High doses of intra-articular (IA) antibiotics has been shown to effectively achieve a minimal biofilm eradication concentration which could mitigate the need for removal of infected but well-ingrown cementless components of a total hip arthroplasty (THA). However, there are concerns that percutaneous catheters could lead to multi-resistance or multi-organism peri-prosthetic joint infections (PJI) following single stage THA revisions for PJI. Eighteen single-stage revision procedures were performed for acute (N=9) or chronic (N=9) PJI following a primary (N=12) or revision (N=6) cementless THA. Modular and loosened components were replaced. All well ingrown components were retained. Two Hickmann catheters were placed in the joint space. Along with intravenous antibiotics, IA antibiotics were injected twice a day for two weeks, followed by 3 months of oral antibiotics. Per-operative cultures demonstrated 4 multi-bacterial PJIs. None of the patients developed post-operatively an AB related renal or systemic dysfunction. At a mean follow-up of 38 months [range, 8–72] all patients had normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate and white blood cell count. Four had a slightly elevated C-reactive protein but were completely symptom free and did not show any sign of loosening at a mean of 27 months [range, 16–59]. Addition of high doses of IA antibiotics following single-stage revision for PJI in cementless THA, is an effective and safe treatment option that allows for retention of well-ingrown components. We found no evidence for residual implant infection or catheter induced multi-resistance. Total hip arthroplasty, revision surgery, Periprosthetic Joint Infection, Intra-articular antibiotics Level 4 (Case series)
Tenotomy of the iliopsoas tendon has been described as an effective procedure to treat refractive groin pain induced by iliopsoas tendinitis. However, the procedure forces the rectus femoris to act as the primary hip flexor and little is known about the long-term effects of this procedure on the peri-articular muscle envelope (PAME). Studies suggest that iliopsoas tenotomy results in atrophy of the iliopsoas and decreased hip flexion strength with poorer outcomes, increasing the susceptibility for secondary tendinopathy. The aim of this study is to describe changes in the PAME following psoas release. All patients who presented for clinical examination at our hospital between 2016 and 2021 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients who presented after psoas tenotomy with groin pain and who were unable to actively lift the leg against gravity, were included. Pelvic MRI was taken. Qualitative muscle evaluation was done with the Quartile classification system. Quantitative muscle evaluation was done by establishing the cross-sectional area (CSA). Two independent observers evaluated the ipsi- and contralateral PAME twice. The muscles were evaluated on the level: iliacus, psoas, gluteus minimus-medius-maximus, rectus femoris, tensor fasciae lata, piriformis, obturator externus and internus. For the qualitative evaluation, the intra- and inter-observer reliability was calculated by using kappastatistics. A Bland-Altman analysis was used to evaluate the intra- and inter-observer reliability for the quantitative evaluation. The Wilcoxon test was used to evaluate the changes between the ipsi- and contra-lateral side. 17 patients were included in the study. Following psoas tenotomy, CSA reduced in the ipsilateral gluteus maximus, if compared with the contralateral side. Fatty degeneration occurred in the tensor fascia latae. Both CSA reduction and fatty degeneration was seen for psoas, iliacus, gluteus minimus, piriformis, obturator externus and internus. No CSA reduction and fatty degeneration was seen for gluteus medius and rectus femoris. Following psoas tenotomy, the PAME of the hip shows atrophy and fatty degeneration. These changes can lead to detrimental functional problems and may be associated with debilitating rectus femoris tendinopathy. In patients with psoas tendinopathy, some caution is advised when considering an iliopsoas tenotomy.Conclusions/Discussion
Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) surgery is a physical and cognitive challenge for surgeons. Data on stress levels, cognitive and physical load of orthopaedic surgeons, as well as ergonomic impact, are limited. With and without the use of an automated impaction device, operational efficiency and the surgeon's ergonomic, mental, and physical load was investigated. In a total of thirty THA procedures, a standard manual technique was compared with an automated impaction device. Three computerized cognitive tasks (Simon, pattern comparison, and pursuit rotor) and five physical tests (isometric wall-sit, plank-to-fatigue, handgrip, supra-postural task, and shoulder endurance) were used to assess psychophysiological load of the surgeon. Surgeon's cortisol concentration was evaluated from saliva samples. Postural risk was assessed by Rapid Upper Limb Assessment (RULA) and Rapid Entire Body Assessment (REBA). Efficiency was assessed by timing surgical steps and instrumentation flow. Cognitive performances after automated impaction showed faster response times and lower error rates with a greater time-on-target (+1.5 s) and a lower mouse deviation from target (−1.7 pixels). Manual impaction showed higher physical exhaustion in the isometric wall-sit test (10.6% vs. 22.9%), plank-to-fatigue (2.2% vs. 43.8%), the number of taps in the supra-postural task (−0.7% vs. −7.7%), handgrip force production in the dominant (−6.7% vs. −12.7%) and contralateral hand (+4.7% vs. +7.7%), and in shoulder endurance (−15s vs. −56s). An increase of 38.2% in salivary cortisol concentration between the midday (1.31 nmol/l) and afternoon session (1.81 nmol/l) was observed with manual impaction. After using automated impaction, salivary cortisol concentration decreased (−51.2%). Manual broaching time was on average 6′20’’ versus 7’3’’ with automated impaction. RULA of manual impaction scored 6 for cup impaction and 5 for femoral broaching, versus 3 and 3 for automated impaction, respectively. REBA of manual impaction scored 9 for cup impaction and 5 for femoral broaching, versus 4 and 3 for automated impaction, respectively. Automated impaction lowers surgeons’ cognitive and physical fatigue and leads to reduced stress and improved ergonomics without loss of surgical efficiency.
Psoas tendinopathy is a potential cause of groin pain after primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). The direct anterior approach (DAA) is becoming increasingly popular as the standard approach for primary THA due to being a muscle preserving technique. It is unclear what the prevalence is for the development of psoas-related pain after DAA THA, how this can influence patient reported outcome, and which risk factors can be identified. This retrospective case control study of prospectively recorded data evaluated 1784 patients who underwent 2087 primary DAA THA procedures between January 2017 and September 2019. Psoas tendinopathy was defined as (1) persistence of groin pain after DAA THA and was triggered by active hip flexion, (2) exclusion of other causes such as dislocation, infection, implant loosening or (occult) fractures, and (3) a positive response to an image-guided injection with xylocaine and steroid into the psoas tendon sheath. Complication-, re-operation rates, and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) were measured. Forty-three patients (45 hips; 2.2%) were diagnosed with psoas tendinopathy according to the above-described criteria. The mean age of patients who developed psoas tendinopathy was 50.8±11.7 years, which was significantly lower than the mean age of patients without psoas pain (62.4±12.7y; p<0.001). Patients with primary hip osteoarthritis were significantly less likely to develop psoas tendinopathy (14/1207; 1.2%) in comparison to patients with secondary hip osteoarthritis to dysplasia (18/501; 3.6%) (p<0.001) or FAI (12/305; 3.9%) (p<0.001). Patients with psoas tendinopathy had significantly lower PROM scores at 6 weeks and 1 year follow-up. Psoas tendinopathy was present in 2.2% after DAA THA. Younger age and secondary osteoarthritis due to dysplasia or FAI were risk factors for the development of psoas tendinopathy. Post-operatively, patients with psoas tendinopathy often also presented with low back pain and lateral trochanteric pain. Psoas tendinopathy had an important influence on the evolution of PROM scores.
Optimal exposure through the direct anterior approach (DAA) for total hip arthroplasty (THA) conducted on a regular operating theatre table is achieved with a standardized capsular releasing sequence in which the anterior capsule can be preserved or resected. We hypothesized that clinical outcomes and implant positioning would not be different in case a capsular sparing (CS) technique would be compared to capsular resection (CR). In this prospective trial, 219 hips in 190 patients were randomized to either the CS (n = 104) or CR (n = 115) cohort. In the CS cohort, a medial based anterior flap was created and sutured back in place at the end of the procedure. The anterior capsule was resected in the CR cohort. Primary outcome was defined as the difference in patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) after one year. PROMs (Harris Hip Score (HHS), Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS), and Short Form 36 Item Health Survey (SF-36)) were collected preoperatively and one year postoperatively. Radiological parameters were analyzed to assess implant positioning and implant ingrowth. Adverse events were monitored.Aims
Methods
Quality monitoring is increasingly important to support and assure sustainability of the Orthopaedic practice. Many surgeons in a non-academic setting lack the resources to accurately monitor quality of care. Widespread use of electronic medical records (EMR) provides easier access to medical information and facilitates its analysis. However, manual review of EMRs is inefficient and costly. Artificial Intelligence (AI) software has allowed for development of automated search algorithms for extracting relevant complications from EMRs. We questioned whether an AI supported algorithm could be used to provide accurate feedback on the quality of care following Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) in a high-volume, non-academic setting. 532 Consecutive patients underwent 613 THA between January 1st and December 31st, 2017. Patients were prospectively followed pre-op, 6 weeks, 3 months and 1 year. They were seen by the surgeon who created clinical notes and reported every adverse event. A random derivation cohort (100 patients, 115 hips) was used to determine accuracy. The algorithm was compared to manual extraction to validate performance in raw data extraction. The full cohort (532 patients, 613 hips) was used to determine its recall, precision and F-value.INTRODUCTION
METHODS
The capsular releasing sequence is crucial to safely conduct the Direct Anterior Approach for THA on a regular OR table. The release of the anterior capsule is the first step of the releasing sequence and allows for optimal exposure. This can be done by either resecting a part of the anterior capsule or by preserving it. Our zero hypothesis was that clinical outcomes would not be different between both techniques. 190 Patients operated between November 2017 and May 2018, met the inclusion criteria and were randomly allocated in a double blinded study to either the capsular resection (CR)(N=99) or capsular preservation (CP)(N=91) cohort. The same cementless implant was used in all cases. Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMS) were collected pre- and post-operatively at 6 weeks, 3 months and 1 year. Adverse events were recorded. Outcomes were compared with the Mann-Withney U test and a significance level of p<0,05.INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS & METHODS
Several studies have shown that gait kinematics[1–3] and hip contact forces (HCFs)[4, 5] of patients following total hip arthroplasty (THA) do not return to normal, although improvements in kinematics are found compared to the pre-surgery. However, the evolution of HCFs after surgery has not been investigated. The goal of this study is to evaluate HCFs during gait in OA patients before and at 2 evaluation moments post-THA. Fourteen unilateral hip OA patients before and 3- and 12-months post-THA surgery walked at self-selected speed, as well as 18 healthy control subjects. 3D marker trajectories were captured using Vicon (Oxford Metrics, UK) and force data was measured using two AMTI force platforms (Watertown, MA). A musculoskeletal model consisting of 14 segments, 19 degrees of freedom and 88 musculotendon actuators and including wrapping surfaces around the hip joint was used[6]. All analyses were performed in OpenSim 3.1[7]. The model was scaled to the dimensions of each subject using the marker positions of a static pose. A kalman smoother procedure was used to calculate joint angles[8]. Muscle forces were calculated using static optimization, minimizing the sum of squared muscle activations. HCFs were calculated and normalized to body weight (BW). First and second peak HCFs were determined and used for statistical analysis. To determine differences between HCFs of OA patients at the different evaluation moments, a Friedman test was used. In case of a significant difference, post-hoc rank-based multiple comparison tests with a Bonferonni adjustment was used. To compare controls and patients at each evaluation moment separate Man-Whitney U tests were used. Differences in HCFs between the affected and non-affected legs were expressed by a symmetry index (SI), i.e. the ratio between the HCFs of the affected leg over the non-affected leg, averaged over the stance phase of the gait cycle. At the first and second HCF peaks, no significant differences were found between pre-, 3- and 12-months post-surgery (first peak average HCF: 2.68, 2.72 and 2.78BW respectively; second peak average HCF: 3.21, 3.83 and 3.77BW respectively). Compared to controls, significant differences are found for all evaluation moments at the first and second HCF peaks (average HCF controls: 3.43 and 5.15BW respectively). The SI was below 1 pre- and 3-months post-surgery (0.88 and 0.85 respectively), indicating decreased loading of the affected compared to the non-affected leg. At 12-months post-surgery SI was close to 1 (0.98). As reported before[4, 5], first or second peak HCFs do not return to normal after THA. Although HCFs increase after THA compared to pre-surgery, significant differences with controls remain. Surprisingly, no significant differences are found between the different evaluation moments of the patients, indicating no clear improvements are found after THA. Further, average HCF peaks at 3- and 12-months post-surgery are similar, indicating no further improvements are found 3-months post-surgery. However, the SI was above or close to 1 at 12-months post-surgery, indicating hip loading evolved to a more symmetrical loading 12-months post-surgery.
A soft-tissue defect over an infected total knee
replacement (TKR) presents a difficult technical problem that can
be treated with a gastrocnemius flap, which is rotated over the
defect during the first-stage of a revision procedure. This facilitates
wound healing and the safe introduction of a prosthesis at the second
stage. We describe the outcome at a mean follow-up of 4.5 years
(1 to 10) in 24 patients with an infected TKR who underwent this procedure.
A total of 22 (92%) eventually obtained a satisfactory result. The
mean Knee Society score improved from 53 pre-operatively to 103
at the latest follow-up (p <
0.001). The mean Western Ontario
and McMaster Universities osteoarthritis index and Short-Form 12
score also improved significantly (p <
0.001). This form of treatment can be used reliably and safely to treat
many of these complex cases where control of infection, retention
of the components and acceptable functional recovery are the primary
goals. Cite this article:
The 3D interplay between femoral component placement on contact stresses and range of motion of hip resurfacing was investigated with a hip model. Pre- and post-operative contours of the bone geometry and the gluteus medius were obtained from grey-value CT-segmentations. The joint contact forces and stresses were simulated for variations in component placement during a normal gait. The effect of component placement on range of motion was determined with a collision model. The contact forces were not increased with optimal component placement due to the compensatory effect of the medialisation of the center of rotation. However, the total range of motion decreased by 33%. Accumulative displacements of the femoral and acetabular center of rotation could increase the contact stresses between 5–24%. Inclining and anteverting the socket further increased the contact stresses between 6–11%. Increased socket inclination and anteversion in combination with shortening of the neck were associated with extremely high contact stresses. The effect of femoral offset restoration on range of motion was significantly higher than the effect of socket positioning. In conclusion, displacement of the femoral center of rotation in the lateral direction is at least as important for failure of hip resurfacings as socket malpositioning.
Ectopic ossification (EO) at the acetabular rim has been suggested to be associated with pincer impingement and to lead to ossification of the labrum. However, this has never been substantiated with histological, radiographic and MRI findings in large cohorts of patients. We hypothesized that it is more a bone apposition of the acetabular rim and that it occurs more frequently in coxa profunda (CP) hips. In the first part, a cohort of 20 hips with this suspected ectopic rim ossification (EO) pattern were identified. The radiographic features that could be associated with this ossification pattern were described and evaluated by a histologic examination of intra-operative samples taken from the rim trimming. In the second part, we assessed the prevalence of this ectopic ossification process in a cohort of 203 patients treated for FAI.Introduction
Materials and Methods
The bowing of the femur defines a curvature plane to which the proximal and distal femoral anatomic landmarks have a predictable interrelationship. This plane can be a helpful adjunct for computer navigation to define the pre-operative, non-diseased anatomy of the femur and more particularly the rotational alignment of the femoral component in total knee arthroplasty (TKA). There is very limited knowledge with regards to the sagittal curvature -or bowing- of the femur. It was our aim (1) to determine the most accurate assessment technique to define the femoral bowing, (2) to define the relationships of the curvature plane relative to proximal and distal anatomic landmarks and (3) to assess the position of femoral components of a TKA relative to the femoral bowing.Summary sentence
Background and aims
We report the outcome at a minimum of 10 years follow-up for 80 polished tapered stems performed in 53 patients less than 35-years-old with a high risk profile for aseptic loosening. Forty-six prosthesis were inserted for inflammatory hip arthritis and 34 for avascular necrosis. The mean age at surgery was 28 years in the inflammatory arthritis (17–35) and 27 years in the avascular necrosis (15–35) patients. At a mean follow-up of 14.5 years in the inflammatory arthritis group and 14 years in the avascular necrosis group respectively, survivorship of the 80 stems with revision of the femoral component for any reason as an endpoint was 100 % (95 % CI). Re-operation was because of failure of four metal-backed cups, 3 all polyethylene cups and one cementless cup. None of the stems were radiographically loose. All but two femoral components subsided within the cement mantle to a mean of 1.2 mm (0 tot 2.5) at final follow-up. Periarticular osteolysis was noted in 4 femurs in zone 7. This finding was associated with polyethylene wear and was only seen in those hips that needed revision for a metal backed cup loosening. Our findings show that the polished tapered stem has excellent medium-term results when implanted in young patients with high risk factors for aseptic loosening.
The Exeter stem is a polished cemented stem that has been associated with an excellent survivorship. However, this wedge shaped stem has also been associated with a relative higher risk for a peri-periprosthetic fracture due to the wedge-shaped configuration that can lead to a Vancouver type B2 fracture when the stem is being driven downwards inside the femoral canal by a traumatic blast. Traditionally, these fractures should be treated with a revision stem because the stem has become loosened in the fractured cement mantle. We present a case series of 5 cases where our treatment algorithm was to first let the non-displaced fracture to consolidate by 6 weeks of limited weight bearing as tolerated in order to conduct a second stage in-cement revision. This would simplify the revision procedure dramatically. However, all patients are currently pain free and do not require revision surgery although they are being monitored very closely. We conclude that non-displaced Vancouver type B2 fractures can be approached by a 2 stage treatment algorithm where the initial step is to let the fracture consolidate with limited weight bearing.
It was the purpose to evaluate the biomechanical changes that occur after optimal and non-optimal component placement of a hip resurfacing (SRA) by using a subject specific musculoskeletal model based on CT-scan data. Nineteen hips from 11 cadavers were resurfaced with a BHR using a femoral navigation system. CT images were acquired before and after surgery. Grey-value segmentation in Mimics produced contours representing the bone geometry and identifying the outlines of the 3 parts of the gluteus medius. The anatomical changes induced by the procedure were characterised by the translation of the hip joint center (HJCR) with respect to the pelvic and femoral bone. The contact forces during normal gait with ‘optimal’ component placement were calculated for a cement mantle of 3 mm, a socket inclination of 45° and anteversion of 15°. The biomechanical effect of ‘non-optimal placement’ was simulated by varying the positioning of the components.Introduction
Materials and Methods
The difference in the mean values regarding inclination was greater than would be expected by chance; there was a statistically significant difference (P = 0,010).
Navigation technique was discussed to equalize the drawback of MIS. However, tools like imageless navigation may further improve the cup position even in traditional approach.