A review of current literature describes varying 10-year survival rates for the Oxford Unicompartmental Knee Replacement (Biomet Orthopedics Inc, Warsaw, Ind). Application of rigorous indications and meticulous surgical technique are two factors considered to reduce revision rates. A retrospective case-note review was conducted for 96 patients (128 knees) aged 42–89 (mean 57) who had an Oxford unicompartmental knee replacement for medial compartment osteoarthritis between January 2000 and January 2011. All procedures were performed, or directly supervised, by one 5 surgeons. The aim of the study was to ascertain the rate of revision to bicompartmental knee replacement and any associated contributory factors. Of the 128
Joint registries report that 25–40% of UKR revisions are performed for pain. Proximal tibial strain and microdamage are possible causes of this “unexplained” pain. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of UKR implant design and material on proximal tibial cortical strain and cancellous microdamage. Composite Sawbone tibias were implanted with cemented UKR components: 5 fixed bearing all-polyethylene (FB-AP), 5 fixed bearing metal backed (FB-MB), and 5 mobile bearing metal backed implants (MB-MB). Five intact tibias were used as controls. Tibias were loaded in 500N increments to 2500N. Cortical surface strain was measured using digital image correlation (DIC). Cancellous microdamage was measured using acoustic emission (AE), a technique which detects elastic waves produced by the rapid release of energy during microdamage events. DIC showed significant differences in anteromedial cortical strain between implants at 1500N and 2500N in the proximal 10mm only (p<0.001) with strain shielding in metal backed implants. AE showed significant differences in cancellous microdamage (AE hits), between implants at all loads (p=0.001). FB-AP implants displayed significantly more hits at all loads than both controls and metal backed implants (p<0.001). FB-AP implants also differed significantly by displaying AE hits on unloading (p=0.01), reflecting a lack of implant stiffness. Compared to controls, the FB-AP implant displayed 15x the total AE hits, the FB-MB 6x and the MB-MB 2.7x. All-polyethylene medial UKR implants are associated with greater cancellous bone microdamage than metal backed implants even at low loads.
Minimally invasive implanted unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) leads to excellent functional results. Due to the reduced intraoperative visibility it is difficult to remove extruded bone cement particles, as well as bone particles generated through the sawing. These loose third body particles are frequently found in minimally invasive implanted UKA. The aim of this study was to analyse the influence of bone and cement particles on the wear rate of unicompartmental knee prostheses in vitro. Fixed- bearing unicompartmental knee prostheses (n = 3; Univation F®, Aesculap, Tuttlingen) were tested with a customized four-station servo-hydraulic knee wear simulator (EndoLab GmbH, Thansau, Germany) reproducing exactly the walking cycle as specified in ISO 14243-1:2002. After 5.0 million cycles crushed cortical bone chips were added to the test fluid for 1.5 million cycles to simulate bone particles, followed by 1.5 million cycles blended with PMMA- particles (concentration of the third-body particles: 5g/l; particle diameter: 0.5- 0.7 mm). Every 500 000 cycles the volumetric wear rate was measured (ISO 14243-2) and the knee kinematics were recorded. For the interpretation of the test results we considered four different phases: breaking in- (during the first 2.0 million cycles), the steady state- (from 2.0 million to 5 million cycles), bone particle- and cement particle phase. Finally, a statistical analysis was carried out to verify the normal distribution (Kolmogorov-Smirnov test), followed by direct comparisons to differentiate the volumetric wear amount between the gliding surfaces (paired Student's t-test, p<0.05).Introduction
Material & Methods
The Oxford medial unicompartmental knee replacement has been shown to provide good long-tern results in numerous studies with survivorship at 10 years ranging from 82% to 100%. This prospective study describes the survival of 265 Oxford unicompartmental knee replacements implanted in one centre from 1995-2009. 8 were lost to follow up. 40 of the 265 knees were revised. For operation performed from1995-1999 the risk of revision at 5 years was 10%, operations from 2000-2004 the risk of revision was 15% and from 2005-2009 the risk of revision at 5 years was 36%. This study demonstrates that since 2005 there has been a significant increase in early failure of the Oxford