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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 5 | Pages 831 - 833
1 Sep 1994
Jacobsson S Djerf K Ivarsson I Wahlstrom O

We studied the effect of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs on the fixation of hydroxyapatite-coated implants. Cylindrical plugs of pure titanium, coated with hydroxyapatite (HA), were inserted into both femora of 10 adult rabbits, 5 of which received 7 daily doses of 30 mg diclofenac. Three weeks after implantation the interface strengths were measured by the pull-out test. The mean peak force for the diclofenac-treated group was 290 +/- 57 N compared with 369 +/- 37 N for the control group (p < 0.025). We conclude that the inhibitory effect of diclofenac on bone repair is not neutralised by HA-coating of an implant


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 3 | Pages 340 - 344
1 Apr 2000
Jakob M Rikli DA Regazzoni P

Stable fixation of fractures of the distal radius can be achieved by using two 2.0 mm titanium plates placed on the radial and intermediate columns angled 50° to 70° apart. We describe our results with this method in a prospective series of 74 fractures (58 severely comminuted) in 73 consecutive patients. Early postoperative mobilisation was possible in all except four wrists. All of the 73 patients, except two with other injuries, returned to work and daily activities with no limitations. The anatomical results were excellent or good in 72 patients and fair in one. Our discussion includes details of important technical considerations based on an analysis of the specific complications which were seen early in the series


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 3 | Pages 344 - 349
1 Apr 2004
McCombe P Williams SA

We selected randomly a consecutive series of 162 patients requiring hip replacement to receive either a cementless, hemispherical, modular, titanium acetabular cup or a cemented, all-polyethylene cup. These replacements were performed by two surgeons in four general hospitals. The same surgical technique was used and a 26 mm metal-head femoral component was used in every case. After exclusions, 115 hips were studied for differences in rates of wear and osteolysis. The mean clinical follow-up was eight years and the mean radiological follow-up, 6.5 years. The cementless cups wore at a mean rate of 0.15 mm per year and the cemented cups at 0.07 mm per year. This difference was significant (p < 0.0001). Our findings in this mid-term study suggest that cementless cups wear more than cemented cups


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 4 | Pages 588 - 592
1 Jul 1996
Rikli DA Regazzoni P

Fractures of the distal end of the radius should be treated on the same principles as other fractures involving joints. Displaced articular fractures require open reduction to allow anatomical reconstruction of both the radiocarpal and the radio-ulnar joints. For extra-articular fractures with severe comminution and shortening this enables the radial length to be re-established achieving radio-ulnar congruency. Stable internal fixation can be achieved with two 2.0 AO titanium plates placed on each of the ‘lateral’ and the ‘intermediate’ columns of the wrist at an angle of 50° to 70°. This gives good stability despite the tiny dimensions of the plates, and allows early function. We report a series of 20 fractures treated by this method of internal fixation with satisfactory results in all


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 3 | Pages 376 - 382
1 Mar 2020
Pesenti S Lafage R Henry B Kim HJ Bolzinger M Elysée J Cunningham M Choufani E Lafage V Blanco J Jouve J Widmann R

Aims

To compare the rates of sagittal and coronal correction for all-pedicle screw instrumentation and hybrid instrumentation using sublaminar bands in the treatment of thoracic adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS).

Methods

We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 124 patients who had undergone surgery in two centres for the correction of Lenke 1 or 2 AIS. Radiological evaluation was carried out preoperatively, in the early postoperative phase, and at two-year follow-up. Parameters measured included coronal Cobb angles and thoracic kyphosis. Postoperative alignment was compared after matching the cohorts by preoperative coronal Cobb angle, thoracic kyphosis, lumbar lordosis, and pelvic incidence.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 1 | Pages 60 - 67
1 Jan 1994
Shanbhag A Jacobs J Glant T Gilbert J Black J Galante J

Interfacial membranes collected at revision from 11 failed uncemented Ti-alloy total hip replacements were examined. Particles in the membranes were characterised by electron microscopy, microchemical spectroscopy and particle size analysis. Most were polyethylene and had a mean size of 0.53 micron +/- 0.3. They were similar to the particles seen in the base resin used in the manufacture of the acetabular implants. Relatively few titanium particles were seen. Fragments of bone, stainless steel and silicate were found in small amounts. Most of the polyethylene particles were too small to be seen by light microscopy. Electron microscopy and spectroscopic techniques are required to provide an accurate description of this debris


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 2 | Pages 251 - 256
1 Mar 1992
Duparc J Massin P

We implanted 203 smooth-stemmed femoral components before January 1988. The femoral component used was anatomically shaped, fluted and made of titanium. Thirty-two hips were revised due to mid-thigh pain, and the femoral implant was found to be loose in all. In the 157 patients with a two-year follow-up, the Merle d'Aubigne and pain scores for completely cementless arthroplasties were similar to those for hybrid prostheses (cemented acetabular cup and cementless femoral stem). Of the 145 cases with two-year radiographic follow-up, 59 had extensive radiolucencies and 22 were unstable. The five-year cumulative survival rate was 77%. Implantation of this stem should be restricted to patients in whom cement fixation is contra-indicated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 5 | Pages 824 - 830
1 Sep 1994
Lintner F Bohm G Huber M Scholz R

We studied the fixation of a cementless titanium femoral prosthesis partially coated with hydroxyapatite ceramic (HAC) 10.4 months after implantation. Histomorphological investigation showed extensive new bone formation between the HAC coating and the bone bed; morphometry showed bone contact indices of up to 91.60%. There were a number of resorption lacunae on the HAC coat with depths of up to 76.6 microns and widths of up to 453 microns. Our results confirmed that considerable bone remodelling had taken place and that the apatite-coated prosthesis had united with bone despite the lack of appreciable immediate press-fit. Hydroxyapatite particles which had been released did not appear to show any negative effects on the stability of the implant


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 4 | Pages 580 - 581
1 Jul 1991
Ritter M Eizember L Keating E Faris P

We used the stainless steel cable grip system described by Dall and Miles in 1983 to fix trochanters in 40 hips after total arthroplasty with trochanteric osteotomy. The cable broke in 32.5% of the hips; the trochanter failed to unite in 37.5%. Significantly more cables broke when placed inside the femoral canal than when the cable was placed round the femoral shaft (58% as against 9.5%, difference p less than 0.01). The high incidence of breakage may have resulted from contact between the stainless steel cable and the titanium prosthesis, from the acute angulation, or because of the lower fatigue strength of stainless steel. Better results have been obtained using cables with a higher fatigue strength, passed outside the proximal femur


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 1 | Pages 17 - 22
1 Jan 1988
Geesink R de Groot K Klein C

Implants of solid sintered hydroxyapatite form very tight bonds with living bone, but are susceptible to fatigue failure. This problem can be overcome by using plasma-sprayed apatite coatings on titanium implants. A very strong bond is formed between bone and this composite material; this was studied in canine bone with plug implants, avoiding any mechanical retention. Mechanical testing showed an interface shear strength at six weeks of 49 MPa with a maximum of 64 MPa after six months. There was histological evidence of direct bonding between the apatite coating and living bone while uncoated control plugs were easily extracted. The results indicate that apatite-coated implants can form a chemical fixation with a strength comparable to that of cortical bone itself. This fixation is far stronger than that provided by current cemented or uncemented fixation techniques


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 4 | Pages 444 - 450
1 Nov 1975
Rae T

This is part of a larger study designed to investigate the action of particulate metals of orthopaedic interest on tissues. Damaging effects were determined by cytological examination and the assay of two enzymes. Lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) if released into the supernatant indicates a damaged cell membrane; decreased intracellular levels of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) indicates a lowered phagocytic capacity of the cells. Soluble and wear products around implanted prostheses could facilitate late infections by impairing local reactions to bacteria. Particulate cobalt, nickel and cobalt-chromium alloy were found to damage the cells and to cause LDH release. G6PD was found to have a lower activity in the cells exposed to these materials. In contrast, titanium, chromium and molybdenum were well tolerated by macrophages and had no effect on the distribution and activity of either enzyme. The solubility of these metals in the culture medium was also measured


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 1 | Pages 139 - 143
1 Jan 2001
Fini M Giavaresi G Torricelli P Krajewski A Ravaglioli A Belmonte MM Biagini G Giardino R

We implanted nails made of titanium (Ti6Al4V) and of two types of glass ceramic material (RKKP and AP40) into healthy and osteopenic rats. After two months, a histomorphometric analysis was performed and the affinity index calculated. In addition, osteoblasts from normal and osteopenic bone were cultured and the biomaterials were evaluated in vitro. In normal bone the rate of osseointegration was similar for all materials tested (p > 0.5) while in osteopenic bone AP40 did not osseointegrate (p > 0.0005). In vitro, no differences were observed for all biomaterials when cultured in normal bone-derived cells whereas in osteopenic-bone-derived cells there was a significant difference in some of the tested parameters when using AP40. Our findings suggest that osteopenic models may be used in vivo in the preclinical evaluation of orthopaedic biomaterials. We suggest that primary cell cultures from pathological models could be used as an experimental model in vitro


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 4 | Pages 598 - 606
1 May 2004
Daley B Doherty AT Fairman B Case CP

Wear debris was extracted from 21 worn hip and knee replacements. Its mutagenic effects were tested on human cells in tissue culture using the micronucleus assay and fluorescent in situ hybridisation. The extracted wear debris increased the level of micronuclei in a linear dose-dependent manner but with a tenfold difference between samples. The concentration of titanium +/− vanadium and aluminium within the wear debris was linearly related both to the level of centromere-positive micronuclei in tissue culture, indicating an aneuploid event, and to the level of aneuploidy in vivo in peripheral blood lymphocytes. The concentration of cobalt and chromium +/− nickel and molybdenum in the wear debris correlated with the total index of micronuclei in tissue culture, both centromere-positive and centromere-negative i.e. both chromosomal breakage and aneuploidy events. The results show that wear debris can damage chromosomes in a dose-dependent manner which is specific to the type of metal. The results from studies in vitro correlate with those in vivo and suggest that the wear debris from a worn implant is at least partly responsible for the chromosomal damage which is seen in vivo


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1115 - 1121
1 Sep 2019
Takenaka S Makino T Sakai Y Kashii M Iwasaki M Yoshikawa H Kaito T

Aims

The aim of this study was to explore risk factors for complications associated with dural tear (DT), including the types of DT, and the intra- and postoperative management of DT.

Patients and Methods

Between 2012 and 2017, 12 171 patients with degenerative lumbar diseases underwent primary lumbar spine surgery. We investigated five categories of potential predictors: patient factors (sex, age, body mass index, and primary disease), surgical factors (surgical procedures, operative time, and estimated blood loss), types of DT (inaccessible for suturing/clipping and the presence of cauda equina/nerve root herniation), repair techniques (suturing, clipping, fibrin glue, polyethylene glycol (PEG) hydrogel, and polyglycolic acid sheet), and postoperative management (drainage duration). Postoperative complications were evaluated in terms of dural leak, prolonged bed rest, headache, nausea/vomiting, delayed wound healing, postoperative neurological deficit, surgical site infection (SSI), and reoperation for DT. We performed multivariable regression analyses to evaluate the predictors of postoperative complications associated with DT.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 2 | Pages 261 - 267
1 Feb 2020
Tøndevold N Lastikka M Andersen T Gehrchen M Helenius I

Aims

It is uncertain whether instrumented spinal fixation in nonambulatory children with neuromuscular scoliosis should finish at L5 or be extended to the pelvis. Pelvic fixation has been shown to be associated with up to 30% complication rates, but is regarded by some as the standard for correction of deformity in these conditions. The incidence of failure when comparing the most caudal level of instrumentation, either L5 or the pelvis, using all-pedicle screw instrumentation has not previously been reported. In this retrospective study, we compared nonambulatory patients undergoing surgery at two centres: one that routinely instrumented to L5 and the other to the pelvis.

Methods

In all, 91 nonambulatory patients with neuromuscular scoliosis were included. All underwent surgery using bilateral, segmental, pedicle screw instrumentation. A total of 40 patients underwent fusion to L5 and 51 had their fixation extended to the pelvis. The two groups were assessed for differences in terms of clinical and radiological findings, as well as complications.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 4 | Pages 607 - 612
1 Jul 1991
Morrey B Adams R Bryan R

Fifty-three of 55 consecutive elbow replacements for post-traumatic arthritis were followed for a minimum of two years (mean 6.3, range 2 to 14.4). The patients presented difficult management problems, having undergone an average of two previous operations per joint; 22 joints had suffered prior complications; 18 had less than 50 degrees of flexion and six were flail. One of three versions of the Coonrad prosthesis was employed in all. During the follow-up period, 10 patients underwent 14 revision procedures for aseptic loosening; 38 elbows are currently without progressive radiolucent lines. In two patients an elbow had to be resected, one for deep infection and the other for bone resorption following a foreign-body reaction to titanium. The current design of the Coonrad prosthesis offers a reliable option for the treatment of post-traumatic arthritis but should be used only in carefully selected patients over the age of 60 years


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 7 | Pages 848 - 851
1 Jul 2019
Sautet P Parratte S Mékidèche T Abdel MP Flécher X Argenson J Ollivier M

Aims

The aims of this study were to compare the mean duration of antibiotic release and the mean zone of inhibition between vancomycin-loaded porous tantalum cylinders and antibiotic-loaded bone cement at intervals, and to evaluate potential intrinsic antimicrobial properties of tantalum in an in vitro medium environment against methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA).

Materials and Methods

Ten porous tantalum cylinders and ten cylinders of cement were used. The tantalum cylinders were impregnated with vancomycin, which was also added during preparation of the cylinders of cement. The cylinders were then placed on agar plates inoculated with MSSA. The diameter of the inhibition zone was measured each day, and the cylinders were transferred to a new inoculated plate. Inhibition zones were measured with a Vernier caliper and using an automated computed evaluation, and the intra- and interobserver reproducibility were measured. The mean inhibition zones between the two groups were compared with Wilcoxon’s test.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 3 | Pages 485 - 489
1 May 1998
Clatworthy MG Clark DI Gray DH Hardy AE

We performed a randomised, prospective trial to evaluate the use of unreamed titanium nails for femoral fractures. Of 48 patients with 50 femoral fractures 45 were followed to union; 23 with an unreamed and 22 with a reamed nail. The study was stopped early because of a high rate of implant failure. The fractures in the unreamed group were slower to unite (39.4 weeks) than those in the reamed group (28.5 weeks; p = 0.007). The time to union was over nine months in 57% of the unreamed group and in 18% of the reamed group. In the unreamed group 14 secondary procedures were required in ten patients to enhance healing compared with three in three patients in the reamed group. Six implants (13%) failed, three in each group. Four of these six fractures showed evidence of delayed union. To achieve quicker union and fewer implant failures we recommend the use of reamed nails of at least 12 mm in diameter for female patients and 13 mm in males


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 5 | Pages 849 - 856
1 Sep 1997
Wang W Ferguson DJP Quinn JMW Simpson AHRW Athanasou NA

Abundant implant-derived biomaterial wear particles are generated in aseptic loosening and are deposited in periprosthetic tissues in which they are phagocytosed by mononuclear and multinucleated macrophage-like cells. It has been stated that the multinucleated cells which contain wear particles are not bone-resorbing osteoclasts. To investigate the validity of this claim we isolated human osteoclasts from giant-cell tumours of bone and rat osteoclasts from long bones. These were cultured on glass coverslips and on cortical bone slices in the presence of particles of latex, PMMA and titanium. Osteoclast phagocytosis of these particle types was shown by light microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray analysis and SEM. Giant cells containing phagocytosed particles were seen to be associated with the formation of resorption lacunae. Osteoclasts containing particles were also calcitonin-receptor-positive and showed an inhibitory response to calcitonin. Our findings demonstrate that osteoclasts are capable of phagocytosing particles of a wide range of size, including particles of polymeric and metallic bio-materials found in periprosthetic tissues, and that after particle phagocytosis, they remain fully functional, hormone-responsive, bone-resorbing cells


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 3 | Pages 352 - 357
1 Apr 2000
Milošev L Antolič V Minovič A Cör A Herman S Pavlovčič V Campbell P

We describe three prostheses with cemented titanium-alloy stems and Al. 2. O. 3. ceramic femoral heads which had to be revised after a mean period of implantation of 78 months. In each case, the neck of the prosthesis had been so severely worn that the profile was elliptical rather than circular. There was severe metallosis of the periprosthetic tissues. Metal particles isolated from the tissues were approximately one nanometre in size and the ratios of titanium, aluminium and vanadium in the particles were the same as in the original alloy. Histologically, the high concentration of metal particles masked the presence of high-density polyethylene (HDP) debris, but again particles about one nanometre in size were isolated from the tissues. The severe necrobiosis and necrosis noted were consistent with other reports of the presence of extensive wear particles in periprosthetic tissues. Wear is presumed to have occurred as a result of mismatch between the shape or size of the taper cone and the femoral head, or to changes in the geometry of loading due to migration of the cup. To facilitate early intervention, patients with this design of prosthesis should be monitored radiologically