Failing total knee replacement management has included isotope bone scan to identify infection or loosening. BASK guidance suggests bone scans have a poor positive predictive value and are not advised. We assessed isotope bone scanning as a negative predictor to exclude loosening or infection in failing total knee replacement. Retrospective review of consecutive bone scans performed to investigate painful total knee replacements for a one-year period (June 2017 to June 2018). 166 bone scans performed. 33 excluded (no notes or scan for other reasons). Demographic information, age of prosthesis, clinic review date, serological markers, results of aspiration and subsequent intraoperative findings also recorded.Abstract
Introduction
Methodology
Orthopaedic surgeons are increasingly pressured to consider Between October 2004 and September 2006 details of all new patients referred to our orthopaedic fracture clinic were prospectively entered into an audit database. Patients did not receive any form of thromboprophylaxis. Data was cross referenced with a national mortality database to identify all patients who subsequently died within 90 days of attendance in fracture clinic.Background
Methods