Abstract. INTRODUCTION. Fracture neck of femur is aptly called as “the fracture of necessity” owing to the various factors responsible for its non-union. Pauwel's inter-trochantric
Introduction. Osteogenesis imperfect (OI) is a geno- and phenotypically heterogeneous group of congenital collagen disorders characterized by fragility and microfractures resulting in long bone deformities. OI can lead to progressive femoral coxa vara from bone and muscular imbalance and continuous microfracture about the proximal femur. If left untreated, patients develop Trendelenburg gait, leg length discrepancy, further stress fracture and acute fracture at the apex of the deformity, impingement and hip joint degeneration. In the OI patient, femoral coxa vara cannot be treated in isolation and consideration must be given to protecting the whole bone with the primary goal of verticalization and improved biomechanical stability to allow early loading, safe standing, re-orientation of the physis and avoidance of untreated sequelae. Implant constructs should therefore be designed to accommodate and protect the whole bone. The normal paediatric femoral neck shaft angle (FNSA) ranges from 135 to 145 degrees. In OI the progressive pathomechanical changes result in FNSA of significantly less than 120 degrees and decreased Hilgenreiner epiphyseal angles (HEA). Proximal femoral
It is very difficult to perform total knee arthroplasty (TKA) for severe varus bowing deformity of femur. We performed simultaneous combined femoral supra-condyle
The optimal correction of the weight bearing line during High Tibial Osteotomy has not been determined. We used finite element modelling to simulate the effect that increasing opening wedge HTO has on the distribution of stress and pressure through the knee joint during normal gait. Subject-specific models were developed by combining geometry from 7T MRI scans and applied joint loads from ground reaction forces measured during level walking. Baseline stresses and pressures on the articulating proximal tibial cartilage and menisci were calculated. Progressive osteotomies were then simulated to shift the weight-bearing line from the native alignment towards/into the lateral compartment (between 40 – 80% of medial-lateral tibial width). Changes in calculated stresses and pressures were recorded. Both stress and pressure decreased in the medial compartment and increased in the lateral compartment as increasingly
(Case) 79-year-old woman. Past history, in 1989, right femur
Sugioka trans-trochanteric
[Introduction]. Total hip arthroplasty (THA) markedly improves pain, gait, and activities of daily living for most patients with osteoarthritis. However, pelvic osteotomy has been recommended for young and active patients with hip dysplasia, because THA in that population is associated with high rates of revision THA. The rotational acetabular osteotomy (RAO) of Ninomiya and Tagawa, and the eccentric rotational acetabular osteotomy of Hasegawa for hip dysplasia reportedly are successful in young and active patients. However, even after the surgery of RAO, osteoarthritis developed in some cases and leaded to the conversion to THA. The differences of bone quality of acetabulum have been reported between at the surgery of THA after RAO and at the surgery of primary THA. We should not discuss the results of these two THA equally. The purpose of this study is to report the results of THA after RAO. [Patients and Methods]. We retrospectively reviewed 33 patients (37 hips) treated by total hip arthroplasty after rotational acetabular osteotomy between 1992 and 2012. Five cases were performed RAO with
Background. Subtrochanteric femoral shortening and corrective osteotomy are considered to be an integral part of total hip arthroplasty for a completely dislocated hip or severe deformity of the proximal femur. A number of alternative femoral osteotomy techniques, transverse, oblique, step-cut, and V-shaped, have been described. Becker and Gustilo reported the “double-chevron subtrochanteric shortening derotational femoral osteotomy,” which is reasonable in that the osteotomy site is torsionally more stable and can be stabilized with a shorter stem. We have simplified this procedure, and performed it without a trochanteric osteotomy. We describe a simplified double-chevron osteotomy and provide the clinical results from a series of 22 successful procedures. Methods. In this series, we performed 22 cementless total hip arthroplasties combined with double-chevron subtrochanteric osteotomies between 1997 and 2002. There were 17 females and 2 males. Their average age at the time of the operation was 59 years old (range, 41–74 years old). Thirteen of these hips were congenitally dislocated hips (Crowe IV), and 8 hips were after proximal femoral osteotomies using a procedure described by Schanz or
Introduction. Version abnormalities of the femur, either retroversion or excessive anteversion, cause pain and hip joint damage due to impingement or instability respectively. A retrospective clinical review was conducted on patients undergoing a subtrochanteric derotation osteotomy for either excessive anteversion or retroversion of the femur. Methods. A total of 49 derotation osteotomies were performed in 39 patients. There were 32 females and 7 males. Average age was 29 years (range 14 to 59 years). Osteotomies were performed closed with an intramedullary saw (Figure 1). Fixation was performed with a variety of intramedullary nails. Patients requiring a varus or
There are basically 4 ways advocated to determine the proper femoral component rotation during TKA: (1) The Trans-epicondylar Axis, (2) Perpendicular to the “Whiteside Line,” (3) Three to five degrees of external rotation off the posterior condyles, and (4) Rotation of the component to a point where there is a balanced symmetric flexion gap. This last method is the most logical and functionally, the most appropriate. Of interest is the fact that the other 3 methods often yield flexion gap symmetry, but the surgeon should not be wed to any one of these individual methods at the expense of an unbalanced knee in flexion. In correcting a varus knee, the knee is balanced first in extension by the appropriate medial release and then balanced in flexion by the appropriate rotation of the femoral component. In correcting a valgus knee, the knee can be balanced first in flexion by the femoral component rotation since balancing in extension almost never involves release of the lateral collateral ligament (LCL) but rather release of the lateral retinaculum. If a rare LCL release is anticipated for extension balancing, then it would be performed prior to determining the femoral rotation since the release may open up the lateral flexion gap to a point where even more femoral component rotation is needed to close down that lateral gap. It is important to know and accept the fact that some knees will require internal rotation of the femoral component to yield flexion gap symmetry. The classic example of this is a knee that has previously undergone a
Purpose. Patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) deficiency and symptomatic medial compartment osteoarthritis (OA) present a challenge in management. These are often younger than typical primary OA patients and aspire to remain athletically active beyond simple ADLs. Combined ACL reconstruction and
Double-level lengthening, bone transport, and bifocal compression-distraction are commonly undertaken using Ilizarov or other fixators. We performed double-level fixator-assisted nailing, mainly for the correction of deformity and lengthening in the same segment, using a straight intramedullary nail to reduce the time in a fixator. A total of 23 patients underwent this surgery, involving 27 segments (23 femora and four tibiae), over a period of ten years. The most common indication was polio in ten segments and rickets in eight; 20 nails were inserted retrograde and seven antegrade. A total of 15 lengthenings were performed in 11 femora and four tibiae, and 12 double-level corrections of deformity without lengthening were performed in the femur. The mean follow-up was 4.9 years (1.1 to 11.4). Four patients with polio had tibial lengthening with arthrodesis of the ankle. We compared the length of time in a fixator and the external fixation index (EFI) with a control group of 27 patients (27 segments) who had double-level procedures with external fixation. The groups were matched for the gain in length, age, and level of difficulty score.Aims
Patients and Methods