Clinical, haematological or economic benefits of post-operative blood
Bactericidal levels of antibiotics are difficult
to achieve in infected total joint arthroplasty when intravenous antibiotics
or antibiotic-loaded cement spacers are used, but intra-articular
(IA) delivery of antibiotics has been effective in several studies.
This paper describes a protocol for IA delivery of antibiotics in
infected knee arthroplasty, and summarises the results of a pharmacokinetic
study and two clinical follow-up studies of especially difficult
groups: methicillin-resistant Cite this article:
Hyaline articular cartilage has been known to
be a troublesome tissue to repair once damaged. Since the introduction
of autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) in 1994, a renewed
interest in the field of cartilage repair with new repair techniques
and the hope for products that are regenerative have blossomed.
This article reviews the basic science structure and function of
articular cartilage, and techniques that are presently available
to effect repair and their expected outcomes.
We have prospectively studied the outcome of infections associated with implants which were retained and treated using a standardised antimicrobial protocol. Over a period of four years, we studied 24 consecutive patients who had symptoms of infection for less than one year, a stable implant, no sinus tract and a known pathogen which was susceptible to recommended antimicrobial agents. The infections involved hip prostheses (14), knee prostheses (5), an internal fixation device (4), and an ankle prosthesis (1). Twenty patients had a successful outcome at a median follow-up of 3.7 years (1.8 to 4.7); four had failure of the implant after a median follow-up of 1.2 years (0.3 to 2.5). The probability of survival without failure of treatment was 96% at one year (95% confidence interval (CI) 88 to 100), 92% at two years (95% CI 80 to 100) and 86% at three years (95% CI 72 to 100). Patients with a short-term infection but with a stable implant, no sinus tract and a known pathogen may be successfully treated by retention of the implant and the use of a standardised regimen of antimicrobial treatment.
Ten patients, who were unsuitable for limb lengthening over an intramedullary nail, underwent lengthening with a submuscular locking plate. Their mean age at operation was 18.5 years (11 to 40). After fixing a locking plate submuscularly on the proximal segment, an external fixator was applied to lengthen the bone after corticotomy. Lengthening was at 1 mm/day and on reaching the target length, three or four screws were placed in the plate in the distal segment and the external fixator was removed. All patients achieved the pre-operative target length at a mean of 4.0 cm (3.2 to 5.5). The mean duration of external fixation was 61.6 days (45 to 113) and the mean external fixation index was 15.1 days/cm (13.2 to 20.5), which was less than one-third of the mean healing index (48 days/cm (41.3 to 55). There were only minor complications. Lengthening with a submuscular locking plate can successfully permit early removal of the fixator with fewer complications and is a useful alternative in children or when nailing is difficult.