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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 395 - 395
1 Sep 2012
Sánchez Ruas JJ Burgos Flores J Aranda Romero F Del Olmo Hernández T De Blas G Barrios C Hevia E Regidor I Correa Gorospe C Ruíz Ibán M Díaz Heredia J López Mondéjar J Berrendero L
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Introduction. A new triggered electromyography test for detection of stimulus diffusion to intercostal muscles of the contralateral side during thoracic pedicle screw placement was evaluated. Experimental research was carried out in order to determine if, using this test, neural contact at different aspects of the spinal cord and nerve roots could be discriminated. Methods. Nine industrial pigs (60–75 kg) had 108 pedicle screws placed bilaterally in the thoracic spine (T8–T13). Neural structures were stimulated under direct vision at different anatomic locations from T9 to T12. Recording electrodes were placed over the right and left intercostal muscles. Increasing intensity of the stimulus was applied until muscle response was detected at the contralateral side (diffusion phenomenon). After this first experiment, the thoracic spine was instrumented. Screws were placed in the pedicle in two different positions, the anatomic intrapedicular location and with purposeful contact with the neural elements. Results. Response thresholds to direct stimulation of nerve root at different points were significantly lower than those obtained by stimulation of the dorsal aspect of the spinal cord (0.44±0.22 mA vs 1.38±0.71 mA). However, a 24-fold stimulation intensity (6.50±0.29 mA) was necessary to obtain diffusion of the EMG response to the opposite left side if the right nerve root was stimulated. Only a 2-fold increment (3.17±0.93 mA) was able to elicit diffusion of EMG responses to the contralateral side when stimulation was applied to the dorsal aspect of the spinal cord. Contralateral EMG responses after high increases of stimulation thresholds indicated nerve root contact. Diffusion phenomenon after low threshold increments reflected medullar contact. Electromyography recordings after triggered stimulation of the screws showed that only screws in contact with the spinal cord had significantly lower responses (2.72±1.48 mA). Conclusion. Stimulus-triggered EMG could only discriminate screws with violation of the medial pedicle wall if they were contact with neural tissues. Recording EMG-potentials at the contralateral paraspinal muscles (stimulus diffusion phenomenon) proved to be a reliable method to discriminate which of the neural structures was at risk


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 323 - 323
1 Sep 2012
Li C Hussain A Joseph P Kamali A
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INTRODUCTION. One of the recent advances in the hard-on-hard hip arthroplasty is the development of a new material of diffusion hardened oxidised zirconium (DHOxZr). The DHOxZr material consists of a ceramic layer on the top surface which is supported by a thick oxygen diffusion hardened (DH) zone underneath. With the desired properties of metal substrate, ceramic surface and a gradient structure of the oxygen diffusion zone, the DHOxZr-on-DHOxZr bearing combination is expected to produce low wear and minimal metal ions. This can possibly address the concerns associated with metal hypersensitivity associated with metal on metal bearings and fracture risk associated with ceramics. The aim of this study was to evaluate the wear of DHOxZr-on-DHOxZr as a possible hard on hard bearing combination in hips. METHODS. Three pairs of 50 mm DHOxZr prototype hip joint devices, each consisting of a DHOxZr modular head and a DHOxZr liner were wear tested in a ProSim hip joint simulator under standard testing conditions used by the Implant Development Centre (IDC), Smith & Nephew, Leamington Spa for 5 million cycles (Mc). The flexion/extension was 30° and 15°. The internal/external rotation was ± 10°. The force was Paul-type stance phase loading, with a maximum load of 3 kN and a standard ISO swing phase load of 0.3 kN. The test frequency was 1 Hz. Gravimetric analysis was carried out at 0, 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 million cycles. The lubricant was new born calf serum with 2 g/l sodium azide concentration diluted with de-ionised water to achieve average protein concentration of 20 g/l. Lubricant was changed every 0.25Mc during the first million cycles of the test and at every 0.33 Mc from 1 to 5Mc. RESULTS. A biphasic wear pattern was observed for the DHOxZr on DHOxZr devices during the test, with a running in phase from 0–1 Mc and a steady state phase from 1–5 Mc. At a confidence level of 95%, the mean wear rate was 0.21 ±0.06 mm3/Mc during the running-in stage, and the wear rate was reduced to 0.01 ±0.03 mm3/Mc during the steady state for the device tested. The wear volume loss of the DHOxZr on DHOxZr devices was significantly lower than that generated by CoCrMo metal on metal (MoM) devices (p < 0.05) under identical simulator test conditions


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 1 | Pages 142 - 149
1 Jan 2022
Armstrong BRW Devendra A Pokale S Subramani B Rajesh Babu V Ramesh P Dheenadhayalan J Rajasekaran S

Aims

The aim of this study was to assess whether it is possible to predict the mortality, and the extent and time of neurological recovery from the time of the onset of symptoms and MRI grade, in patients with the cerebral fat embolism syndrome (CFES). This has not previously been investigated.

Methods

The study included 34 patients who were diagnosed with CFES following trauma between 2012 and 2018. The clinical diagnosis was confirmed and the severity graded by MRI. We investigated the rate of mortality, the time and extent of neurological recovery, the time between the injury and the onset of symptoms, the clinical severity of the condition, and the MRI grade. All patients were male with a mean age of 29.7 years (18 to 70). The mean follow-up was 4.15 years (2 to 8), with neurological recovery being assessed by the Glasgow Outcome Scale and the Mini-Mental State Examination.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 130 - 130
1 Sep 2012
Wannomae K Oral E Neils A Rowell S Muratoglu O
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Introduction. Vitamin E stabilization of radiation crosslinked UHMWPE is done by (1) blending into the resin powder, consolidating and irradiating or (2) diffusing into already consolidated and irradiated UHMWPE and terminally gamma sterilizing. With blending, a higher radiation dose is required for crosslinking to the same level as virgin UHMWPE. With diffusion, the vitamin E amount used is not limited by the crosslink density, but, vitamin E is exposed to terminal sterilization dose of 25–40 kGy, less than the 100–150 kGy used with blending, which may decrease the grafting of the antioxidant onto the polymer. We investigated the efficiency of grafted vitamin E against squlene-initiated accelerated aging. Methods. Medical grade GUR1050 UHMWPE with vitamin E (0.1 wt%) was irradiated to 150 kGy. Tibial knee insert preforms were irradiated to 100 kGy, diffused with vitamin E using a doping and homogenization procedure. This UHMWPE was used either before or after gamma sterilization. One set of machined blocks (10 × 10 × 6 mm; n = 6) were extracted in boiling hexane for 4 days, then dried. The extracted blocks were doped with squalene at 120°C for 2 hours. One block each was analyzed after doping. The rest were accelerated aged at 70°C and 5 atm. of oxygen for 6 (n = 2) and 14 days (n = 3). Thin sections (150 micron thick) were microtomed and analyzed by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy to determine a vitamin E index (1245–1275 cm. −1. normalized to 1850–1985 cm. −1. ) and an oxidation index (1700 cm. −1. normalized to 1370 cm. −1. ) after extraction with boiling hexane for 16 hours and drying. Results. After extraction, 92% of the original vitamin E was removed from diffused and sterilized UHMWPE and 99% of the vitamin E was removed from the diffused and unsterilized UHMWPE. Vitamin E content of the blended, irradiated UHMWPEs could not be detected. As a result of accelerated aging in the presence of squalene, all extracted vitamin E-stabilized UHMWPEs showed increased oxidation except diffused, sterilized UHMWPE. The small amount grafted vitamin E in these samples (8%, ∼0.02 wt%) protected irradiated UHMWPE under these conditions. All vitamin E-stabilized, extracted UHMWPEs showed higher oxidative stability than irradiated and melted virgin UHMWPE in the presence of squalene. In the blended, irradiated UHMWPE, there was less effective vitamin E compared to the diffused, sterilized UHMWPE due to the high dose irradiation. Conclusions. Radiation grafting of vitamin E onto UHMWPE was effective against squalene initiated oxidation in accelerated aging. Vitamin E-diffused, sterilized UHMWPE showed no oxidation and diffused, unsterilized UHMWPE and blended, irradiated UHMWPE showed higher oxidative resistance than irradiated/melted UHMWPE


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1550 - 1556
1 Dec 2019
Mc Colgan R Dalton DM Cassar-Gheiti AJ Fox CM O’Sullivan ME

Aims

The aim of this study was to examine trends in the management of fractures of the distal radius in Ireland over a ten-year period, and to determine if there were any changes in response to the English Distal Radius Acute Fracture Fixation Trial (DRAFFT).

Patients and Methods

Data was grouped into annual intervals from 2008 to 2017. All adult inpatient episodes that involved emergency surgery for fractures of the distal radius were included


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 9 | Pages 427 - 435
1 Sep 2016
Stravinskas M Horstmann P Ferguson J Hettwer W Nilsson M Tarasevicius S Petersen MM McNally MA Lidgren L

Objectives

Deep bone and joint infections (DBJI) are directly intertwined with health, demographic change towards an elderly population, and wellbeing.

The elderly human population is more prone to acquire infections, and the consequences such as pain, reduced quality of life, morbidity, absence from work and premature retirement due to disability place significant burdens on already strained healthcare systems and societal budgets.

DBJIs are less responsive to systemic antibiotics because of poor vascular perfusion in necrotic bone, large bone defects and persistent biofilm-based infection. Emerging bacterial resistance poses a major threat and new innovative treatment modalities are urgently needed to curb its current trajectory.

Materials and Methods

We present a new biphasic ceramic bone substitute consisting of hydroxyapatite and calcium sulphate for local antibiotic delivery in combination with bone regeneration. Gentamicin release was measured in four setups: 1) in vitro elution in Ringer’s solution; 2) local elution in patients treated for trochanteric hip fractures or uncemented hip revisions; 3) local elution in patients treated with a bone tumour resection; and 4) local elution in patients treated surgically for chronic corticomedullary osteomyelitis.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 97-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1423 - 1427
1 Oct 2015
Rand BCC Penn-Barwell JG Wenke JC

Systemic antibiotics reduce infection in open fractures. Local delivery of antibiotics can provide higher doses to wounds without toxic systemic effects. This study investigated the effect on infection of combining systemic with local antibiotics via polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) beads or gel delivery.

An established Staphylococcus aureus contaminated fracture model in rats was used. Wounds were debrided and irrigated six hours after contamination and animals assigned to one of three groups, all of which received systemic antibiotics. One group had local delivery via antibiotic gel, another PMMA beads and the control group received no local antibiotics. After two weeks, bacterial levels were quantified.

Combined local and systemic antibiotics were superior to systemic antibiotics alone at reducing the quantity of bacteria recoverable from each group (p = 0.002 for gel; p = 0.032 for beads). There was no difference in the bacterial counts between bead and gel delivery (p = 0.62).

These results suggest that local antibiotics augment the antimicrobial effect of systemic antibiotics. Although no significant difference was found between vehicles, gel delivery offers technical advantages with its biodegradable nature, ability to conform to wound shape and to deliver increased doses. Further study is required to see if the gel delivery system has a clinical role.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015;97-B:1423–7.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1617 - 1622
1 Dec 2008
Axelrad TW Steen B Lowenberg DW Creevy WR Einhorn TA

Heterotopic ossification occurring after the use of commercially available bone morphogenetic proteins has not been widely reported. We describe four cases of heterotopic ossification in patients treated with either recombinant bone morphogenetic protein 2 or recombinant bone morphogenetic protein 7. We found that while some patients were asymptomatic, heterotopic ossification which had occurred around a joint often required operative excision with good results.