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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 3 | Pages 431 - 434
1 May 1988
Dodd C Fergusson C Freedman L Houghton G Thomas D

The results of a study of the use of autograft versus allograft bone in the surgery of idiopathic adolescent scoliosis are presented. Two groups of patients, matched for age, sex, level and angle of curve, received bone grafts, 20 patients having autogenous bone from the iliac crest and the other 20 having donor bone from a bone bank. Both groups had otherwise identical posterior fusions and Harrington instrumentation. There was no difference between the two groups in a blind, radiographic assessment of bone graft mass at six months, nor in maintenance of the curve correction over the same period. No major operative complications nor failures of instrumentation were encountered. There was, however, a marked reduction in operative time and blood loss in the patients receiving donor bone and also a much lower incidence of late symptoms relating to the operative sites. We conclude that, even in the presence of adequate iliac crest, the use of bank bone is superior for grafting in idiopathic scoliosis surgery


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 3 | Pages 538 - 544
1 May 1999
Deijkers RLM Bouma GJ van der Meer-Prins EMW Huysmans PE Taminiau AHM Claas FHJ

We analysed the cellular immune response in ten transplantations of different massive bone allografts, of which five had a poor clinical outcome. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) and T helper lymphocytes (TH) against mismatched donor antigens were found in all patients. More importantly, CTL with a high affinity for donor antigens were found in five cases. High-affinity CTL need no CD8 molecule to stabilise the antigen binding and are strongly associated with rejection of heart and corneal transplants. Even after removal of most of the bone-marrow cells, we found high-affinity CTL and high TH frequencies. This T-cell response could be detected over a period of years. We conclude that frozen bone allografts can induce high-affinity donor-specific CTL. The present assay allows qualification and quantification of the levels of CTL and TH in the blood. This approach may be helpful in studying the effect of the immune response on the outcome of the graft


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 2 | Pages 342 - 344
1 Mar 1999
Hamer AJ Stockley I Elson RA

Secondary sterilisation of allograft bone by gamma irradiation is common, but the conditions under which it is performed vary between tissue banks. Some do so at room temperature, others while the bone is frozen. Bone is made brittle by irradiation because of the destruction of collagen alpha chains, probably mediated by free radicals generated from water molecules. Freezing reduces the mobility of water molecules and may therefore decrease the production of free radicals. We found that bone irradiated at −78°C was less brittle and had less collagen damage than when irradiated at room temperature. These findings may have implications for bone-banking


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 3 | Pages 363 - 368
1 May 1996
Hamer AJ Strachan JR Black MM Ibbotson CJ Stockley I Elson RA

There have been conflicting reports on the effects of gamma irradiation on the material properties of cortical allograft bone. To investigate changes which result from the method of preparation, test samples must be produced with similar mechanical properties to minimise variations other than those resulting from treatment. We describe a new method for the comparative measurement of bone strength using standard bone samples. We used 233 samples from six cadavers to study the effects of irradiation at a standard dose (28 kGy) alone and combined with deep freezing. We also investigated the effects of varying the dose from 6.8 to 60 kGy (n = 132). None of the treatments had any effect on the elastic behaviour of the samples, but there was a reduction in strength to 64% of control values (p < 0.01) after irradiation with 28 kGy. There was also a dose-dependent reduction in strength and in the ability of the samples to absorb work before failure. We suggest that irradiation may cause an alteration in the bone matrix of allograft bone, but provided it is used in situations in which loading is within its elastic region, then failure should not occur


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 5 | Pages 740 - 744
1 Sep 1994
Azuma T Yasuda H Okagaki K Sakai K

We report the results of 24 acetabular reconstructions in which cemented polyethylene cups and tamped corticocancellous allografts were used for severe acetabular bone deficiency. Eleven hips had type-II (cavitary) bone deficiency and 13 had type-III (combined) defects. At a mean follow-up of 5.8 years, two components had migrated more than 5 mm and had accompanying radiolucent zones of more than 2 mm width. A radiolucency 5 mm wide was also seen in zone III of an acetabular implant which had not migrated. None of the patients had required revision because of loosening or infection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 4 | Pages 643 - 646
1 Jul 1990
Mulroy R Mankin H Harris W

We describe a patient in whom a total hip replacement had failed and who subsequently fractured her proximal femur. The prosthetic hip and the surrounding bone were excised and replaced by a matched pair of allograft components. She obtained seven years of pain free hip function before the graft showed radiographic signs of failure; it was then replaced by a new prosthetic hip


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 5 | Pages 791 - 794
1 Sep 1991
Guo M Xia Z Lin L

We studied the calcium content and mechanical strength of cortical bone from rats and dogs after different periods of demineralisation, showing that the rate of demineralisation differed considerably between the species. Specimens from the rat were further treated by chemical extraction and autolysis and tested for osteoinductive properties. We showed that partially demineralised cortical bone retained adequate mechanical strength, while retaining the biological effects of completely demineralised bone. This shows that it is possible to prepare allografts which have adequate mechanical strength and still retain osteo-inductive properties


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 4 | Pages 544 - 549
1 May 2002
Piccaluga F Valle AD Fernández JCE Pusso R

Impacted morcellised bone allograft and a Charnley stem was used to revise 59 loose femoral components in 57 consecutive patients. Femoral bone loss was rated as Endo-Klinik grade 2 in nine patients, grade 3 in 41, and grade 4 in nine. The immediate postoperative radiographs and those taken at the most recent follow-up were compared for radiolucencies, subsidence and incorporation of the graft. One patient was lost to follow-up and two were not available for radiological analysis. The mean clinical follow-up in 58 procedures was 56.7 months (24 to 144) and the mean radiological review of 56 reconstructions was 54.4 months (24 to 144). An intraoperative femoral fracture occurred in one patient (1.7%) and was successfully treated by strut grafting and cerclage wiring. Extrusion of cement through perforations or incomplete hoop fractures was detected in the postoperative radiographs of ten procedures (17%); none of these patients sustained a complete fracture. Three patients had dislocations (5%) and two (3.5%) developed painful subsidence of the stem which required a further revision. The latest follow-up radiographs in 56 reconstructions showed a well fixed stem and radiological healing of the graft in 52 (93%), and definite loosening in four (7%). Of these four, two were revised again and two were asymptomatic after a follow-up of 120 months each. The mean subsidence in the 52 successful revisions was 0.38 mm (0 to 4). Impaction allografting with a Charnley stem restored bone stock and provided adequate fixation of the stem in 93% of the hips. There was a low rate of rerevision (3.5%) and a low incidence of intraoperative and postoperative complications


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 1 | Pages 135 - 142
1 Jan 1999
Kärrholm J Hultmark P Carlsson L Malchau H

We revised 24 consecutive hips with loosening of the femoral stem using impaction allograft and a cemented stem with an unpolished proximal surface. Repeated radiostereometric examinations for up to two years showed a slow rate of subsidence with a mean of 0.32 mm (−2.0 to +0.31). Fifteen cases followed for a further year showed the same mean subsidence after three years, indicating stabilisation. A tendency to retroversion of the stems was noted between the operation and the last follow-up. Retroversion was also recorded when displacement of the stem was studied in ten of the patients after two years. Repeated determination of bone mineral density showed an initial loss after six months, followed by recovery to the postoperative level at two years. Defects in the cement mantle and malalignment of the stem were often noted on postoperative radiographs, but did not correlate with the degrees of migration or displacement. After one year, increasing frequency of trabecular remodelling or resorption of the graft was observed in the greater trochanter and distal to the tip of the stem. Cortical repair was noted distally and medially (Gruen regions 3, 5 and 6). Migration of the stems was the lowest reported to date, which we attribute to the improved grafting technique and to the hardness of the graft


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 1 | Pages 74 - 80
1 Jan 1989
Wakitani S Kimura T Hirooka A Ochi T Yoneda M Yasui N Owaki H Ono K

In an attempt to repair articular cartilage, allograft articular chondrocytes embedded in collagen gel, were transplanted into full-thickness defects in rabbit articular cartilage. Twenty-four weeks after the transplantation, the defects were filled with hyaline cartilage, specifically synthesising Type II collagen. These chondrocytes were autoradiographically proven to have originated from the transplanted grafts. Assessed histologically the success rate was about 80%, a marked improvement over the results reported in previous studies on chondrocyte transplantation without collagen gel. By contrast, the defects without chondrocyte transplantation healed with fibrocartilage. Immunological enhancement induced by transplanted allogenic chondrocytes or collagen was not significant at eight weeks after treatment, so far as shown by both direct and indirect blastformation reactions. Thus, allogenic transplantation of isolated chondrocytes embedded in collagen gel appears to be one of the most promising methods for the restoration of articular cartilage


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 6 | Pages 862 - 864
1 Nov 1995
Franzen H Toksvig-Larsen S Lidgren L Onnerfalt R

We report the preliminary findings of the use of roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis to evaluate the early migration of five femoral components after revision for mechanical loosening using impacted cancellous allograft and cement. All hips were examined at one week, four to six months and one year after surgery. All the components subsided by 0.4 to 4.9 mm during the first year. In four hips the prosthetic head was displaced 1.1 to 6.9 mm posteriorly. Fixation of the femoral components was less secure than after primary arthroplasty but the incidence and magnitude of early migration were similar to those after revision with cement alone


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 3 | Pages 310 - 313
1 Mar 2005
Buckley SC Stockley I Hamer AJ Kerry RM

We report the results of the revision of 123 acetabular components for aseptic loosening treated by impaction bone grafting using frozen, morsellised, irradiated femoral heads and cemented sockets. This is the first large series using this technique to be reported. A survivorship of 88% with revision as the end-point after a mean of five years is comparable with that of other series.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 3 | Pages 559 - 559
1 May 1998
McMinn D


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 5 | Pages 935 - 935
1 Sep 1999
SIDDIQUI SA LIPTON J BRYK E VIGORITA V EVANGALISTA J


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 178 - 180
1 Mar 1997
Norman-Taylor FH Villar RN


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 1 | Pages 151 - 152
1 Jan 1990
Nelson I Bulstrode C Mowat A


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1363 - 1369
1 Oct 2010
Garcia-Cimbrelo E Garcia-Rey E Cruz-Pardos A Madero R

Revision surgery of the hip was performed on 114 hips using an extensively porous-coated femoral component. Of these, 95 hips (94 patients) had a mean follow-up of 10.2 years (5 to 17). No cortical struts were used and the cortical index and the femoral cortical width were measured at different levels.

There were two revisions for aseptic loosening. Survivorship at 12 years for all causes of failure was 96.9% (95% confidence interval 93.5 to 100) in the best-case scenario. Fibrous or unstable fixation was associated with major bone defects. The cortical index (p = 0.045) and the lateral cortical thickness (p = 0.008) decreased at the proximal level over time while the medial cortex increased (p = 0.001) at the proximal and distal levels. An increase in the proximal medial cortex was found in patients with an extended transtrochanteric osteotomy (p = 0.026) and in those with components shorter than 25 cm (p = 0.008).

The use of the extensively porous-coated femoral component can provide a solution for difficult cases in revision surgery. Radiological bony ingrowth is common. Although without clinical relevance at the end of follow-up, the thickness of the medial femoral cortex often increased while that of the lateral cortex decreased. In cases in which a shorter component was used and in those undertaken using an extended trochanteric osteotomy, there was a greater increase in thickness of the femoral cortex over time.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 3 | Pages 350 - 351
1 May 1994
Michaud R Drabu K


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1124 - 1132
1 Nov 2004
Tsiridis E Narvani AA Haddad FS Timperley JA Gie GA

We reviewed retrospectively the outcome of the treatment by impaction grafting of periprosthetic femoral fractures around loose stems in 106 patients with Vancouver type-B2 and type-B3 fractures. Eighty-nine patients had a cemented revision with impaction grafting and a long or short stem. The remaining 17 had cemented revision without impaction grafting.

Fractures treated by impaction grafting and a long stem were more than five times likely to unite than those treated by impaction grafting and a short stem (odds ratio = 5.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.54 to 19.6; p = 0.009). Furthermore, those with impaction grafting and a long stem were significantly more likely to unite than those with a long stem without impaction grafting (odds ratio = 4.07, 95% CI 1.10 to 15.0; p = 0.035).

There was also a trend towards a higher rate of union in those treated by impaction grafting than in those without (odds ratio = 2.69, 95% CI 0.86 to 8.45; p = 0.090).

Impaction grafting is being increasingly widely used for the restoration of femoral bone stock. It can be successfully applied to periprosthetic femoral fractures but a long stem should be used to bypass the distal fracture line.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 5 | Pages 771 - 776
1 Jul 2004
Frei H Mitchell P Masri BA Duncan CP Oxland TR

We studied various aspects of graft impaction and penetration of cement in an experimental model. Cancellous bone was removed proximally and local diaphyseal lytic defects were simulated in six human cadaver femora. After impaction grafting the specimens were sectioned and prepared for histomorphometric analysis.

The porosity of the graft was lowest in Gruen zone 4 (52%) and highest in Gruen zone 1 (76%). At the levels of Gruen zones 6 and 2 the entire cross-section was almost filled with cement. Cement sometimes reached the endosteal surface in other Gruen zones. The mean peak impaction forces exerted with the impactors were negatively correlated with the porosity of the graft.