Injuries to the quadriceps muscle group are common in athletes performing high-speed running and kicking sports. The complex anatomy of the rectus femoris puts it at greatest risk of injury. There is variability in prognosis in the literature, with reinjury rates as high as 67% in the severe graded proximal tear. Studies have highlighted that athletes can reinjure after nonoperative management, and some benefit may be derived from surgical repair to restore function and return to sport (RTS). This injury is potentially career-threatening in the elite-level athlete, and we aim to highlight the key recent literature on interventions to restore strength and function to allow early RTS while reducing the risk of injury recurrence. This article reviews the optimal diagnostic strategies and classification of quadriceps injuries. We highlight the unique anatomy of each injury on MRI and the outcomes of both nonoperative and operative treatment, providing an evidence-based management framework for athletes. Cite this article:
Aims. The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of perioperative essential amino acid (EAA) supplementation to prevent rectus femoris muscle atrophy and facilitate early recovery of function after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Methods. The study involved 60 patients who underwent unilateral TKA for primary knee osteo-arthritis (OA). This was a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized control trial with patients randomly allocated to two groups, 30 patients each: the essential amino acid supplementation (9 g daily) and placebo (lactose powder, 9 g daily) groups. Supplementation and placebo were provided from one week before to two weeks after surgery. The area of the
Introduction: The authors introduce a modified technique of iliac splitting and expanding shelf (ISES) arthroplasty for severe LCPD, and report on the intermediate outcomes. Materials and Methods: This new procedure is a modification of the previously reported tectoplasty of Saito (1986) and the shelf arthroplasty of Catterall (1992). Only the sartorius muscle and the indirect head of the
Two cases are described of exostosis of the anterior inferior iliac spine after traumatic avulsion of the apophysis at this site by the
Background. Spastic muscles of patients with cerebral palsy (CP) are considered structurally as shortened muscles, that produce high force in short muscle lengths. Yet, previous intraoperative studies in which muscles’ forces are measured directly as a function of joint angle showed consistently that spastic knee flexor muscles produce a low percentage of their maximum force in flexed knee positions. They also showed effects of epimuscular myofascial force transmission (EMFT): simultaneous activation of different muscles elevated target muscle's force. However, quantification of spastic muscle's force - muscle-tendon unit length (l. MTU. ) data during gait is lacking. Aim. Combining intraoperative experiments with participants’ musculoskeletal models developed based on their gait analyses, we aimed to test the following hypotheses: activated spastic semitendinosus (ST) muscle (1) operates at short l. MTU. 's during gait, forces are (2) low at short l. MTU. 's and (3) increase by co-activating other muscles. Methods. Ten limbs of seven children with CP (GMFCS-II) were tested. Pre-surgery, gait analyses were conducted. Intraoperatively, isometric spastic ST distal forces were measured in ten hip-knee joint angle combinations, in two conditions: (i) activation of the ST individually and (ii) simultaneously with the gracilis, biceps femoris, and
Previous reports have shown the efficacy of muscle interposition grafts in treating recalcitrant infection in the presence of hip arthroplasty. We report our experience with a two stage debridement and rectus femoris pedicled interposition graft technique in chronic severe native hip infection with a persistent draining sinus. During the last 16 months, three paraplegic patients presented with persistently draining sinuses and chronic osteomyelitis of the pelvis, acetabulum and proximal femur, in a total of four hips. The mean patient age was 49 years (range, 40 to 59 years). In all patients there had been previous attempts to control the infection with wound debridement and long-term antibiotics. A two-stage operative treatment was used in all patients. The first stage comprised wound debridement, washout, gentamycin-bead application and temporary vacuum assisted wound coverage. At the second stage, approximately ten days later, through a standard anterior midline incision, the
Purpose. Rectus femoris avulsion (RFA) injuries in paediatric patients are currently managed conservatively. However, the proximal attachment of the
BACKGROUND. Our modified procedure for rotational acetabular osteotomy (RAO) aimed to reduce operative invasion of soft tissue and to minimize incision length. SURGICAL TECHNIQUE. A shortened skin incision (10–15 cm versus 20–30 cm in traditional RAO) is curved over greater trochanter and exposed by transtrochanteric approach. Medial gluteus muscle is retracted to expose the ilium without detachment from iliac crest. Similarly the
Introduction: The use of freeze-dried grafts in the treatment of knee instability is a common technique used in rescue surgery of complex knee instabilities. Purpose: To assess the evolution of patients that undergo complex knee surgery with freeze-dried ligaments. Materials and methods: We carried out a retrospective study of patients that had undergone knee ligament surgery with freeze-dried grafts between 1999 and 2005. The study was carried out on 89 patients with a minimum follow-up of 18 months. They were all men except for 3 women. The patients were all of working age, from 19–51 years of age. Fifty-five patients underwent ACL surgery due to tears of previous plasties of the semitendinosus and
To compare strength and recruitment of periarticular knee muscles in subjects with severe osteoarthritis (OA) one week before and one year after a total knee replacement (TKR). Twenty-eight subjects, mean age = 64.5 years, with severe knee OA performed maximum voluntary isometric contractions for six exercises designed to test knee flexor and extensor and plantarflexor muscle strength. Torque and surface electromyograms (EMG) from the lateral and medial gastrocnemius, lateral and medial hamstring, vastus lateralis and medialis and
INTRODUCTION:. The popularity of the direct anterior approach (DAA) for total hip arthroplasty (THA) is increasing as this approach causes less soft tissue damage and no muscular detachments and significantly shorter postoperative recovery time. Despite the promising early results the complication rate in the DAA cases has been concerning such as 9% rate in 247 DAA cases reported by Woolen et. al [1]. As DAA has not conventionally being used by surgeons these complications are expected to be reduced when the surgeons are more experienced. Therefore to better understand the issues that cause the postop complications in DAA we have conducted the present study. OBJECTIVES:. The objective of the current study is to investigate the postop complications in individuals with arthritic hips treated by DAA THA over a period of 3.5 years by a one surgeon. METHODS:. The procedure was performed with the patient supine on a fracture table via DAA [2]. Briefly, the approach consisted of making a 8–10 cm incision 2 cm distal and lateral to the anterior superior iliac spine to a point several centimeters anterior to the greater trochanter. The dissection advanced to visualize the anterior capsule at the interval between the tensor and the sartorius and
Biomechanical considerations are relevant to cup positioning in total hip replacement (THR) to optimise the patient-specific post-operative outcome. One goal is to place the hip centre of rotation (COR) such that parameters characterising the biomechanics of the hip joint lie within physiological ranges. Different biomechanical models have been developed and are based on exact knowledge about muscle insertion points whose positions can be estimated on the basis of bony landmarks. Therefore, accurate landmark localisation is necessary to obtain reliable and comparable parameter values. As most biomechanical considerations are limited to the frontal plane, landmark localisation relying on standardised pre-operative radiographs has been established in clinical practice. One potential drawback of this approach is that user-interactive landmark localisation in radiographs might be more error-prone and subjective than localisation in 3D images. Therefore, we investigated the possibility of increasing the reproducibility of interactive landmark localisation by providing 3D localisation techniques. As the so-called BLB score based on Blumentritt's biomechanical hip model has already been introduced into clinical practice as a criterion for cup position planning, we examined the anatomical landmarks involved in BLB score evaluation. We developed a CT-based simulation tool allowing for the generation of 3D bone surface models and standardised digitally reconstructed radiographs (DRRs). Correspondences between points in the 2D DRR and rays in the 3D bone surface model are automatically established and optionally visualised by the tool. Two modes of landmark localisation were examined: In the 2D-mode, only AP DRRs were displayed, and the users had to localise the landmarks by clicking within the DRR image. In the 3D-mode, additionally the arbitrarily rotatable bone surface models together with the aforementioned 2D/3D correspondences were visualised. The user could then choose between landmark localisation by clicking either within the DRR image or within the 3D view. In either case, the 2D landmark positions within the DRR were recorded. The participants were given both an example AP pelvis radiograph with highlighted anatomical landmarks and the following landmark descriptions from the user's manual (v2.06) of the mediCAD software (Hectec GmbH, Landshut, Germany): P4: ca. 3cm distal lesser trochanter minor (in the imagined direction of pull of the
The decrease in the number of satellite cells (SCs), contributing to myofibre formation and reconstitution, and their proliferative capacity, leads to muscle loss, a condition known as sarcopenia. Resistance training can prevent muscle loss; however, the underlying mechanisms of resistance training effects on SCs are not well understood. We therefore conducted a comprehensive transcriptome analysis of SCs in a mouse model. We compared the differentially expressed genes of SCs in young mice (eight weeks old), middle-aged (48-week-old) mice with resistance training intervention (MID+ T), and mice without exercise (MID) using next-generation sequencing and bioinformatics.Aims
Methods
Although there are various pelvic osteotomies for acetabular dysplasia of the hip, shelf operations offer effective and minimally invasive osteotomy. Our study aimed to assess outcomes following modified Spitzy shelf acetabuloplasty. Between November 2000 and December 2016, we retrospectively evaluated 144 consecutive hip procedures in 122 patients a minimum of five years after undergoing modified Spitzy shelf acetabuloplasty for acetabular dysplasia including osteoarthritis (OA). Our follow-up rate was 92%. The mean age at time of surgery was 37 years (13 to 58), with a mean follow-up of 11 years (5 to 21). Advanced OA (Tönnis grade ≥ 2) was present preoperatively in 16 hips (11%). The preoperative lateral centre-edge angle ranged from -28° to 25°. Survival was determined by Kaplan-Meier analysis, using conversions to total hip arthroplasty as the endpoint. Risk factors for joint space narrowing less than 2 mm were analyzed using a Cox proportional hazards model.Aims
Methods
Introduction. Quadriceps weakness, which is often reported following total knee arthroplasty (TKA), affects patients' abilities to perform activities of daily living [1]. Implant design features, particularly of the patella-femoral joint, influence the mechanical advantage of the extensor mechanism. This study quantifies the changes in extensor mechanism moment arms due to different patellar resurfacing options during TKA. Methods. Posterior-stabilized TKR surgery was performed on seven cadaveric knees which were subsequently mounted in the Kansas Knee Simulator (KKS) [2]. A dynamic physiological squat was simulated between 5° and 80° knee flexion at 50% body weight while knee kinematics, including the lines of action of the
Periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs) with prior multiple failed surgery for reinfection represent a huge challenge for surgeons because of poor vascular supply and biofilm formation. This study aims to determine the results of single-stage revision using intra-articular antibiotic infusion in treating this condition. A retrospective analysis included 78 PJI patients (29 hips; 49 knees) who had undergone multiple prior surgical interventions. Our cohort was treated with single-stage revision using a supplementary intra-articular antibiotic infusion. Of these 78 patients, 59 had undergone more than two prior failed debridement and implant retentions, 12 patients had a failed arthroplasty resection, three hips had previously undergone failed two-stage revision, and four had a failed one-stage revision before their single-stage revision. Previous failure was defined as infection recurrence requiring surgical intervention. Besides intravenous pathogen-sensitive agents, an intra-articular infusion of vancomycin, imipenem, or voriconazole was performed postoperatively. The antibiotic solution was soaked into the joint for 24 hours for a mean of 16 days (12 to 21), then extracted before next injection. Recurrence of infection and clinical outcomes were evaluated.Aims
Methods
Sarcopenia is characterized by a generalized progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass, strength, and physical performance. This systematic review primarily evaluated the effects of sarcopenia on postoperative functional recovery and mortality in patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery, and secondarily assessed the methods used to diagnose and define sarcopenia in the orthopaedic literature. A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Google Scholar databases according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Studies involving sarcopenic patients who underwent defined orthopaedic surgery and recorded postoperative outcomes were included. The quality of the criteria by which a diagnosis of sarcopenia was made was evaluated. The quality of the publication was assessed using Newcastle-Ottawa Scale.Aims
Methods
Rotating-hinge knee prostheses are commonly used to reconstruct the distal femur after resection of a tumour, despite the projected long-term burden of reoperation due to complications. Few studies have examined the factors that influence their failure and none, to our knowledge, have used competing risk models to do so. The purpose of this study was to determine the risk factors for failure of a rotating-hinge knee distal femoral arthroplasty using the Fine-Gray competing risk model. We retrospectively reviewed 209 consecutive patients who, between 1991 and 2016, had undergone resection of the distal femur for tumour and reconstruction using a rotating-hinge knee prosthesis. The study endpoint was failure of the prosthesis, defined as removal of the femoral component, the tibial component, or the bone-implant fixation; major revision (exchange of the femoral component, tibial component, or the bone-implant fixation); or amputation.Aims
Methods
We wished to quantify the extent of soft-tissue damage sustained
during minimally invasive total hip arthroplasty through the direct
anterior (DA) and direct superior (DS) approaches. In eight cadavers, the DA approach was performed on one side,
and the DS approach on the other, a single brand of uncemented hip
prosthesis was implanted by two surgeons, considered expert in their
surgical approaches. Subsequent reflection of the gluteus maximus
allowed the extent of muscle and tendon damage to be measured and
the percentage damage to each anatomical structure to be calculated.Aims
Materials and Methods
Slipped upper femoral epiphysis (SUFE) is the
most common hip disorder to affect adolescents. Controversy exists over
the optimal treatment of severe slips, with a continuing debate
between Between 2001 and 2011, 57 patients (35 male, 22 female) with
a mean age of 13.1 years (9.6 to 20.3, SD 2.3) were referred to
our tertiary referral institution with a severe slip. The affected
limb was rested in slings and springs before corrective surgery
which was performed via an anterior Smith-Petersen approach. Radiographic
analysis confirmed an improvement in mean head–shaft slip angle
from 53.8o (standard deviation ( This is a technically demanding operation with variable outcomes
reported in the literature. We have demonstrated good results in
our tertiary centre. Cite this article: