In chronically infected fracture non-unions, treatment requires extensive debridement to remove necrotic and infected bone, often resulting in large defects requiring elaborate and prolonged bone reconstruction. One approach includes the induced membrane technique (IMT), although the differences in outcome between infected and non-infectious aetiologies remain unclear. Here we present a new rabbit humerus model for IMT secondary to infection, and, furthermore, we compare bone healing in rabbits with a chronically infected non-union compared to non-infected equivalents. A 5 mm defect was created in the humerus and filled with a polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) spacer or left empty (n=6 per group). After 3 weeks, the PMMA spacer was replaced with a beta-tricalcium phosphate (chronOs, Synthes) scaffold, which was placed within the induced membrane and observed for a further 10 weeks. The same protocol was followed for the infected group, except that four week prior to treatment, the wound was inoculated with Staphylococcus aureus (4×10. 6. CFU/animal) and the PMMA spacer was loaded with gentamicin, and systemic therapy was applied for 4 weeks prior to chronOs application. All the animals from the infected group were culture positive during the first revision surgery (mean 3×10. 5. CFU/animal, n= 12), while at the second revision, after antibiotic therapy, all the animals were culture negative. The differences in bone healing between the non-infected and infected groups were evaluated by radiography and histology. The initially infected animals showed impaired bone healing at euthanasia, and some remnants of bacteria in histology. The non-infected animals reached bone bridging in both empty and chronOs conditions. We developed a preclinical in vivo model to investigate how bacterial
Decreasing the chance of local relapse or infection after surgical excision of bone metastases is a main goals in orthopedic oncology. Indeed, bone metastases have high incidence rate (up to 75%) and important cross-relations with
Infection in orthopedics is a challenge, since it has high incidence (rates can be up to 15-20%, also depending on the surgical procedure and on comorbidities), interferes with osseointegration and brings severe complications to the patients and high societal burden. In particular, infection rates are high in oncologic surgery, when biomedical devices are used to fill bone gaps created to remove tumors. To increase osseointegration, calcium phosphates coatings are used. To prevent infection, metal- and mainly silver-based coatings are the most diffused option. However, traditional techniques present some drawbacks, including scarce adhesion to the substrate, detachments, and/or poor control over metal ions release, all leading to cytotoxicity and/or interfering with osteointegration. Since important cross-relations exist among infection, osseointegration and tumors, solutions capable of addressing all would be a breakthrough innovation in the field and could improve clinical practice. Here, for the first time, we propose the use antimicrobial silver-based nanostructured thin films to simultaneously discourage
Open limb fractures are typically due to a high energy trauma. Several recent studied have showed treatment's superiority when a multidisciplinary approach is applied. World Health Organization reports that isolate limb traumas have an incidence rate of 11.5/100.000, causing high costs in terms of hospitalization and patient disability. A lack of experience in soft tissue management in orthopaedics and traumatology seems to be the determining factor in the clinical worsening of complex cases. The therapeutic possibilities offered by microsurgery currently permit simultaneous reconstruction of multiple tissues including vessels and nerves, reducing the rate of amputations, recovery time and preventing postoperative complications. Several scoring systems to assess complex limb traumas exist, among them: NISSSA, MESS, AO and Gustilo Anderson. In 2010, a further scoring system was introduced to focus open fractures of all locations: OTA-OFC. Rather than using a single composite score, the OTA-OFC comprises five components grades (skin, arterial, muscle, bone loss and contamination), each rated from mild to severe. The International Consensus Meeting of 2018 on musculoskeletal infections in orthopaedic surgery identified the OTA-OFC score as an efficient catalogue system with interobserver agreement that is comparable or superior to the Gustilo-Anderson classification. OTA-OFC predicts outcomes such as the need for adjuvant treatments or the likelihood of early amputation. An orthoplastic approach reconstruction must pay adequate attention to bone and soft tissue
Chronic osteomyelitis is historically treated in a two stage fashion with antibiotic-loaded polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) as local antibacterial therapy. However, two-stage surgeries are associated with high morbidity, long hospitalization and high treatment costs. In recent years new biomaterials were developed that allow to change this treatment algorithm. S53P4 bioactive glass is such a novel biodegradable antibacterial bone graft substitute that enables a one-stage surgery in local treatment of chronic osteomyelitis. This study aimed to explore the eradication of
Osteomyelitis is an
Chronic osteomyelitis (OM) is a progressive, inflammatory
Bacterial
This longitudinal microCT study revealed the osteolytic response to a Staphylococcus epidermidis-infected implant in vivoand also demonstrates how antibiotics and/or a low bone mass state influence the morphological changes in bone and the course of the infection. Colonisation of orthopaedic implants with Staphylococcus aureusor S. epidermidisis a major clinical concern, since infection-induced osteolysis can drastically impair implant fixation or integration within bone. High fracture incidence in post-menopausal osteoporosis patients means that this patient group are at risk of implant
Purpose. Gustilo type III open fractures are associated with high infection rates in spite of instituting a standard of care (SOC) consisting of intravenous antibiotics, irrigation and debridement (I&D), and delayed wound closure. Locally-delivered antibiotic has been proven to assist in reducing infection in open fractures. The aims of this study are to determine the effectiveness and safety of a new implantable and biodegradable antibacterial product. 1. in preventing bacterial
The objective of this study is to determine an optimal antibiotic-loaded
bone cement (ALBC) for infection prophylaxis in total joint arthroplasty
(TJA). We evaluated the antibacterial effects of polymethylmethacrylate
(PMMA) bone cements loaded with vancomycin, teicoplanin, ceftazidime,
imipenem, piperacillin, gentamicin, and tobramycin against methicillin-sensitive Objectives
Methods
We investigated the antibiotic concentration in fresh-frozen femoral head allografts harvested from two groups of living donors. Ten samples were collected from patients with osteoarthritis of the hip and ten from those with a fracture of the neck of the femur scheduled for primary arthroplasty. Cefazolin (1 g) was administered as a pre-operative prophylactic antibiotic. After storage at −80°C for two weeks the pattern of release of cefazolin from morsellised femoral heads was evaluated by an We concluded that allografts of morsellised bone from the femoral head harvested from patients undergoing arthroplasty of the hip contained cefazolin, which had been administered pre-operatively and they exhibited inhibitory effects against bacteria
The feasibility of bone transport with bone substitute and the factors which are essential for a successful bone transport are unknown. We studied six groups of 12 Japanese white rabbits. Groups A to D received cylindrical autologous bone segments and groups E and F hydroxyapatite prostheses. The periosteum was preserved in group A so that its segments had a blood supply, cells, proteins and scaffold. Group B had no blood supply. Group C had proteins and scaffold and group D had only scaffold. Group E received hydroxyapatite loaded with recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 and group F had hydroxyapatite alone. Distraction osteogenesis occurred in groups A to C and E which had osteo-conductive transport segments loaded with osteo-inductive proteins. We conclude that scaffold and proteins are essential for successful bone transport, and that bone substitute can be used to regenerate bone.