control side. Group 2 patients showed signifi cant improvement in both sway area and path (p< .0001) for both limbs post-operatively. No signifi cant post-operative changes in sway occurred in either limb of Group 1 patients.

The OKS improved post-operatively in both groups, rising from 21.4 to 35.5 for Group 1 patients and from 23.9 to 38 for Group 2 patients.

Conclusion Interestingly, joint position sense improved for both groups but did not seem to show any difference between UKA and TKA. Postural sway was infl uenced by joint replacement type. Ligament retention may contribute to improved global postural control seen after unicompartmental knee arthroplasty and may explain the higher level of function seen in these patients.