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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXIII | Pages 43 - 43
1 May 2012
Crawford S Ward H Wills R
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We report decreased clinical VTE rates following increased use of mechanical prophylaxis in elective kip and knee arthroplasty. Usage of intermittent pneumatic compression (IPC) increased due to the increased availability of pump machinery. Timing of IPC use also changed with IPC used intraoperatively on the unoperated limb and for a longer period postoperatively Clinical VTE rates are assessed for two years prior to the change in practice (1140 procedures) and two years afterwards (1285 procedures). There was no other change in practice (chemical thromboprophylaxis, anesthetic technique, use of compression stockings, usage of tourniquet or usage of cement) or in patient profile.

Overall clinical VTE rates during admission dropped from 2.98% to 0.62% (p<0.0001). This decrease was seen in both hips 1.77% to 0.2% (p=0.029) and knees 3.97% to 0.89% (p=0.0002). There was a decrease in both pulmonary emboli 1.14% to 0.16% (p=0.0043) and symptomatic DVT 1.84% TO 0.47% (p=0.0023). There was no change in the rate of post discharge VTE events recorded 1.07% (p=0.57), either for DVT or PE (P=0.74 for each).

We conclude that IPC with non-sequential calf compression is effective in reducing the rates of clinical in-hospital VTE after elective hip and knee arthroplasty.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 86-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 7 - 7
1 Jan 2004
Wills R Grimm M Markel D
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Initial fixation affects ingrowth of uncemented tibial components. Previous studies assessed initial fixation, however most used limited one-dimensional motion measurements. Therefore, a three-dimensional micro-motion and migration analysis was performed to compare initial fixation of four different tibial tray configurations: 1) Keeled component 2) Non-keeled component (post but no keel) 3) Keeled component with screws 4) Non-keeled component with screws.

Osteonics series 7 000 tibial trays (identical to Scorpio design) with and without standard keels were obtained. The 30 mm posts were left intact. The components were implanted without cement into twenty-four fresh-frozen cadaveric tibiae. Specimens were loaded through matched femoral components via two separate loading conditions: 1) sinusoidal medial load from 200 to 2 200 N at 0.5 Hz and 2) sinusoidal torsion load from −5 Nm to +5 Nm at 0.5 Hz with constant 1 200 N axial load. Motion data were collected from reference cubes and transducers rigidly attached to the trays, during 3 000 cycles of loading. Rigid-body mechanics were used to calculate the motion of a wire-frame computer model. Comparisons were made of micro-motion and migration magnitudes.

A keel did not significantly decrease micromotion or migration under medial or torsion loading compared to a post alone (p=1.04). The addition of four cancellous screws decreased motion (p< .05) regardless of the presence of a keel under medial loading. No significant differences were noted under torsional load for any tray configuration.

A keel did not enhance initial fixation compared to screws or a post alone. Screws enhanced fixation under axial offset loading in all constructs. Screw fixation did not affect motion under torsion loads perhaps due to the limited magnitude of torque transmitted across the unconstrained femoral-tibial articulation. Based on these data, initial fixation of uncemented tibial implants should include screw fixation to counter the effects of offset axial loads.