Maintaining posterior stability in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may be achieved by using a posterior stabilized TKA, retaining and balancing the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) using a traditional cruciate-retaining design (CR), or by increasing the sagittal plane conformity of the tibial insert. In the latter case, stability is achieved by the addition of an anterior buildup on the tibial polyethylene creating the so-called “anterior stabilized” (AS) design. We hypothesized that using an AS tibial insert would provide similar function and survivorship as compared to using a more traditional CR bearing when the PCL is either recessed or balanced. Between 2004 and 2016, 1,731 modular CR TKAs were implanted in 1,509 patients using the same CR TKA design. The diagnosis was osteoarthritis in 98%. 58% of patients were female. Average age of 64.9 years. Within this group, 868 TKAs (50.1%) had a standard CR tibial bearing (3-degree posterior slope and no posterior lip) implanted (CR-S). 480 TKAs (27.8%) had a lipped CR modular tibial bearing (2.5 mm elevated posterior lip) implanted (CR-L). Starting in 2013, 383 TKAs (22.1%) were implanted with an AS modular tibial bearing (9–11 mm anterior lip and a 5 mm posterior lip). If the PCL was considered non-functional or absent, an AS bearing was placed. If the PCL was considered functional, a standard bearing or lipped bearing was used. Clinical and radiographic analysis was performed according to the Knee Society (KS) grading system. The most recent clinical and radiographic evaluation was used for post-operative analysis. The average follow-up in the entire cohort of TKAs was 5.5 years (range 2 to 14.3 years). Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to determine prosthesis survivorship with failure defined as aseptic loosening of the prosthesis (with or without revision) or tibial insert exchange.Introduction
Methods
Dual-mobility (DM) articulations may be useful for patients at increased risk for instability in primary and revision THA. While DM articulations are becoming increasingly popular, its routine use in primary THA is more uncertain. Even less is known about femoral head penetration in DM designs manufactured with highly cross-linked polyethylene infused with Vitamin E (E-HXLPE). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the early clinical results and femoral head penetration rates of primary THA implanted with DM E-HXLPE. Between 2012 and 2017, 105 primary DM THAs were performed using a one-piece acetabular shell, 28mm ceramic head, coupled with an E-HXLPE outer bearing via a standard posterior approach. Three patients refused follow-up after six months. 102 hips (92 patients) were available for review. The diagnosis was 99% OA. Average age was 65.7 years (33–90 years). 56% of patients were female. The most common femoral head size was 50mm (range, 44–60mm). The average thickness of the E-HXLPE outer bearing was 22.7mm (range, 16–32mm). Patients were followed at two months (baseline radiograph), six months, one, three, five, and seven years. Harris hip scores (HHS), UCLA activity score, and femoral head penetration (Martell method) were obtained at each visit beyond two months. Follow-up averaged 3 years (range, 1–7 years).Introduction
Methods
The strain on clinic and surgeon resources resulting
from a rise in demand for total knee replacement (TKR) requires reconsideration
of when and how often patients need to be seen for follow-up. Surgeons
will otherwise require increased paramedical staff or need to limit
the number of TKRs they undertake. We reviewed the outcome data
of 16 414 primary TKRs undertaken at our centre to determine the
time to re-operation for any reason and for specific failure mechanisms.
Peak risk years for failure were determined by comparing the conditional
probability of failure, the number of failures divided by the total
number of TKRs cases, for each year. The median times to failure
for the most common failure mechanisms were 4.9 years (interquartile
range (IQR) 1.7 to 10.7) for femoral and tibial loosening, 1.9 years
(IQR 0.8 to 3.9) for infection, 3.1 years (IQR 1.6 to 5.5) for tibial
collapse and 5.6 years (IQR 3.4 to 9.3) for instability. The median
time to failure for all revisions was 3.3 years (IQR 1.2 to 8.5),
with an overall revision rate of 1.7% (n = 282). Results from our
patient population suggest that patients be seen for follow-up at
six months, one year, three years, eight years, 12 years, and every
five years thereafter. Patients with higher pain in the early post-operative
period or high body mass index (≥ 41 kg/m2) should be
monitored more closely. Cite this article:
The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of posterior
cruciate ligament (PCL) retention, PCL recession, and PCL excision
during cruciate-retaining total knee replacement. A total of 3018 anatomic graduated component total knee replacements
were examined; 1846 of these retained the PCL, 455 PCLs were partially
recessed, and in 717 the PCL was completely excised from the back
of the tibia.Objectives
Methods
We investigated the long-term changes in the Harris Hip and Knee Society scores (HSS and KSS) to determine whether they result from overall functional decline rather than actual changes in the condition of the prosthesis. The HHS for 106 total hip arthroplasties with a minimum follow-up of ten years, no medical complications after operation and no evidence of radiological loosening, and the KSS for 264 total knee arthroplasties with a minimum follow-up of 12 years and no medical complications after operation or signs of radiographical loosening were evaluated. There were statistically significant drops in the functional scoring components of the joint evaluation systems despite no loosening of the prostheses or other significant medical complications. The HHS declined at an average of 0.67 points per year from between three and ten years after operation (p <
0.0001). Contributing to this were deterioration in gait and limp (p <
0.0004), the use of support aids (p <
0.0001), the distance walked (p <
0.0001) and the ability to climb stairs (p <
0.0455). The functional component of the KSS declined significantly at an average 0.88 points per year betwen the third and 12th years (p <
0.0001). There were significant declines in every component of the functional score including the distance walked (p <
0.0001), the ability to climb stairs (p <
0.0001) and the use of support aids (p <
0.0001). The knee score component of the KSS did not decline significantly (p <
0.9750). The combination of functional and pain scores within the HHS system leads to an inaccurate decline in the entire score. The decline of HHS and Knee Society functional scores in total joint arthroplasties, in the absence of implant-related problems, suggests that deterioration in the functional capacity of ageing patients is an important factor in longitudinal studies using these scoring systems.
Interest in unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) for the treatment of medial compartment osteoarthritis has increased in recent years with apparent improvement in the long-term results. This is a result of improved surgical technique, patient selection, and implant design. In an effort further to improve patient selection we analysed the relationship between the pre-operative alignment of the knee and the anatomical findings at the time of surgery. We compared these findings with the indications for UKA. From 4021 total knee arthroplasties we compared intra-operative observations with the pre-operative clinical data in order to identify knees with isolated, medial, compartment changes, which would have been ideal candidates for UKA. We found that only 247 of the knees (6.1%) met anatomical qualifications for isolated, medial, unicompartmental osteoarthritis, and of these, only 168 (4.3%) met clinical standards ideal for UKA. Pre-operative alignment showed a significant relationship with patterns of disease. Logistic regression revealed a relationship between pre-operative alignment and intra-operative findings resembling a Gaussian distribution. Patients with a pre-operative varus alignment of 7° were slightly more likely to be selected for UKA. But the further the anatomical alignment in either direction varies from 7° of varus, the more unlikely it is for the knee to exhibit a disease pattern of isolated, medial, unicompartmental osteoarthritis.
We have made a retrospective review of 185 cemented Charnley total hip arthroplasties performed between 1970 and 1974 to determine the relationships between radiological variables and failure of the femoral and acetabular components. We measured the acetabular wear, the orientation of the cup, the thickness and consistency of acetabular and femoral cement mantles, radiolucency and femoral alignment. The mean follow-up was for 11.7 years. Femoral loosening was demonstrable radiologically in 15 hips (8.1%), ten (5.4%) of which were revised during the period of follow-up. Only when the first postoperative radiograph showed a thin cement mantle in Gruen zone 5 was there a significant association with failure of the femoral component. There were 12 loose acetabular components (6.5%), nine (4.8%) of which were revised. When the initial radiograph after operation showed radiolucency in DeLee and Charnley zone 1, the incidence of acetabular loosening was 28.21%. If such radiolucency was not present, the incidence of acetabular loosening was only 0.69%. Our findings emphasise the importance of careful cementing.
The postoperative analgesic effects of intra-articular injections of bupivacaine and/or morphine were examined prospectively in 437 patients who had total knee replacement for osteoarthritis. They were divided randomly into four groups. Group I received 10 mg of morphine (1 ml) and 9 ml of saline, group II received 10 ml of bupivacaine (2.5 mg/ml), group III received 10 ml of saline, and group IV received 10 mg of morphine (1 ml) and 9 ml of bupivacaine (2.5 mg/ml). All analgesics administered in the first 24 hours after operation were recorded. The patients rated their pain on the McGill-Melzack scale at 1, 6, 12 and 24 hours. No significant differences were found between any of the groups in the use of Demoral and/or Toradol in 24 hours, the length of stay in hospital or the pain rating at 1, 6, 12 or 24 hours. Patients in groups I and IV, whose injections included morphine, used significantly more morphine in the first 24 postoperative hours than did groups II or III.