Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 20 of 75
Results per page:
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Dec 2020
Pourreza E Cengiz B Çamurdan AD Taş GB Zinnuroğlu M Gürses S
Full Access

It has been recently being investigated how the pressure distribution beneath the foot points to the active usage of the foot in standing adults. Nevertheless, it offers new perspectives in postural research by introducing foot-triggered sensory-motor control strategies in quiet standing dynamics. Furthermore, the spatiotemporal evolution of physiological postural control strategies has not clearly been identified yet. Thus, we have chosen developmental aspects of the infant's postural adjustments as a media to explore learning of biped standing. This study investigates developmental changes in active usage of a contact surface and pressure distribution beneath infants’ foot during learning of upright posture. We started studying longitudinally on 22 female and 22 male infants at their 12.5. th. months (1. st. trimester, T1) and kept on screening the same subjects at every three months (19 females and 12 males at 15.5. th. months (T2), 17 females and 7 males at 18.4. th. months (T3)), during their normal checkup appointments in Gazi University Hospital, Social Pediatrics Department-Ankara/Turkey. Each trial was fulfilled by an infant standing on a pressure pad placed on top of a force plate to collect the pressure distribution data beneath the feet for 15 sec at T1, and 25-sec long duration at T2 and T3 and was repeated at least three times. During the data collection, infants’ parents were beside them trying to get infants’ attention towards themselves preventing them from being distracted and/or moving and walking around. The data collection setup additionally contained one camera for videotaping the infants’ reactions. Our main research interest in this study was to explore the spatiotemporal evolution of the behavioral characteristics of human postural sway. We expected to monitor the developmental changes at an infant's standing experience during their 2. nd. -year epoch through time-frequency domain analyses and explorative/exploitative informatics’ metrics. We computed Center of Pressure (CoP) time signal from the data collected by the force plate and the pressure pad. In time domain, mean and the variance at the CoP time signal were estimated in both antero-posterior (CoPx) and medio-lateral (CoPy) directions. In the frequency domain, 50% and 95% power frequency, centroidal frequency (CF), and frequency dispersion were calculated. We observed substantial developmental changes in every trimester, each being comparable with the previous one, which points to infants experiencing a major developmental milestone that can be noticed considerably even in the shorter time intervals. The phase plane analysis performed through the time signals and their time derivatives (estimated velocity of CoPx and CoPy) revealed a shrinkage in the characteristic pattern observed through the following epochs. One-Way ANOVA analysis demonstrated significant differences in 50% and 95% power and centroidal frequency of CoPx (p=0.001, p=0.000, p=0.000) and CoPy (p=0.002, p=0.000, p=0.000) respectively. Further, post hoc analyses demonstrated a significant difference at T1 compared against T2 and T3 for all three frequency domain metrics. Particularly speaking, CF dropped from 2.39 to 1.65 Hz, and from 2.86 to 1.70 Hz for CoPx and CoPy respectively, while passing from T1 to T2. The current status of this research managed to grasp the developmental aspects of infant standing through frequency domain metrics and reconstructed phase space analysis up to their 18 months old


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 55 - 55
1 Jan 2017
Rivière C Girerd D Ollivier M Argenson J Parratte S
Full Access

A principle of Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) is to achieve a neutral standing coronal alignment of the limb (Hip Knee Ankle (HKA) angle) to reduce risks of implant loosening, reduce polyethylene wear, and optimise patella tracking. Several long-term studies have questioned this because the relationship between alignment and implant survivorship is weaker than previously reported. We hypothesize standing HKA poorly predicts implant failure because it does not predict dynamic HKA, dynamic adduction moment, and loading of the knee during gait. Therefore, the aim of our study is to assess the relationship between the standing (or static) and the dynamic (gait activity) HKAs. We performed a prospective study on a cohort of 35 patients (35 knees) who were treated with a posterior-stabilized TKA for primary osteoarthritis between November 2012 and January 2013. Three months after surgery each patient had a standardized digital full-leg coronal radiographs and was classified as neutrally aligned TKA (17 patients), varus aligned (9 patients), and valgus aligned (4 patients). Patients then performed a gait analysis for level walking and dynamic HKA and adduction moment during the stance phase of gait were measured. We found standing HKA having a moderate correlation with the peak dynamic varus (r=0.318, p=0.001) and the mean and peak adduction moments (r=0.31 and r=-0.352 respectively). In contrast we did not find a significant correlation between standing HKA and the mean dynamic coronal alignment (r=0.14, p=0.449). No significant differences were found for dynamic frontal parameters (dynamic HKA and adduction moment) between patients defined as neutrally aligned or varus aligned. In our practice, the standing HKA after TKA was of little value to predict dynamic behaviour of the limb during gait. These results may explain why standing coronal alignment after TKA may have limited influence on long term implant fixation and wear


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_30 | Pages 42 - 42
1 Aug 2013
Winter A Ferguson K Holt G
Full Access

The aim of this study is to assess the discrepancy between weight bearing long leg radiographs and supine MRI alignment. There is currently increasing interest in the use of MRI to assess knee alignment and develop custom made cutting blocks utilising this data. However in almost all units MRI scans are performed supine and it is recognised that knee alignment can alter with weight bearing. 46 patients underwent MRI scans as pre-operative planning for Biomet signature total knee replacement and the measure of varus or valgus deformity on MRI was obtained from the plan produced by Biomet Signature software system. 41 of these patients had long leg weight bearing radiographs performed. 37 of these radiographs were amenable to measuring the knee alignment on the picture archiving and communication system (PACS). These measurements were performed by two assessors and inter-observer reliability was satisfactory. There was a significant difference between the alignment as measured on supine MRI compared with weight bearing long leg films. In knee arthroplasty one of the aims is to correct the biomechanical axis of the knee and one of the appeals of custom made cutting blocks is that this can be achieved more easily. However it is important to realise that alignment is not a static value and thus correcting supine alignment may not necessarily result in correction of weight bearing alignment.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 47 - 47
14 Nov 2024
Daneshvarhashjin N Debeer P Andersen MS Verhaegen F Scheys L
Full Access

Introduction. Assessment of the humeral head translation with respect to the glenoid joint, termed humeral head migration (HHM), is crucial in total shoulder arthroplasty pre-operative planning. Its assessment informs current classification systems for shoulder osteoarthritis as well as the evaluation of surgical correction. In current clinical practice, HHM assessment relies on computed-tomography (CT) imaging. However, the associated supine position might undermine its functional relevance as it does not reflect the weight-bearing condition with active muscle engagement associated with the upright standing position of most daily activities. Therefore, we assessed to what extent HHM in a supine position is associated with HHM in a range of functional arm positions. Method. 26 shoulder osteoarthritis patients and 12 healthy volunteers were recruited. 3D shapes of the humerus and scapula were reconstructed from their respective CT scans using an image processing software. 3. , and their CT-scan-based HHMs were measured. Furthermore, all subjects underwent low-dose biplanar radiography . 4. in four quasi-static functional arm positions while standing: relaxed standing, followed by 45 degrees of shoulder extension, flexion, and abduction. Using a previously validated method implemented in the programming platforms. 5. , 3D shapes were registered to the pairs of biplanar images for each arm position and the corresponding functional HHM was measured. Bivariate correlations were assessed between the CT-based HHM and each functional arm position. Result. HHM in 45 degrees of flexion and extension both showed significant and strong correlations (r>0.66 and P<0.01) with HHM assessed in the supine position. However, such a high correlation was not found for relaxed standing and 45 abduction. Conclusion. Although HHM in a supine position correlates with HHM in 45-degree extension and flexion, it is poorly associated with the HHM in abduction and relaxed standing. These results may suggest the inclusion of more functionally-relevant patient positioning toward better-informed shoulder arthroplasty planning. Acknowledgement. Funding from PRosPERos-II Project


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 51 - 51
14 Nov 2024
Shayestehpour H Shayestehpour MA Wong C Bencke J Rasmussen J
Full Access

Introduction. Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) is a three-dimensional deformity of the spine with unclear etiology. Due to the asymmetry of lateral curves, there are differences in the muscle activation between the convex and concave sides. This study utilized a comprehensive thoracic spine and ribcage musculoskeletal model to improve the biomechanical understanding of the development of AIS deformity and approach an explanation of the condition. Methods. In this study, we implemented a motion capture model using a generic rigid-body thoracic spine and ribcage model, which is kinematically determinate and controlled by spine posture obtained, for instance, from radiographs. This model is publicly accessible via a GitHub repository. We simulated gait and standing models of two AIS (averaging 15 years old, both with left lumbar curve and right thoracic curve averaging 25 degrees) and one control subject. The marker set included extra markers on the sternum and the thoracic and lumbar spine. The study was approved by the regional Research Ethics Committee (Journal number: H17034237). Results. We investigated the difference between the muscle activation on the right and left sides including erector spinae (ES), psoas major (PS), and multifidus (MF). Results of the AIS simulations indicated that, on average throughout the gait cycle, the right ES, left PS and left MF had 46%, 44%, and 23% higher activities compared to the other side, respectively. In standing, the ratios were 28%, 40%, and 19%, respectively. However, for the control subject, the differences were under 7%, except ES throughout the gait, which was 17%. Conclusion. The musculoskeletal model revealed distinct differences in force patterns of the right and left sides of the spine, indicating an instability phenomenon, where larger curves lead to higher muscle activations for stabilization. Acknowledgement. The project is funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 program through Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant No. [764644]


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 64 - 64
1 Dec 2021
Hamilton R Holt C Hamilton D Jones R Shillabeer D Kuiper JH Sparkes V Mason D
Full Access

Abstract. Objectives. Current tools to measure pain are broadly subjective impressions of the impact of the nociceptive impulse felt by the patient. A direct measure of nociception may offer a more objective indicator. Specifically, movement-induced physiological responses to nociception may offer a useful way to monitor knee OA. In this proof-of-concept study, we evaluated whether integrated biomechanical and physiological sensor datasets could display linked and quantifiable information to a nociceptive stimulus. Method. Following ethical approval, we applied a quantified thermal pain stimulus to a volunteer during stationary standing in a gait lab setting. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) and an electromyography (EMG) lower body marker set were tested and integrated with ground reaction force (GRF) data collection. Galvanic skin response electrodes and skin thermal sensors were manually timestamp linked to the integrated system. Results. The integrated EMG, GRF and IMU data show fluctuations within 0.5 seconds of each other when a thermal pain trigger is applied at several time points during a stationary standing test. Manually timestamped physiology measures displayed increased values during testing for skin conductivity (up to 5 µSiemens, 37% compared to baseline) and skin temperature (up to 0.3˚C, 1% compared to baseline). Conclusions. This proof-of-concept study suggests that physiological data mimics biomechanical data in response to a known pain stimuli. While this protocol requires further evaluation as to the measurement parameters, the association of the physiological output to the known pain stimulus suggests the potential development of wearable nociceptive sensors that can measure disease progression and treatment effectiveness


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 103 - 103
11 Apr 2023
Domingues I Cunha R Domingues L Silva E Carvalho S Lavareda G Carvalho R
Full Access

Patients who are Jehovah's witnesses do not accept blood transfusions. Thus, total hip arthroplasty can be challenging in this group of patients due to the potential for blood loss. Multiple strategies have been developed in order to prevent blood loss. A 76-year-old female, Jehovah's witness medicated with a platelet antiaggregant, presented to the emergency department after a fall from standing height. Clinically, she had pain mobilizing the right lower limb and radiological examination revealed an acetabular fracture with femoral head protrusion and ipsilateral isquiopubic fracture. Skeletal traction was applied to the femur during three weeks and no weight bearing was maintained during the following weeks. Posteriorly, there was an evolution to hip osteoarthritis with necrosis of the femoral head. The patient was submitted to surgery six months after the initial trauma, for a total hip arthroplasty. The surgery was performed with hypotensive anaesthesia, careful surgical technique and meticulous haemostasis and there was no need for blood transfusion. Posteriorly, there was a positive clinical evolution with progressive improvement on function and deambulation. Total hip arthroplasty may be safely carried out with good clinical outcomes in Jehovah's witnesses, without the need for blood transfusion, if proper perioperative precautions are taken, as has already been shown in previous studies


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 69 - 69
11 Apr 2023
Domingues I Cunha R Domingues L Silva E Carvalho S Lavareda G Bispo C
Full Access

Radial head fractures are among the most common fractures around the elbow. Radial head arthroplasty is one of the surgical treatment options after complex radial head fractures. This surgery is usually done under general anaesthesia. However, there is a recent anaesthetic technique - wide awake local anaesthesia no tourniquet (WALANT) - that has proven useful in different surgical settings, such as in distal radius or olecranon fractures. It allows a good haemostatic control without the use of a tourniquet and allows the patient to actively collaborate during the surgical procedure. Furthermore, there are no side effects or complications caused by the general anaesthesia and there's an earlier patient discharge. The authors present the case of a seventy-six-year-old woman who presented to the emergency department after a fall from standing height with direct trauma to the left elbow. The radiological examination revealed a complete intra-articular comminuted fracture of the radial head (Mason III). Clinical management: The patient was submitted to surgery with radial head arthroplasty, using WALANT. The surgery was successfully completed without pain. There were no intra or immediate post-operative complications and the patient was discharged on the same day. Six weeks after surgery, the patient had almost full range of motion and was very pleased with the functional outcome, with no limitations on her activities of daily living. The use of WALANT has been expanded beyond the hand and wrist surgery. It is a safe and simple option for patients at high risk of general anaesthesia, allowing similar surgical outcomes without the intraoperative and postoperative complications of general anaesthesia and permitting an earlier hospital discharge. Furthermore, it allows the patient to actively collaborate during the surgery, providing the surgeons the opportunity to evaluate active mobility and stability, permitting final corrections before closing the incision


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 82 - 82
2 Jan 2024
Özer Y Karaduman D Karanfil Y Çiftçi E Balci C Doğu B Halil M Cankurtaran M Korkusuz F
Full Access

Osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee joint is a complex peripheral joint disorder with multiple risk factors. We aimed to examine the relationship between the grade of knee OA and anterior thigh length (ATL). A total of 64 geriatric patients who had no total hip or knee replacement with a BMI of ≥30 were evaluated. Patients' OA severity was determined by two independent experts from bilateral standing knee radiographs according to the Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) grade. Joint cartilage structure was assessed using ultrasonography (US). The ATL, the gastrocnemius medialis (GC), the rectus femoris (RF) and the rectus abdominis (RA) skeletal muscle thicknesses as well as the RF cross-sectional area (CSA) were measured with US. Sarcopenia was diagnosed using the handgrip strength (HGS), 5× sit-to-stand test (5xSST) and bioelectrical impedance analysis. The median (IQR) age of participants was 72 (65–88) years. Seventy-one per cent of the patients (n=46) were female. They were divided into the sarcopenic obese (31.3 %) and the non-sarcopenic obese (68.8%) groups. KL grade of all patients correlated negatively with the ATL (mm) and the thickness of GC (mm) (r= -0,517, p<0.001 and r= -0.456, p<0.001, respectively). In the sarcopenic obese and the non-sarcopenic obese groups, KL grade of the all patients was negatively correlated with ATL (mm) and thickness of GC (mm) (r= -0,986, p<0.001; r= -0.456, p=0.05 and r= -0,812, p=0.002; r= −0,427, p=0.006). KL grade negatively correlated with the RF thickness in the sarcopenic obese group (r= -0,928, p=0.008). In conclusion, OA risk may decrease as the lower extremity skeletal muscle mass increases. Acknowledgments: Feza Korkusuz MD is a member of the Turkish Academy of Sciences (TÜBA)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 67 - 67
2 Jan 2024
Belvedere C
Full Access

3D accurate measurements of the skeletal structures of the foot, in physiological and impaired subjects, are now possible using Cone-Beam CT (CBCT) under real-world loading conditions. In detail, this feature allows a more realistic representation of the relative bone-bone interactions of the foot as they occur under patient-specific body weight conditions. In this context, varus/valgus of the hindfoot under altered conditions or the thinning of plantar tissues that occurs with advancing age are among the most complex and interesting to represent, and numerous measurement proposals have been proposed. This study aims to analyze and compare these measurements from CBCT in weight-bearing scans in a clinical population. Sixteen feet of diabetic patients and ten feet with severe adult flatfoot acquired before/after corrective surgery underwent CBCT scans (Carestream, USA) while standing on the leg of interest. Corresponding 3D shapes of each bone of the shank and hindfoot were reconstructed (Materialise, Belgium). Six different techniques found in the literature were used to calculate the varus/valgus deformity, i.e., the inclination of the hindfoot in the frontal plane of the shank, and the distance between the ground and the metatarsal heads was calculated along with different solutions for the identification of possible calcifications. Starting with an accurate 3D reconstruction of the skeletal structures of the foot, a wide range of measurements representing the same angle of hindfoot alignment were found, some of them very different from each other. Interesting correlations were found between metatarsal height and subject age, significant in diabetic feet for the fourth and fifth metatarsal bones. Finally, CBCT allows 3D assessment of foot deformities under loaded conditions. The observed traditional measurement differences and new measurement solutions suggest that clinicians should consider carefully the anatomical and functional concepts underlying measurement techniques when drawing clinical and surgical conclusions


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 68 - 68
2 Jan 2024
Li J
Full Access

Applications of weightbearing computed tomography (WBCT) imaging in the foot and ankle have emerged over the past decade. However, the potential diagnostic benefits are scattered across the literature, and a concise overview is currently lacking. Therefore, we aimed to systematically review all reported diagnostic applications per anatomical region in the foot and ankle. A systematic literature search was performed in the electronic databases PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science. Search terms consisted of “weightbearing/standing CT and ankle, hind-, mid- or forefoot”. English language studies analyzing the diagnostic applications of WBCT were included. Studies were excluded if they simulated weightbearing CT, described normal subjects, included cadaveric samples or samples were case reports. The modified Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies (MINORS) was applied for quality assessment. The added value was defined as the review was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines and registered in the Prospero database (CRD42019106980). A total of 48 studies (prospective N=8, retrospective N=36, cohort study N=1, diagnostic N=2, prognostic comparative study N=1) were found to be eligible for review. The following diagnostic applications were identified per anatomical area in the foot: ankle (osteoarthritis N=5, ligament injury N=6); hindfoot (deformity N=9); midfoot (Lisfranc injury N=2, flatfoot deformity N=13, osteoarthritis N=1); forefoot (hallux valgus N=12). The identified studies contained diagnostic applications that could not be used on plain radiographs. The mean MINORS equaled 10.1 on a total of 16 (range: 8 to 12). Diagnostic applications of weightbearing CT imaging are most frequently studied in hindfoot deformity, but other area's areas are on the rise. Post-processing of images was identified as the main added value compared to WBRX. However, the findings should be interpreted with caution as the average quality score was moderate. Therefore, future prospective studies are warranted to consolidate the role of WBCT in diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 56 - 56
14 Nov 2024
Robbins C Paley D Sutaria S Pinsky D Roberts D
Full Access

Introduction. Research studies have established mathematical correlations between the lengths of bone segments and the possible biomechanical implications of these correlations. The Lucas sequence comprises a series of integers that adhere to the same recurrence relation as the Fibonacci sequence; it differs in that it can start with any two initial integers. The purpose of this study is to determine whether segmental lengths of the foot height, tibia, femur, and upper body follow a Lucas sequence pattern. Method. This was a retrospective radiographic review of patients who underwent full-body EOS scans. The AP scan was used to measure standing foot height (Ft), tibial length (T), femoral length (Fe), upper body length (UB), and full body length. A linear regression test was performed to determine whether a Lucas sequence-based relationship exists between Ft + T and Fe, and between T + Fe and UB. Result. The regression for the relationship between Ft + T and Fe for the entire cohort (R= 0.82, R2= 0.70), the female subset (R= 0.94, R2= 0.88) and the male subset (R= 0.75, R2= 0.57), all demonstrated a strong positive correlation between Ft + T and Fe and showed that Ft + T is a likely predictor of Fe. The regression test for the entire cohort demonstrated a moderately positive correlation between T + Fe and UB (R= 0.41, R2= 0.17, F(1, 145) = 29.42, p= 2.4E-07). A stronger correlation was found for the relationship between T + Fe and UB (R= 0.57, R2= 0.32, F(1, 35) = 16.64, p= 2.5E-05) for the female subset relative to the male subset (R= 0.20, R2= 0.038, F(1, 35) = 4.37, p= 0.04). Conclusion. This study demonstrates that total height is made up of sequential segments whose lengths approximate a Lucas series. The Fibonacci sequence is therefore once again implicated in human body proportions


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 64 - 64
14 Nov 2024
Hudson P Federer S Dunne M Pring C Smith N
Full Access

Introduction. Weight is a modifiable risk factor for osteoarthritis (OA) progression. Despite the emphasis on weight loss, data quantifying the changes seen in joint biomechanics are limited. Bariatric surgery patients experience rapid weight loss. This provides a suitable population to study changes in joint forces and function as weight changes. Method. 10 female patients undergoing gastric bypass or sleeve gastrectomy completed 3D walking gait analysis at a self-selected pace, pre- and 6 months post-surgery. Lower limb and torso kinematic data for 10 walking trials were collected using a Vicon motion capture system and kinetics using a Kistler force plate. An inverse kinematic model in Visual 3D allowed for no translation of the hip joint centre. 6 degrees of freedom were allowed at other joints. Data were analysed using JASP with a paired samples t-test. Result. On average participants lost 28.8±7.60kg. No significant changes were observed in standing knee and hip joint angles. Walking velocity increased from 1.10±0.11 ms. -1. to 1.23±0.17 ms. -1. (t(9)=-3.060, p = 0.014) with no change in step time but a mean increase in stride length of 0.12m (SE: 0.026m; t(9)=-4.476, p = 0.002). A significant decrease of 21.5±4.2% in peak vertical ground reaction forces was observed (t(9)=12.863, p <0.001). Stride width significantly decreased by 0.04m (SE: 0.010m; t(9)=4.316, p = 0.002) along with a decrease in lateral impulse of 21.2Ns (SE: 6.977Ns; t(7), p = 0.019), but no significant difference in knee joint angles were observed. Double limb support time also significantly reduced by 0.02s (SE: 0.006s; t(9) = 3.639, p=0.005). Conclusion. The reduction in stance width and lateral impulse suggests a more sagittal compass-gait walk is being achieved. This would reduce valgus moments on the knee reducing loading in the medial compartment. The reduction in peak ground reaction force would reduce knee contact forces and again potentially slow OA progression


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 19 - 19
1 Dec 2022
Belvedere C Ruggeri M Berti L Ortolani M Durante S Miceli M Leardini A
Full Access

Biomedical imaging is essential in the diagnosis of musculoskeletal pathologies and postoperative evaluations. In this context, Cone-Beam technology-based Computed Tomography (CBCT) can make important contributions in orthopaedics. CBCT relies on divergent cone X-rays on the whole field of view and a rotating source-detector element to generate three-dimensional (3D) volumes. For the lower limb, they can allow acquisitions under real loading conditions, taking the name Weight-Bearing CBCT (WB-CBCT). Assessments at the foot, ankle, knee, and at the upper limb, can benefit from it in situations where loading is critical to understanding the interactions between anatomical structures. The present study reports 4 recent applications using WB-CBCT in an orthopaedic centre. Patient scans by WB-CBCT were collected for examinations of the lower limb in monopodal standing position. An initial volumetric reconstruction is obtained, and the DICOM file is segmented to obtain 3D bone models. A reference frame is then established on each bone model by virtual landmark palpation or principal component analysis. Based on the variance of the model point cloud, this analysis automatically calculates longitudinal, vertical and mid-lateral axes. Using the defined references, absolute or relative orientations of the bones can be calculated in 3D. In 19 diabetic patients, 3D reconstructed bone models of the foot under load were combined with plantar pressure measurement. Significant correlations were found between bone orientations, heights above the ground, and pressure values, revealing anatomic areas potentially prone to ulceration. In 4 patients enrolled for total ankle arthroplasty, preoperative 3D reconstructions were used for prosthetic design customization, allowing prosthesis-bone mismatch to be minimized. 20 knees with femoral ligament reconstruction were acquired with WB-CBCT and standard CT (in unloading). Bone reconstructions were used to assess congruency angle and patellar tilt and TT-TG. The values obtained show differences between loading and unloading, questioning what has been observed so far. Twenty flat feet were scanned before and after Grice surgery. WB-CBCT allowed characterization of the deformity and bone realignment after surgery, demonstrating the complexity and multi-planarity of the pathology. These applications show how a more complete and realistic 3D geometric characterization of the of lower limb bones is now possible in loading using WB-CBCT. This allows for more accurate diagnoses, surgical planning, and postoperative evaluations, even by automatisms. Other applications are in progress


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Dec 2022
Montanari S Griffoni C Cristofolini L Brodano GB
Full Access

Mechanical failure of spine posterior fixation in the lumbar region Is suspected to occur more frequently when the sagittal balance is not properly restored. While failures at the proximal extremity have been studied in the literature, the lumbar distal junctional pathology has received less attention. The aim of this work was to investigate if the spinopelvic parameters, which characterize the sagittal balance, could predict the mechanical failure of the posterior fixation in the distal lumbar region. All the spine surgeries performed in 2017-2019 at Rizzoli Institute were retrospectively analysed to extract all cases of lumbar distal junctional pathology. All the revision surgeries performed due to the pedicle screws pull-out, or the breakage of rods or screws, or the vertebral fracture, or the degenerative disc disease, in the distal extremity, were included in the junctional (JUNCT) group. A total of 83 cases were identified as JUNCT group. All the 241 fixation surgeries which to date have not failed were included in the control (CONTROL) group. Clinical data were extracted from both groups, and the main spinopelvic parameters were assessed from sagittal standing preoperative (pre-op) and postoperative (post-op) radiographs with the software Surgimap (Nemaris). In particular, pelvic incidence (PI), sagittal vertical axis (SVA), pelvic tilt (PT), T1 pelvic angle (TPA), sacral slope (SS) and lumbar lordosis (LL) have been measured. In JUNCT, the main failure cause was the screws pull-out (45%). Spine fixation with 7 or more levels were the most common in JUNCT (52%) in contrast to CONTROL (14%). In CONTROL, PT, TPA, SS and PI-LL were inside the recommended ranges of good sagittal balance. For these parameters, statistically significant differences were observed between pre-op and post-op (p<0.0001, p=0.01, p<0.0001, p=0.004, respectively, Wilcoxon test). In JUNCT, the spinopelvic parameters were out of the ranges of the good sagittal balance and the worsening of the balance was confirmed by the increase in PT, TPA, SVA, PI-LL and by the decrease of LL (p=0.002, p=0.003, p<0.0001, p=0.001, p=0.001, respectively, paired t-test) before the revision surgery. TPA (p=0.003, Kolmogorov-Smirnov test) and SS (p=0.03, unpaired t-test) differed significantly in pre-op between JUNCT and CONTROL. In post-op, PI-LL was significantly different between JUNCT and CONTROL (p=0.04, unpaired t-test). The regression model of PT vs PI was significantly different between JUNCT and CONTROL in pre-op (p=0.01, Z-test). These results showed that failure is most common in long fused segments, likely due to long lever arms leading to implant failure. If the sagittal balance is not properly restored, after the surgery the balance is expected to worsen, eventually leading to failure: this effect was confirmed by the worsening of all the spinopelvic parameters before the revision surgery in JUNCT. Conversely, a good sagittal balance seems to avoid a revision surgery, as it is visible is CONTROL. The mismatch PI-LL after the fixation seems to confirm a good sagittal balance and predict a good correction. The linear regression of PT vs PI suggests that the spine deformity and pelvic conformation could be a predictor for the failure after a fixation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 15 - 15
17 Nov 2023
Mondal S Mangwani J Brockett C Gulati A Pegg E
Full Access

Abstract. Objectives. This abstract provides an update on the Open Ankle Models being developed at the University of Bath. The goal of this project is to create three fully open-source finite element (FE) ankle models, including bones, ligaments, and cartilages, appropriate musculoskeletal loading and boundary conditions, and heterogeneous material property distribution for a standardised representation of ankle biomechanics and pre-clinical ankle joint analysis. Methods. A computed tomography (CT) scan data (pixel size of 0.815 mm, and slice thickness of 1 mm) was used to develop the 3D geometry of the bones (tibia, talus, calcaneus, fibula, and navicular). Each bone was given the properties of a heterogeneous elastic material based on the CT greyscale. The density values for each bone element were calculated using a linear empirical relation, ρ= 0.0405 + (0.000918) HU and then power law equations were utilised to get the Young's Modulus value for each bone element [1]. At the bone junction, a thickness of cartilage ranging from 0.5–1 mm, and was modelled as a linear material (E=10 MPa, ν=0.4 [2]). All ligament insertions and positions were represented by four parallel spring elements, and the ligament stiffness and material attributes were applied in accordance with the published literature [2]. The ankle model was subjected to static loading (balance standing position). Four noded tetrahedral elements were used for the discretization of bones and cartilages. All degrees of freedom were restricted at the proximal ends of the tibia and fibula. The ground reaction forces were applied at the underneath of the calcaneus bone. The interaction between the cartilages and bones was modelled using an augmented contact algorithm with a sliding elastic contact between each cartilage. A tied elastic contact was used between the cartilages and the bone. FEbio 2.1.0 (University of Utah, USA) was used to construct the open-source ankle model. Results. When the double-legged stance phase loading condition was taken into consideration, stress at the antero-medial tibial wall (ranged from 1 to 7 MPa) was found to be similar to the prior work [2], indicating bulk of the load transfer was through this region. The maximum principal strain was predicted at the different regions on bones around the ankle joint. The proximal surface of the talus, and tibial distal surface were shown to have the highest maximum principal strains followed by antero-medial walls of the tibia bone, at the proximal location. Conclusions. The present open 3D FE model of the ankle will assist researchers in better understanding ankle biomechanics, precisely predicting load transfer, and examining the ankle to address unmet clinical needs for this joint. The results of the current investigation are realistic in terms of load transfer and stress-strain distribution across the ankle joint and well comparable to those reported in the literature [2]. However, sensitivity and ankle instability simulations will be performed in future work to investigate the model's reliability and robustness. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 13 - 13
1 Dec 2022
Barone A Cofano E Zappia A Natale M Gasparini G Mercurio M Familiari F
Full Access

The risk of falls in patients undergoing orthopedic procedures is particularly significant in terms of health and socioeconomic effects. The literature analyzed closely this risk following procedures performed on the lower limb, but the implications following procedures on the upper limb remain to be investigated. Interestingly, it is not clear whether the increased risk of falling in patients undergoing shoulder surgery is due to preexisting risk factors at surgery or postoperative risk factors, such as anesthesiologic effects, opioid medications used for pain control, or brace use. Only one prospective study examined gait and fall risk in patients using a shoulder abduction brace (SAB) after shoulder surgery, revealing that the brace adversely affected gait kinematics with an increase in the risk of falls. The main purpose of the study was to investigate the influence of SAB on gait parameters in patients undergoing shoulder surgery. Patients undergoing elective shoulder surgery (arthroscopic rotator cuff repair, reverse total shoulder arthroplasty, and Latarjet procedure), who used a 15° SAB in the postoperative period, were included. Conversely, patients age > 65 years old, with impaired lower extremity function (e.g., fracture sequelae, dysmorphism, severe osteo-articular pathology), central and peripheral nervous system pathologies, and cardiac/respiratory/vascular insufficiency were excluded. Participants underwent kinematic analysis at four different assessment times: preoperative (T0), 24 hours after surgery (T1), 1 week after surgery (T2), and 1 week after SAB removal (T3). The tests used for kinematic assessment were the Timed Up and Go (TUG) and the 10-meter test (10MWT), both of which examine functional mobility. Agility and balance were assessed by a TUG test (transitions from sitting to standing and vice versa, walking phase, turn-around), while gait (test time, cadence, speed, and pelvic symmetry) was evaluated by the 10MWT. Gait and functional mobility parameters during 10MWT and TUG tests were assessed using the BTS G-Walk sensor (G-Sensor 2). One-way ANOVA for repeated measures was conducted to detect the effects of SAB on gait parameters and functional mobility over time. Statistical analysis was performed with IBM®SPSS statistics software version 23.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA), with the significant level set at p<0.05. 83% of the participants had surgery on the right upper limb. A main effect of time for the time of execution (duration) (p=0.01, η2=0.148), speed (p<0.01, η2=0.136), cadence (p<0.01, η2=0.129) and propulsion-right (R) (p<0.05, η2=0.105) and left (L) (p<0.01, η2=0.155) in the 10MWT was found. In the 10MWT, the running time at T1 (9.6±1.6s) was found to be significantly longer than at T2 (9.1±1.3s, p<0.05) and at T3 (9.0±1.3s, p=0.02). Cadence at T1 (109.7±10.9steps/min) was significantly lower than at T2 (114.3 ±9.3steps/min, p<0.01) and T3 (114.3±9.3steps/min, p=0.02). Velocity at T1 (1.1±0.31m/s) was significantly lower than at T2 (1.2± 0.21m/s, p<0.05). No difference was found in the pelvis symmetry index. No significant differences were found during the TUG test except for the final rotation phase with T2 value significantly greater than T3 (1.6±0.4s vs 1.4±0.3s, p<0.05). No statistically significant differences were found between T0 and T2 and between T0 and T3 in any of the parameters analyzed. Propulsion-R was significantly higher at T3 than T1 (p<0.01), whereas propulsion-L was significantly lower at T1 than T0 (p<0.05) and significantly higher at T2 and T3 than T1 (p<0.01). Specifically, the final turning phase was significantly higher at T2 than T3 (p<0.01); no significant differences were found for the duration, sit to stand, mid-turning and stand to sit phases. The results demonstrated that the use of the abduction brace affects functional mobility 24 hours after shoulder surgery but no effects were reported at longer term observations


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Nov 2021
Sosio C Sirtori P Ciliberto R Lombardo MDM Mangiavini L Peretti G
Full Access

Introduction and Objective. Kinematic Alignment (KA) is a surgical technique that restores the native knee alignment following Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA). The association of this technique with a medial pivot implant design (MP) attempts to reestablish the physiological kinematics of the knee. Aim of this study is to analyze the clinical and radiological outcomes of patients undergoing MP-TKA with kinematic alignment, and to assess the effect of the limb alignment and the orientation of the tibial component on the clinical outcomes. Materials and Methods. We retrospectively analyzed 63 patients who underwent kinematic aligned medial pivot TKA from September 2018 to January 2020. Patient-Related Outcomes (PROMs) and radiological measures were collected at baseline, 3 months and 12 months after surgery. Results. We demonstrated a significant improvement in the clinical and functional outcomes starting from 3 months after surgery. This finding was also confirmed at the longest follow-up. The clinical improvement was independent from the limb alignment and from the orientation of the tibial component. The radiological analysis showed that the patient's native limb alignment was restored, and that the joint line orientation maintained the parallelism to the floor when standing. This latter result has a particular relevance, as it may positively influence the outcomes, reducing the risk of wear and mobilization of the implant. Conclusions. The association of kinematic alignment and a medial pivot TKA implant allows for a fast recovery, good clinical and functional outcomes, independently from the final limb alignment and the tibial component orientation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 37 - 37
1 Dec 2021
Chen H Gulati A Mangwani J Brockett C Pegg E
Full Access

Abstract. Objectives. The aim of this study was to develop an open-source finite element model of the ankle for identification of the best clinical treatment to restore stability to the ankle after injury. Methods. The ankle geometry was defined from the Visible Human Project Female CT dataset available from the National Library of Medicine, and segmented using Dragonfly software (Object Research Systems, 2020). The finite element model was created with FEBio (University of Utah, 2021) using the dynamic nonlinear implicit solver. Linear isotropic material properties were assigned to the bones (E=7300MPa, ν=0.3, ρ=1730kg/m. 3. ) and cartilage (E=10MPa, ν=0.4, ρ=1100kg/m. 3. ). Spring elements were used to represent the ligaments and material properties were taken from Mondal et al. [1]. Lagrangian contact was defined between the cartilaginous surfaces with μ=0.003. A standing load case was modelled, assuming even distribution of load between the feet. A reaction force of 344.3N was applied to the base of the foot, a muscle force of 252.2N, and the proximal ends of the tibia and fibula were fully constrained. Results. The von Mises stresses closely matched those reported by Mondal et al. for the fibula (Present study: 1.00MPa, Mondal: 1.30MPa) and the talus (Present study: 2.20MPa, Mondal: 2.39MPa). However stresses within the tibia were underpredicted (Present study: 1.08MPa, Mondal: 5.86MPa). This was because the present study modelled a shorter tibial length because of a limitation in the CT slices available, which reduced the bending force. Conclusions. This first step in producing an open source ankle model for the orthopaedics community has shown the potential of the model to generate results comparable with those found in the literature. Future work is underway to examine the robustness of the model under different loading and explore alternative open-source CT datasets. [1] Mondal, S., & Ghosh, R. (2017). J Orthopaedics, 14(3), 329–335. . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jor.2017.05.003


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 22 - 22
1 Nov 2021
Belvedere C Leardini A Gill R Ruggeri M Fabbro GD Grassi A Durante S Zaffagnini S
Full Access

Introduction and Objective. Medial Knee Osteoarthritis (MKO) is associated with abnormal knee varism, this resulting in altered locomotion and abnormal loading at tibio-femoral condylar contacts. To prevent end-stage MKO, medial compartment decompression is selectively considered and, when required, executed via High Tibial Osteotomy (HTO). This is expected to restore normal knee alignment, load distribution and locomotion. In biomechanics, HTO efficacy may be investigated by a thorough analysis of the ground reaction forces (GRF), whose orientation with respect to patient-specific knee morphology should reflect knee misalignment. Although multi-instrumental assessments are feasible, a customized combination of medical imaging and gait analysis (GA), including GRF data, rarely is considered. The aim of this study was to report an original methodology merging Computed-Tomography (CT) with GA and GFR data in order to depict a realistic patient-specific representation of the knee loading status during motion before and after HTO. Materials and Methods. 25 MKO-affected patients were selected for HTO. All patients received pre-operative clinical scoring, and radiological/instrumental assessments; so far, these were also executed post-operatively at 6-month follow-up on 7 of these patients. State-of-the-art GA was performed during walking and more demanding motor tasks, like squatting, stair-climbing/descending, and chair-rising/sitting. An 8-camera motion capture system, combined with wireless electromyography, and force platforms for GRF tracking, was used together with an own established protocol. This marker-set was enlarged with 4 additional skin-based non-collinear markers, attached around the tibial-plateau rim. While still wearing these markers, all analyzed patients received full lower-limb X-ray in standing posture a CT scan of the knee in weight-bearing Subsequently, relevant DICOMs were segmented to reconstruct the morphological models of the proximal tibia and the additional reference markers, for a robust anatomical reference frame to be defined on the tibia. These marker trajectories during motion were then registered to the corresponding from CT-based 3D reconstruction. Relevant registration matrices then were used to report GRF data on the reconstructed tibial model. Intersection paths of GRF vectors with respect to the tibial-plateau plane were calculated, together with their centroids. Results. Pre-operative clinical and radiological scoring confirmed MKO and associated abnormal varism. The morphological characterization of GRF was successfully achieved pre- and post- HTO on patient-specific tibial plateau. Pre-operative GFR patterns and peaks, including those related to knee joint moments, were observed medially on the knee, as expected. In post-HTO, these resulted lateralized and much closer to the tibial plateau spine, as desired. In detail, when post- is compared to pre-op, the difference of the centroids were, on average, 54.6±18.1 mm (min÷max: 36.7÷72.8 mm) more lateral during walking and 52.5±28.5 mm (24.7÷87.6 mm) during stair climbing. When reported in % of the tibial plateau width, these values became 69.2±20.1 (46.1÷81.4) and 78.1±30.1 (43.4÷98.0), respectively. Post-op also clinical scores and GA revealed a considerable overall improvement, especially in functional performances. Conclusions. The reported novel approach allows a combination of motion data, including GFR, and tibial-plateau morphology. Relevant pre- and post-operative routine application offer a quantification of the effect of the original deformity and executed joint realignment, and an assistance for surgical planning in case of HTO as well as ideally in other orthopedic treatments