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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 3 - 3
1 Apr 2014
Burwell G Aujla R Grevitt M Randell T Dangerfield P Cole A Pratt R Kirby A Polak F Web J Moulton A
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Aim:

Right-Handed Girls With Rt-Ais Measured Using Holtain Equipment Have Upper Arm Length Asymmetry (Right-Minus-Left) Which Is: 1) Relatively Longer On Scoliosis Curve Convexity; 2) Significantly Associated With Scoliosis Curve Severity (Cobb Angle And Apical Vertebral Rotation); And 3) Transient, Decreasing With Age And Years After Menarche [1,2]. The Aim Is To Test Whether The Right Upper Arm Length Relative Overgrowth And Spinal Deformity Severity Were Associated With Right Or Left Upper Arm Length Size-For-Age.

Method:

94 Right-Handed Girls With Rt-Ais, Age 11–18 Years, (Mean Cobb Angle 46 Degrees, Range 10–102 Degrees), Were Evaluated Using A Harpenden Anthropometer For Upper Arm Length Asymmetry, Plotted Against Right And Left Upper Arm Length Standard Deviation Scores (Sds), Calculated From 378 Normal Girls, Age 11–18 Years.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXVII | Pages 30 - 30
1 Jun 2012
Burwell R Aujla R Grevitt M Randell T Dangerfield P Cole A Kirby A Polak F Pratt R Webb J Moulton A
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Introduction

In patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS), anomalous extra-spinal left-right skeletal length asymmetries in upper limbs, periapical ribs, and ilia beg the question as to whether these bilateral asymmetries are connected in some way with pathogenesis. The upper arm and iliac length asymmetries correlate significantly with adjacent spinal curve severity respectively in thoracic and lower (thoracolumbar and lumbar) spine. In lower limbs, skeletal length asymmetries and proximo-distal disproportion are unrelated to spinal curve severity. Overall, these observations raise questions about mechanisms that determine skeletal bilateral symmetry of vertebrates in health and disorder, and whether such mechanisms are involved in the cause of this disease. We investigated upper arm length (UAL) asymmetries in two groups of right-handed girls aged 11–18 years, with right thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (RT-AIS, n=98) from preoperative and screening referrals (mean Cobb angle 45°) and healthy controls (n=240).

Methods

Right and left UAL were measured with a Harpenden anthropometer of the Holtain equipment, by one of four observers (RGB, AAC, RKP, FJP). UAL asymmetry was calculated as UAL difference, right minus left, in mm. Repeatability of the measurements was assessed by technical error of the measurement (TEM) and coefficient of reliability (R).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 7 - 7
1 Apr 2012
Kerr H Dabke H Collins I Grevitt M
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Compare the prevalence of psychological distress in claustrophobic patients compared with a non-affected group, together with determination of presenting disability and overall intervention rates.

Retrospective case notes review.

33 patients (13 males) all requiring MRI scan under sedation for claustrophobia (Group 1) were compared with an age and sex matched cohort that had MRI without sedation (Group 2). Both groups were drawn from the same chronic back clinic. Average age in both groups was 54 years (range 27-79 years). Both groups had standard conservative therapy, together with psychometric evaluation.

Primary: Zung Depression Index (ZDI), Modified Somatic Perception Questionnaire (MSPQ). Secondary: Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), intervention rates (surgery, injections and physiotherapy sessions)

Comparison of means -

22 patients (66.7%) in Group 1 were discharged after their MRI with no intervention compared to 7 patients (21.2%) in Group 2.

Claustrophobic patients with back pain showed higher levels of depression than non-claustrophobic patients, with a greater prevalence of psychological distress. Disability however was the same. The majority of claustrophobic patients had no intervention, with a lower rate than their non-claustrophobic peers. Claustrophobia is a proxy for psychological distress and should be considered in the overall evaluation of chronic back patients.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 74 - 74
1 Apr 2012
Sundaram R Schratt W Hegarty J Whynes D Grevitt M
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To determine the cost-effectiveness of Lumbar Total Disc Replacement (LTDR) with circumferential spinal fusion surgery.

Cost utility analysis.

We prospectively reviewed a cohort of 32 consecutive patients who underwent LTDR between 2004 and 2008 with a mean follow-up for 3.75 years. Identical data was compared to a similar group of patients (n=37) who underwent fusion in our institution.

Oswestry Disability Index, visual analogue scale, quality of life (SF-36) and NHS resource use. Cost-effectiveness was measured by the incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained. QALY gains were estimated from SF-36 data using standard algorithms.

There was no significant intergroup difference in the ODI, VAS and SF-36 pre and post-op. Both treatments produced statistically significant and equivalent improvements in mean health state utility at the 24-month follow-up (0.078 for LTDR, 0.087 for fusion). Costs were significantly lower with LTDR than with fusion due to a shorter mean procedure time (193.6 vs 377.4 minutes) and shorter length of stay (5.8 vs 7 days). The mean cost difference was £2,878 per patient. At 2 years, the cost per QALY gain of the lower-cost option (LTDR) was £48,892 although the cost effectiveness ratio would fall to below £30,000 if it is assumed that the patient benefits of LTDR last for at least 4 years.

Both treatments led to significant improvements in patient outcomes which were sustained for at least 24 months. Costs were lower with LTDR which is effective and a more cost-effective alternative.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 12 - 12
1 Apr 2012
Stamuli E Grevitt M Freeman B Posnett J Claxton K Righetti C
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To evaluate the cost-effectiveness IDET relative to circumferential lumbar fusion with femoral ring allograft (FRA).

Cost-effectiveness analysis

Patient-level data were available for patients with discogenic low back pain treated with FRA (n=37) in a randomized trial of FRA vs. titanium cage, and for patients recruited to a separate study evaluating the use of IDET (n=85). Patients were followed-up for 24 months.

Oswestry Disability Index, visual analogue scale, quality of life (SF-36), radiographic evaluations, and NHS resource use. Cost-effectiveness was measured by the incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained.

Both treatments produced statistically significant improvements in pain, disability and quality of life at the 24-month follow-up. Costs were significantly lower with IDET due to a shorter mean procedure time (377.4 minutes vs. 49.9 minutes) and length of stay (7 days vs. 1.2 days). The mean incremental cost of IDET was -£3,713 per patient; the mean incremental QALY gain was 0.03. At a threshold of £20,000 per QALY the probability that IDET is cost-effective is 1, and the net health benefit is 0.21 QALY per patient treated.

Both treatments led to significant improvements in patient outcomes which were sustained for at least 24 months. Costs were lower with IDET, and for appropriate patients IDET is an effective and cost-effective treatment alternative.

Ethics approval: Ethics committee COREC

This cost-effectiveness analysis was carried out by the York Health Economics Consortium at the University of York, and was funded by Smith & Nephew. Smith & Nephew had no financial or other involvement in the collection or analysis of the data on which the CEA is based.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 4 - 4
1 Apr 2012
Chinwalla F Grevitt M Leung Y
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Determine the detection rate of modern spinal implants using the current technology.

There is a paucity of data regarding detection rates of modern spinal implants using modern walk-through pulsed archway metal detectors (AMDs). No published reports compare detection capability with hand-held metal detectors (HHMDs).

ex-vivo & in-vivo comparison of detection rates using AMD & HHMD (set to maximum DoT sensitivities), in patients of varying Body Mass Index (BMI), implants, implant mass/density and alloys.

40 patients with: lumbar disc replacement (CoCr) (n=8), cervical disc replacement (CoCr) (1), posterior deformity instrumentation (17), anterior deformity instrumentation (2), anterior reconstruction (2), PLIF (6), interspinous distraction device (1), anterior cervical plate (2) ALIF (1), All implants were titanium unless indicated. Mean metal mass was 98g (range 6g-222g).

The AMD did not detect any instrumentation individually or in combination up to a titanium mass totalling 215g. The HHMD detected all instrumentation at a distance of 5cm; with the minimum mass being 2g

No implants were detected in patients by the AMD. The HHMD did not detect any anterior lumbar or thoracic surgical implants. It detected anterior cervical implants. The HHMD detected all posterior surgical implants. There was no significant relationship between detection, BMI, total metal mass, and metal density/segment.

AMD detectors do not detect modern spinal implants. HHMD detect all modern posterior spinal implants; this has implications for patient documentation.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 8 - 8
1 Apr 2012
Bowyer K Grevitt M
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Comparison of efficacy of multi-modality spinal cord monitoring [SCM] (SSEP & MEP) in surgery of paediatric deformity using two classification systems I (traditional) vs. II (modified).

SSEP SCM has low sensitivity in a normal spinal cord; this is only marginally improved with additional MEP monitoring. Traditional definitions of a ‘false’ positive' test ignores anaesthetic & surgical interventions following notification of altered SCM signals.

Retrospective, paediatric cohort.

232 patients; mean age 14 years (26% males). 68% idiopathic scoliosis; 62% posterior surgery.

Primary: Post-operative neurologic deficit. Secondary: significant (>50%↓ amplitude) SSEP or any MEP loss.

PPV- Positive predictive value, NPV- Negative predictive value; LR+ve- Positive likelihood ratio, LR-ve Negative likelihood ratio; N/C – Not calculable

Efficacy of SCM is determined by definitions of ‘false positive’. System II classification was more efficacious and reflects current surgical practice.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 6 - 6
1 Apr 2012
Rushton P Grevitt M Sell P
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Comparison of clinical, radiological & functional outcomes of corrective surgery for right thoracic AIS curves.

There is a paucity of data relating functional outcomes to the radiological and surface measurement results of either posterior or anterior surgery for right thoracic AIS.

Prospective, cohort study, mean follow up 35 months (range 9-115)

38 patients (6 males); 22 Lenke 2 posterior, 16 Lenke 1 anterior.

Primary= rib hump, radiological (frontal Cobb correction, apical vertebral translation AVT, sagittal profile), Modified SRS Outcomes Instrument (MSRSI). Secondary= estimated blood loss (EBL), operative time, complications

No significant difference at P<0.005 with student t-test unless indicated

Rib Hump: 16° posterior 17 ° anterior, corrected to 8 ° (50%) and 6 ° (60%) respectively.

Thoracic Cobb: 70° posterior 61 ° anterior, corrected to 27° (61%) and 22° (64%) respectively. No difference in preoperative curve flexibility or fulcrum bending correction index. Thoracic AVT 55% correction posterior, 70% anterior, Lumbar Cobb 59% correction posterior, 52% anterior. Thoracic kyphosis significantly reduced in posterior surgery (35 ° to 20 °) and significantly increased with anterior surgery (21° to 30°). Lumbar lordosis significantly reduced with posterior surgery (88° to 47°), no significant change with anterior surgery (60° to 53°).

MSRSI; Domain scores similar preoperatively between groups. Difference scores (postop-preop), higher scores=better. Pain: +1.21 posterior +0.73 anterior. Self image: +1.02 posterior +0.71 anterior. Function/activity: +0.28 posterior +0.21 anterior. Mental health: +0.66 posterior +0.45 anterior.

No significant difference in complication rate, operative time or estimated blood loss

Similar cohorts of AIS patients treated by either anterior or posterior surgery have no significant differences in radiological or functional outcomes. The different final sagittal profile in both groups did not affect the MSRSI outcomes. Both procedures deliver significant health gains as measured by the MSRSI.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 5 - 5
1 Apr 2012
Rushton P Grevitt M Sell P
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To determine the factors that influences the clinical outcomes in surgical correction of thoracic AIS.

There are conflicting data regarding the effects of back shape and radiologic parameters on the self-reported outcomes of surgery in AIS.

Prospective, cohort study; mean follow-up 29 months (range 9-88)

30 patients (5 males);

Rib hump 17 ° corrected to 7 °.

Thoracic Cobb 66 ° corrected to 25 ° (63%). Lumbar Cobb 42 ° corrected to 17°. Thoracic apical vertebral translation (AVT) 48mm corrected to 18mm. Lumbar AVT 34mm corrected to 19mm. Thoracic kyphosis 29° preoperatively 23° postoperatively. Lumbo-sacral lordosis 57° preoperatively 49° postoperatively

Modified SRS Outcomes Instrument (MSRSI) filled out pre-operatively and at final follow up.

Primary= rib hump, radiological (frontal Cobb correction, lumbar & thoracic AVT, sagittal profile), Modified SRS Outcomes Instrument (MSRSI) domain scores.

The magnitude of the rib hump had a significant association with pain:

Rib hump vs. MSRSI pain r= -0.55 p<0.000

Similar correlations existed between rib hump and self-image (r=-0.64, p<0.0000), thoracic Cobb angle with pain (r=-0.48 p<0.0001) and self-image (r= -0.57, P<0.0000). The postoperative thoracic Cobb angle, and percentage thoracic Cobb correction had significant correlations with self-image (r=-0.55 p=0.003 & r=0.54 p0.004 respectively).

The size of the rib hump has a significant impact on pain & self-image. These domains are also significantly influenced by the residual thoracic Cobb angle and overall scoliosis correction.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1034 - 1037
1 Sep 2000
Kothari P Freeman B Grevitt M Kerslake R

Injury to the spinal cord without radiological abnormality often occurs in the skeletally immature cervical and thoracic spine. We describe four adult patients with this diagnosis involving the cervical spine with resultant quadriparesis. The relevant literature is reviewed. The implications for initial management of the injury, the role of MRI and the need for a high index of suspicion are highlighted.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 1 | Pages 48 - 52
1 Jan 1997
Grevitt M Khazim R Webb J Mulholland R Shepperd J

The Short Form-36 (SF-36) health questionnaire has been put forward as a general measure of outcome in health care and has been evaluated in several recent studies in the UK. We report its use in three groups of patients after spinal operations and have compared it with the Oswestry and Low Back Pain disability scales.

There was a significant correlation between all variables of the SF-36 and the low-back scores. The mental-health items had the weakest correlation. Our study shows that the SF-36 questionnaire is valid and has internal consistency when applied to these patients.