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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_17 | Pages 45 - 45
24 Nov 2023
Dendoncker K Putzeys G Cornu O Nieuwenhuizen T Bertrand M Valster H Croes K
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Aim

Local antibiotics released through a carrier is a commonly used technique to prevent infection in orthopaedic procedures. An interesting carrier in aseptic bone reconstructive surgery are bone chips impregnated with AB solution. Systemically administered Cefazolin (CFZ) is used for surgical site infection prophylaxis however in vitro study showed that fresh frozen and processed bone chips impregnated with CFZ solution completely release the CFZ within a few hours. On the other hand irradiated freeze-dried bone chips, treated with supercritical CO2 (scCO2) have been shown to be an efficient carrier for the antibiotics vancomycine or tobramycine.

With this pilot study we wanted to investigate if CFZ solution impregnation of bone chips treated with scCO2 shows a more favorable release pattern of CFZ.

Method

The bone chips were prepared using the standard scCO2 protocol and were impregnated with 100 mg/ml cefazolin at different timepoints during the process: before freeze drying (BC type A), after freeze drying (BC type B) and after gamma-irradiation. 0.5g of the impregnated bone grafts were incubated with 5ml of fetal calf serum (FCS) at 37°C. At 2, 4, 6, 8 and 24h of incubation 200µl of eluate was taken for analysis. After 24h the remaining FCS was removed, bone grafts were washed and new FCS (5ml) was added. Consecutive eluate samples were taken at 48, 72 and 96h of incubation.

The concentration of CFZ in the eluates was measured with the validated UPLC-DAD method. Analysis was performed in triplicate.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 87-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 108 - 108
1 Apr 2005
Bertrand M Bentahar T Diméglio A
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Purpose: The prognosis of congenital hip displacement basically depends on the time of diagnosis and treatment. Recognising high-risk hips early remains a number one priority. We conducted a prospective study over a 20-year period from 1992 to 2002 to analyse the epidemiology of congenital hip displacement.

Material and methods: The series included 1056 children with congenital hip disease (1491 hips). Epidemiological data, ultrasound and x-ray findings were recorded over 20 years. The objective was to identify risk factors and evaluate the impact of prevention measures.

Results: The sex ratio showed female predominance, 6:1. The left hip was involved 1.8 times more often, with 41% bilateral involvement. Risk factors were major: family history (31%), breech presentation (25%), postural syndrome (12%); or minor: primiparity (54.4%), birth weight > 4 kg (9.2%). One or more major risk factors were found in 60.5% of the children and 30% had at least one minor risk factor. No risk factor was found in 40%. Screening efficacy improved with a rate of diagnosis before 4 months of 59% in 1983 and 96% in 2002. The number of hips discovered after the age of one year was 15% in 1983 and 6% in 2002.

Discussion: The severity of the hip displacement is not influenced by risk factors nor bilateral involvement. Screening has enabled earlier diagnosis with a 37% increase in the rate of identification before the age of four months. This has been made possible by a systematic examination at birth and ultrasonography introduced in 1989.

Conclusion: A regional map showing the paediatrician : maternity : general practitioner distributions is an important tool for screening campaigns. Despite adequate screening 40% of these children do not have any risk factor. Repeated examinations, communication and information exchange between healthcare professionals are the keys to success.