The clinical and radiological results of 50 consecutive acetabular reconstructions in 48 patients using impaction grafting have been retrospectively reviewed. A 1:1 mixture of frozen, ground irradiated bone graft and Apapore 60, a synthetic bone graft substitute, was used in all cases. There were 13 complex primary and 37 revision procedures with a mean follow-up of five years (3.4 to 7.6). The clinical survival rate was 100%, with improvements in the mean Harris Hip Scores for pain and function. Radiologically, 30 acetabular grafts showed evidence of incorporation, ten had radiolucent lines and two acetabular components migrated initially before stabilising. Acetabular reconstruction in both primary and revision surgery using a 1:1 mixture of frozen, ground, irriadiated bone and Apapore 60 appears to be a reliable method of managing acetabular defects. Longer follow-up will be required to establish whether this technique is as effective as using fresh-frozen allograft.
We report the results of 79 patients (81 hips)
who underwent impaction grafting at revision hip replacement using the
Exeter femoral stem. Their mean age was 64 years (31 to 83). According
to the Endoklinik classification, 20 hips had a type 2 bone defect,
40 had type 3, and 21 had type 4. The mean follow-up for unrevised
stems was 10.4 years (5 to 17). There were 12 re-operations due to intra- and post-operative
fractures, infection (one hip) and aseptic loosening (one hip).
All re-operations affected type 3 (6 hips) and 4 (6 hips) bone defects.
The survival rate for re-operation for any cause was 100% for type
2, 81.2% (95% confidence interval (CI) 67.1 to 95.3) for type 3,
and 70.8% (95% CI 51.1 to 90.5) for type 4 defects at 14 years.
The survival rate with further revision for aseptic loosening as
the end point was 98.6% (95% CI 95.8 to 100). The final clinical
score was higher for patients with type 2 bone defects than type
4 regarding pain, function and range of movement. Limp was most
frequent in the type 4 group (p <
0.001). The mean subsidence
of the stem was 2.3 mm ( The impacted bone grafting technique has good clinical results
in femoral revision. However, major bone defects affect clinical
outcome and also result in more operative complications.
We report a 12- to 15-year implant survival assessment
of a prospective single-surgeon series of Birmingham Hip Resurfacings
(BHRs). The earliest 1000 consecutive BHRs including 288 women (335
hips) and 598 men (665 hips) of all ages and diagnoses with no exclusions
were prospectively followed-up with postal questionnaires, of whom
the first 402 BHRs (350 patients) also had clinical and radiological
review. Mean follow-up was 13.7 years (12.3 to 15.3). In total, 59 patients
(68 hips) died 0.7 to 12.6 years following surgery from unrelated
causes. There were 38 revisions, 0.1 to 13.9 years (median 8.7)
following operation, including 17 femoral failures (1.7%) and seven
each of infections, soft-tissue reactions and other causes. With
revision for any reason as the end-point Kaplan–Meier survival analysis
showed 97.4% (95% confidence interval (CI) 96.9 to 97.9) and 95.8%
(95% CI 95.1 to 96.5) survival at ten and 15 years, respectively.
Radiological assessment showed 11 (3.5%) femoral and 13 (4.1%) acetabular
radiolucencies which were not deemed failures and one radiological
femoral failure (0.3%). Our study shows that the performance of the BHR continues to
be good at 12- to 15-year follow-up. Men have better implant survival
(98.0%; 95% CI 97.4 to 98.6) at 15 years than women (91.5%; 95%
CI 89.8 to 93.2), and women <
60 years (90.5%; 95% CI 88.3 to
92.7) fare worse than others. Hip dysplasia and osteonecrosis are
risk factors for failure. Patients under 50 years with osteoarthritis
fare best (99.4%; 95% CI 98.8 to 100 survival at 15 years), with
no failures in men in this group. Cite this article:
We reviewed the evidence for hip surveillance in children with cerebral palsy from the published literature. Publications were identified using the Cochrane controlled trials register, the MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL databases and by hand searching key journals and their references. Studies were included if they reported the frequency, associated risk factors or surveillance measures undertaken to identify subluxation or dislocation of the hip in children with cerebral palsy. Assessment of the quality of the methodology was undertaken independently by two researchers. Four studies described the natural history, incidence and risk factors for dislocation of the hip. Two reported their surveillance results. Approximately 60% of children who were not walking by five years of age were likely to develop subluxation of the hip, with the greatest risk in those with severe neurological involvement. The introduction of surveillance programmes allowed earlier identification of subluxation and reduced the need for surgery on dislocated hips. Surveillance can identify children most at risk of subluxation using radiological methods which are widely available.
The early designs of hip resurfacing implants suffered high rates of early failure, making it impossible to obtain valuable mid-term radiostereophotogrammetric (RSA) results. The metal-on-metal Birmingham Hip Resurfacing arthroplasty has shown promising mid-term results and we present here the first mid-term RSA analysis of a hip resurfacing implant. The analysis was performed in 19 hips at five years post-operatively. The mean acetabular component translation and rotation, and femoral component translation were compared with the previous RSA measurements at two and six months, and one and two years. There was no statistical significance (
Conventional methods of treating ankle fractures
in the elderly are associated with high rates of complication. We describe
the results of treating these injuries in 48 frail elderly patients
with a long calcaneotalotibial nail. The mean age of the group was 82 years (61 to 96) and 41 (85%)
were women. All were frail, with multiple medical comorbidities
and their mean American Society of Anaesthesiologists score was
3 (3 to 4). None could walk independently before their operation.
All the fractures were displaced and unstable; the majority (94%,
45 of 48) were low-energy injuries and 40% (19 of 48) were open. The overall mortality at six months was 35%. Of the surviving
patients, 90% returned to their pre-injury level of function. The
mean pre- and post-operative Olerud and Molander questionnaire scores
were 62 and 57 respectively. Complications included superficial
infection (4%, two of 48); deep infection (2%, one of 48); a broken
or loose distal locking screw (6%, three of 48); valgus malunion
(4%, two of 48); and one below-knee amputation following an unsuccessful
vascular operation. There were no cases of nonunion, nail breakage
or peri-prosthetic fracture. A calcaneotalotibial nail is an excellent device for treating
an unstable fracture of the ankle in the frail elderly patient.
It allows the patient to mobilise immediately and minimises the
risk of bone or wound problems. A long nail which crosses the isthmus
of the tibia avoids the risk of peri-prosthetic fracture associated
with shorter devices. Cite this article:
This short contribution aims to explain how intervertebral disc ‘degeneration’ differs from normal ageing, and to suggest how mechanical loading and constitutional factors interact to cause disc degeneration and prolapse. We suggest that disagreement on these matters in medico-legal practice often arises from a misunderstanding of the nature of ‘soft-tissue injuries’.
Deficiencies of acetabular bone stock at revision hip replacement were reconstructed with two different types of allograft using impaction bone grafting and a Burch-Schneider reinforcement ring. We compared a standard frozen non-irradiated bone bank allograft (group A) with a freeze-dried irradiated bone allograft, vitalised with autologous marrow (group B). We studied 78 patients (79 hips), of whom 87% (69 hips) had type III acetabular defects according to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons classification at a mean of 31.4 months (14 to 51) after surgery. At the latest follow-up, the mean Harris hip score was 69.9 points (13.5 to 97.1) in group A and 71.0 points (11.5 to 96.5) in group B. Each hip showed evidence of trabeculation and incorporation of the allograft with no acetabular loosening. These results suggest that the use of an acetabular reinforcement ring and a living composite of sterile allograft and autologous marrow appears to be a method of reconstructing acetabular deficiencies which gives comparable results to current forms of treatment.
We report on 397 consecutive revision total hip
replacements in 371 patients with a mean clinical and radiological follow-up
of 12.9 years (10 to 17.7). The mean age at surgery was 69 years
(37 to 93). A total of 28 patients (8%) underwent further revision,
including 16 (4%) femoral components. In all 223 patients (56%,
233 hips) died without further revision and 20 patients (5%, 20
hips) were lost to follow-up. Of the remaining patients, 209 (221
hips) were available for clinical assessment and 194 (205 hips)
for radiological review at mean follow-up of 12.9 years (10 to 17.7). The mean Harris Hip Score improved from 58.7 (11 to 92) points
to 80.7 (21 to 100) (p <
0.001) and the mean Merle d’Aubigné and
Postel hip scores at final follow-up were 4.9 (2 to 6), 4.5 (2 to
6) and 4.3 (2 to 6), respectively for pain, mobility and function.
Radiographs showed no lucencies around 186 (90.7%) femoral stems
with stable bony ingrowth seen in 199 stems (97%). The survival
of the S-ROM femoral stem at 15 years with revision for any reason as
the endpoint was 90.5% (95% confidence interval (CI) 85.7 to 93.8)
and with revision for aseptic loosening as the endpoint 99.3% (95%
CI 97.2 to 99.8). We have shown excellent long-term survivorship and good clinical
outcome of a cementless hydroxyapatite proximally-coated modular
femoral stem in revision hip surgery. Cite this article:
The long-term results of grafting with hydroxyapatite granules for acetabular deficiency in revision total hip replacement are not well known. We have evaluated the results of revision using a modular cup with hydroxyapatite grafting for Paprosky type 2 and 3 acetabular defects at a minimum of ten years’ follow-up. We retrospectively reviewed 49 acetabular revisions at a mean of 135 months (120 to 178). There was one type 2B, ten 2C, 28 3A and ten 3B hips. With loosening as the endpoint, the survival rate was 74.2% (95% confidence interval 58.3 to 90.1). Radiologically, four of the type 3A hips (14%) and six of the type 3B hips (60%) showed aseptic loosening with collapse of the hydroxyapatite layer, whereas no loosening occurred in type 2 hips. There was consolidation of the hydroxyapatite layer in 33 hips (66%). Loosening was detected in nine of 29 hips (31%) without cement and in one of 20 hips (5%) with cement (p = 0.03, Fisher’s exact probability test). The linear wear and annual wear rate did not correlate with loosening. These results suggest that the long-term results of hydroxyapatite grafting with cement for type 2 and 3A hips are encouraging.
There are no long-term published results on the survival of a third-generation cemented total shoulder replacement. We describe a clinical and radiological study of the Aequalis total shoulder replacement for a minimum of ten years. Between September 1996 and May 1998, 39 consecutive patients underwent a primary cemented total shoulder replacement using this prosthesis. Data were collected prospectively on all patients each year, for a minimum of ten years, or until death or failure of the prosthesis. At a follow-up of at least ten years, 12 patients had died with the prosthesis intact and two had emigrated, leaving 25 available for clinical review. Of these, 13 had rheumatoid arthritis and 12 osteoarthritis. One refused radiological review leaving 24 with fresh radiographs. Survivorship at ten years was 100% for the humeral component and 92% for the glenoid component. The incidence of lucent lines was low. No humeral component was thought to be at risk and only two glenoid components. The osteoarthritic group gained a mean 65° in forward flexion and their Constant score improved by a mean 41.4 points (13 to 55). The rheumatoid group gained a mean of 24° in flexion and their Constant score improved by 29.4 points. This difference may have been due to failure of the rotator cuff in 75% of the patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Thus a third-generation total shoulder replacement gives an excellent result in patients with osteoarthritis and an intact rotator cuff. Patients with rheumatoid arthritis have a 75% risk of failure of the rotator cuff at ten years.
In this study we evaluated the results of midtarsal
release and open reduction for the treatment of children with convex
congenital foot (CCF) (vertical talus) and compared them with the
published results of peritalar release. Between 1977 and 2009, a
total of 22 children (31 feet) underwent this procedure. In 15 children
(48%) the CCF was isolated and in the remainder it was not (seven
with arthrogryposis, two with spinal dysraphism, one with a polymalformative
syndrome and six with an undefined neurological disorder). Pre-operatively, the mean tibiotalar angle was 150.2° (106° to
175°) and the mean calcaneal pitch angle was -19.3° (-72° to 4°).
The procedure included talonavicular and calcaneocuboid joint capsulotomies,
lengthening of tendons of tibialis anterior and the extensors of
the toes, allowing reduction of the midtarsal joints. Lengthening
of the Achilles tendon was necessary in 23 feet (74%). The mean follow-up was 11 years (2 to 21). The results, as assessed
by the Adelaar score, were good in 24 feet (77.4%), fair in six
(19.3%) and poor in one foot (3.3%), with no difference between
those with isolated CCF and those without. The mean American Orthopaedic
Foot and Ankle Society midfoot score was 89.9 (54 to 100) and 77.8
(36 to 93) for those with isolated CCF and those without, respectively.
At the final follow-up, the mean tibiotalar (120°; 90 to 152) and
calcaneal pitch angles (4°; -13 to 22) had improved significantly
(p <
0.0001). Dislocation of the talonavicular and calcaneocuboid
joints was completely reduced in 22 (70.9%) and 29 (93.6%) of feet,
respectively. Three children (five feet) underwent further surgery
at a mean of 8.5 years post-operatively, three with pes planovalgus
and two in whom the deformity had been undercorrected. No child
developed avascular necrosis of the talus. Midtarsal joint release and open reduction is a satisfactory
procedure, which may provide better results than peritalar release.
Complications include the development of pes planovalgus and persistent
dorsal subluxation of the talonavicular joint. Cite this article:
The cementless Oxford unicompartmental knee replacement
has been demonstrated to have superior fixation on radiographs and
a similar early complication rate compared with the cemented version.
However, a small number of cases have come to our attention where,
after an apparently successful procedure, the tibial component subsides into
a valgus position with an increased posterior slope, before becoming
well-fixed. We present the clinical and radiological findings of
these six patients and describe their natural history and the likely
causes. Two underwent revision in the early post-operative period,
and in four the implant stabilised and became well-fixed radiologically with
a good functional outcome. This situation appears to be avoidable by minor modifications
to the operative technique, and it appears that it can be treated
conservatively in most patients. Cite this article:
Rarely, the extent of a malignant bone tumour
may necessitate resection of the complete humerus to achieve adequate
oncological clearance. We present our experience with reconstruction
in such cases using a total humeral endoprosthesis (THER) in 20
patients (12 male and eight female) with a mean age of 22 years
(6 to 59). We assessed the complications, the oncological and functional
outcomes and implant survival. Surgery was performed between June
2001 and October 2009. The diagnosis included osteosarcoma in nine,
Ewing’s sarcoma in eight and chondrosarcoma in three. One patient
was lost to follow-up. The mean follow-up was 41 months (10 to 120)
for all patients and 56 months (25 to 120) in survivors. There were
five local recurrences (26.3%) and 11 patients were alive at time
of last follow-up, with overall survival for all patients being
52% (95% confidence interval (CI) 23.8 to 74) at five years. The
mean Musculoskeletal Tumor Society score for the survivors was 22
(73%; 16 to 23). The implant survival was 95% (95% CI 69.5 to 99.3)
at five years. The use of a THER in the treatment of malignant tumours of bone
is oncologically safe; it gives consistent and predictable results
with low rates of complication.
When performing total hip replacement (THR) in high dislocated hips, the presence of soft-tissue contractures means that most surgeons prefer to use a femoral shortening osteotomy in order to avoid the risk of neurovascular damage. However, this technique will sacrifice femoral length and reduce the extent of any leg-length equalisation. We report our experience of 74 THRs performed between 2000 and 2008 in 65 patients with a high dislocated hip without a femoral shortening osteotomy. The mean age of the patients was 55 years (46 to 72) and the mean follow-up was 42 months (12 to 78). All implants were cementless except for one resurfacing hip implant. We attempted to place the acetabular component in the anatomical position in each hip. The mean Harris hip score improved from 53 points (34 to 74) pre-operatively to 86 points (78 to 95) at final follow-up. The mean radiologically determined leg lengthening was 42 mm (30 to 66), and the mean leg-length discrepancy decreased from 36 mm (5 to 56) pre-operatively to 8.5 mm (0 to 18) postoperatively. Although there were four (5%) post-operative femoral nerve palsies, three had fully resolved by six months after the operation. No loosening of the implant was observed, and no dislocations or infections were encountered. Total hip replacement without a femoral shortening osteotomy proved to be a safe and effective surgical treatment for high dislocated hips.
Between 1990 and 2000, 123 hips in 110 patients were reconstructed for aseptic loosening using impaction bone grafting with frozen, irradiated, morsellised femoral heads and cemented acetabular components. This series was reported previously at a mean follow-up of five years. We have extended this follow-up and now describe the outcome of 86 hips in 74 patients at a mean of ten years. There have been 19 revisions, comprising nine for infection, seven for aseptic loosening and three for dislocation. In surviving acetabular reconstructions, union of the graft had occurred in 64 of 67 hips (95.5%). Survival analysis for all indications at ten years was 83.3% (95% confidence interval (CI) 68 to 89) and 71.3% (95% CI 58 to 84) at 15 years. Acetabular reconstruction using irradiated allograft and a cemented acetabular component is an effective method of reconstruction, providing results in the medium- to long-term comparable with those of reported series where non-irradiated freshly-frozen bone was used.
Disruption of the interosseous membrane is easily
missed in patients with Essex-Lopresti syndrome. None of the imaging
techniques available for diagnosing disruption of the interosseous
membrane are completely dependable. We undertook an investigation to identify whether a simple intra-operative
test could be used to diagnose disruption of the interosseous membrane
during surgery for fracture of the radial head and to see if the
test was reproducible. We studied 20 cadaveric forearms after excision of the radial
head, ten with and ten without disruption of the interosseous membrane.
On each forearm, we performed the radius joystick test: moderate
lateral traction was applied to the radial neck with the forearm
in maximal pronation, to look for lateral displacement of the proximal radius
indicating that the interosseous membrane had been disrupted. Each
of six surgeons (three junior and three senior) performed the test
on two consecutive days. Intra-observer agreement was 77% (95% confidence interval (CI)
67 to 85) and interobserver agreement was 97% (95% CI 92 to 100).
Sensitivity was 100% (95% CI 97 to 100), specificity 88% (95% CI
81 to 93), positive predictive value 90% (95% CI 83 to 94), and
negative predictive value 100%). This cadaveric study suggests that the radius joystick test may
be useful for detecting disruption of the interosseous membrane
in patients undergoing open surgery for fracture of the radial head
and is reproducible. A confirmatory study
The treatment of peri-prosthetic joint infection
(PJI) of the ankle is not standardised. It is not clear whether
an algorithm developed for hip and knee PJI can be used in the management
of PJI of the ankle. We evaluated the outcome, at two or more years
post-operatively, in 34 patients with PJI of the ankle, identified
from a cohort of 511 patients who had undergone total ankle replacement.
Their median age was 62.1 years (53.3 to 68.2), and 20 patients
were women. Infection was exogenous in 28 (82.4%) and haematogenous
in six (17.6%); 19 (55.9%) were acute infections and 15 (44.1%)
chronic. Staphylococci were the cause of 24 infections (70.6%).
Surgery with retention of one or both components was undertaken
in 21 patients (61.8%), both components were replaced in ten (29.4%),
and arthrodesis was undertaken in three (8.8%). An infection-free
outcome with satisfactory function of the ankle was obtained in
23 patients (67.6%). The best rate of cure followed the exchange
of both components (9/10, 90%). In the 21 patients in whom one or
both components were retained, four had a relapse of the same infecting organism
and three had an infection with another organism. Hence the rate
of cure was 66.7% (14 of 21). In these 21 patients, we compared
the treatment given to an algorithm developed for the treatment
of PJI of the knee and hip. In 17 (80.9%) patients, treatment was
not according to the algorithm. Most (11 of 17) had only one criterion against
retention of one or both components. In all, ten of 11 patients
with severe soft-tissue compromise as a single criterion had a relapse-free
survival. We propose that the treatment concept for PJI of the ankle
requires adaptation of the grading of quality of the soft tissues. Cite this article
The aim of this study was to evaluate the risk
factors for dislocation of the bearing after a mobile-bearing Oxford medial
unicompartmental knee replacement (UKR) and to test the hypothesis
that surgical factors, as measured from post-operative radiographs,
are associated with its dislocation From a total of 480 UKRs performed between 2001 and 2012, in
391 patients with a mean age of 66.5 years (45 to 82) (316 female,
75 male), we identified 17 UKRs where bearing dislocation occurred.
The post-operative radiological measurements of the 17 UKRs and
51 matched controls were analysed using conditional logistic regression analysis.
The post-operative radiological measurements included post-operative
change in limb alignment, the position of the femoral and tibial
components, the resection depth of the proximal tibia, and the femoral component-posterior
condyle classification. We concluded that a post-operative decrease in the posterior
tibial slope relative to the pre-operative value was the only significant
determinant of dislocation of the bearing after medial Oxford UKR
(odds ratio 1.881; 95% confidence interval 1.272 to 2.779). A post-operative
posterior tibial slope <
8.45° and a difference between the pre-operative
and post-operative posterior tibial slope of >
2.19° may increase
the risk of dislocation. Cite this article:
We retrospectively reviewed 44 consecutive patients
(50 hips) who underwent acetabular re-revision after a failed previous
revision that had been performed using structural or morcellised
allograft bone, with a cage or ring for uncontained defects. Of
the 50 previous revisions, 41 cages and nine rings were used with
allografts for 14 minor-column and 36 major-column defects. We routinely
assessed the size of the acetabular bone defect at the time of revision
and re-revision surgery. This allowed us to assess whether host
bone stock was restored. We also assessed the outcome of re-revision
surgery in these circumstances by means of radiological characteristics,
rates of failure and modes of failure. We subsequently investigated
the factors that may affect the potential for the restoration of bone
stock and the durability of the re-revision reconstruction using
multivariate analysis. At the time of re-revision, there were ten host acetabula with
no significant defects, 14 with contained defects, nine with minor-column,
seven with major-column defects and ten with pelvic discontinuity.
When bone defects at re-revision were compared with those at the
previous revision, there was restoration of bone stock in 31 hips, deterioration
of bone stock in nine and remained unchanged in ten. This was a
significant improvement (p <
0.001). Morselised allografting
at the index revision was not associated with the restoration of
bone stock. In 17 hips (34%), re-revision was possible using a simple acetabular
component without allograft, augments, rings or cages. There were
47 patients with a mean follow-up of 70 months (6 to 146) available
for survival analysis. Within this group, the successful cases had
a minimum follow-up of two years after re-revision. There were 22 clinical
or radiological failures (46.7%), 18 of which were due to aseptic
loosening. The five and ten year Kaplan–Meier survival rate was
75% (95% CI, 60 to 86) and 56% (95% CI, 40 to 70) respectively with
aseptic loosening as the endpoint. The rate of aseptic loosening
was higher for hips with pelvic discontinuity (p = 0.049) and less
when the allograft had been in place for longer periods (p = 0.040). The use of a cage or ring over structural allograft bone for
massive uncontained defects in acetabular revision can restore host
bone stock and facilitate subsequent re-revision surgery to a certain
extent. Cite this article: