Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Orthopaedic Proceedings Logo

Receive monthly Table of Contents alerts from Orthopaedic Proceedings

Comprehensive article alerts can be set up and managed through your account settings

View my account settings

Visit Orthopaedic Proceedings at:

Loading...

Loading...

Volume 95-B, Issue SUPP_33 September 2013 Scottish Committee for Orthopaedics and Trauma (SCOT)

D. T. Wallace A. Mahendra H. Findlay M. J. Jane

Bone and soft tissue sarcoma is an uncommon. Benign swellings are, however, common. An approach to tertiary referral is required to accommodate the need for specialist interpretation of all concerning referrals, while maintaining an acceptable time to diagnosis and management.

We aim to describe a new tertiary sarcoma service, utilising modern communication technology and the “virtual clinic” model through a multidisciplinary approach.

All suspected musculoskeletal sarcoma cases are discussed, with available history and imaging, in a virtual clinic by a multidisciplinary team within a week of referral. Clinic decisions allow either immediate discharge, progress to further investigation, or clinic appointment.

Data from the first thousand patients was prospectively collected for initial management decision, and final intervention, and in 625 for waiting time. Almost one third of patients were discharged from the virtual clinic without physical appointment. 45% were sent for further investigation prior to first clinic appointment. Of 625 patients with referral data, mean waiting time was 5.1 days to virtual clinic. For malignant bone and soft tissue tumours, not requiring neoadjuvant treatment, median time to surgery from virtual clinic review was 37 and 47 days respectively.

Through a virtual clinic approach to tertiary sarcoma care, almost a third of referrals have been managed quickly without need for an unnecessary appointment. For 45% of patients the first appointment will be after all necessary investigations have been performed to facilitate rapid decision making. This enables shorter clinic waiting times and rapid transition from first referral to definitive management.


S. L. Gill M. Karabayas S. Al-Khabori G. Scicluna L. Cochrane S. Thomas

Involvement in research forms a mandatory part of Trauma & Orthopaedic specialty training. Evidence of publication is a compulsory criterion for attaining Certificate of Completion of Training (CCT). The publishing behaviour of orthopaedic trainees from all four deaneries in Scotland was examined (East, North, South East and West of Scotland).

A literature search was performed for Scottish orthopaedic trainees achieving CCT between July 2005–July 2010 using Knowledge Network and PubMed databases. Data collected included date of publication, article type, journal, publishing institute, number of authors and position of trainee within authors.

There was no significant difference in mean number of publications/trainee prior to specialty training across the four deaneries (EOS 0.18; NOS 0.18; SES 0.25; WOS 0.73). The number of publications/trainee during training was statistically significantly higher in SES (mean 6.31; mode 9; median 4) compared to WOS (2.23;0;1), NOS (2.18;1;2) and EOS (1.72;1;1). However, there was no correlation between a trainee's number of publications during training and post–CCT. There was no significant difference for mean number of authors/trainee publication during training across the four deaneries (range 3.38–3.63), nor mean position of trainee in list of authors (range 1.37–1.67).

This study highlights important differences and notable similarities in publishing behaviour during orthopaedic training across the Scottish deaneries. It suggests that rates of publication relate to factors during training and that publishing during training is not predictive of future behaviour. This research may be of interest to trainees, training committees and orthopaedic departments in future appointments.


S.E. Maclaine A.J. Bennett N. Gadegaard R.M.D. Meek M.J. Dalby

Nanoscale topography increases the bioactivity of a material and stimulates specific responses (third generation biomaterial properties) at the molecular level upon first generation (bioinert) or second generation (bioresorbable or bioactive) biomaterials.

We developed a technique (based upon the effects of nanoscale topography) that facilitated the in vitro expansion of bone graft for subsequent implantation and investigated the optimal conditions for growing new mineralised bone in vitro.

Two topographies (nanopits and nanoislands) were embossed into the bioresorbable polymer Polycaprolactone (PCL). Three dimensional cell culture was performed using double-sided embossing of substrates, seeding of both sides, and vertical positioning of substrates. The effect of Hydroxyapatite, and chemical stimulation were also examined.

Human bone marrow was harvested from hip arthroplasty patients, the mesenchymal stem cells culture expanded and used for cellular analysis of substrate bioactivity.

The cell line specificity and osteogenic behaviour was demonstrated through immunohistochemistry, confirmed by real-time PCR and quantitative PCR. Mineralisation was demonstrated using alizarin red staining.

Results showed that the osteoinduction was optimally conferred by the presence of nanotopography, and also by the incorporation of hydroxyapatite (HA) into the PCL. The nanopit topography and HA were both superior to the use of BMP2 in the production of mineralised bone tissue.

The protocol from shim production to bone marrow harvesting and vertical cell culture on nanoembossed HaPCL has been shown to be reproducible and potentially applicable to economical larger scale production.


A.G. Marsh J. Robertson A. Godman J. Boyle J. Huntley

Neurological examination in children presenting with upper limb fractures is often poorly performed. We aimed to assess the quality of documented neurological examination in children presenting with upper limb fractures and whether this could be improved following introduction of a simple guideline for paediatric neurological assessment.

We reviewed the clinical notes of all children presenting to the emergency department with upper limb fractures over a three month period. Documentation of initial neurological assessment and clinical suspicion of any nerve injury were noted. Subsequently, we introduced a guideline for paediatric upper limb neurological examination (‘Rock, Paper, Scissors, OK’) to our own hospital and performed a further 3 month clinical review to detect any resulting change in practice.

In the initial study period, 121 patients presented with upper limb fractures. 10 children (8%) had a nerve injury. Neurological examination was documented in 107 (88%) of patients, however, none of the nerve injuries were detected on initial assessment. In patients with nerve injuries, 5 (50%) were documented as being ‘neurovascularly intact’ and 2 (20%) had no documented examination.

Following introduction of the guideline, 97 patients presented with upper limb fractures of which 8 children (8%) had a nerve injury. Documentation of neurological examination increased to 98% for patients presenting directly to our own hospital (p=0.02). Within this cohort all nerve injuries with objective motor or sensory deficits were detected on initial examination.

Introduction of a simple guideline for neurological examination in children with upper limb fractures can significantly improve the quality of documented neurological assessment and detection of nerve injuries.


A. Lomax A. Singh N.J. Madeley C.S. Kumar

A series of 76 distal tibial pilon fractures treated with surgical fixation were retrospectively reviewed from case notes, plain radiographs and CT imaging. Patient demographics, injury and fracture patterns, methods and timing of fixation and clinical and radiological outcomes were assessed over a mean follow up period of 8.6 months (range 2–30).

Definitive fixation was most commonly performed through an open technique (71 cases) with plate fixation. CT imaging was used to plan the most direct approach to access the fracture fragments. Single or double incision techniques were used to access the tibia, with fixation of the fibular performed when necessary.

Superficial infection occurred in 5 cases (6.9%) and deep infection in 2 (2.8%). Aseptic wound breakdown occurred in 5 cases (6.9%). The rate of wound breakdown after three-incision technique was 37.5%.

There were 10 cases of non-union (13.9%) and 8 of mal-union (10.5%). Post-traumatic arthritis was present on the most recent x ray in 17 cases (23.4%). Further surgery was required in 20 cases (27.8%), most commonly for metalwork related problems and also for treatment of non-union, post-traumatic arthritis and infection.

This review gives comprehensive injury specific and surgical outcome data from one of the largest reported series of these complex and problematic injuries.


PG Robinson I. Anthony S. Kumar B. Jones A. Stark R. Ingram

This study assesses the incidence of noise in ceramic on ceramic (COC) bearings compared to metal on polyethylene (MOP) bearings. Noise after MOP implants has rarely been studied and they never been linked to squeaking.

We have developed a noise characterising hip questionnaire and sent it along with the Oxford Hip Score (OHS) to 1000 patients; 509 respondents, 282 COC and 227 MOP; median age 63.7 (range 45–92), median follow up 2.9 years (range 6–156 months).

47 (17%) of the COC patients reported noise compared to 19 (8%) of the MOP patients (P=0.048). 9 COC and 4 MOP patients reported their hip noise as squeaking. We found the incidence of squeaking in the COC hips to be 3.2% compared to 1.8% in the MOP hips. Overall, 27% patients with noise reported avoiding recreational activities because of it and patient's with noisy hips scored on average 4 points less in the OHS (COC: P=0.04 and MOP: P =0.007).

This is the first study to report squeaking from MOP hip replacements. We therefore believe the squeaking hip phenomenon is not exclusive to hard bearings. Surprisingly, only a small proportion of patients described nose from their as a ‘squeak’. Noisy hip implants may have social implications, and patients should be aware of this. We have shown a relationship between noise and a lower OHS. However, longer follow-up and further study is needed to link noise to a poorly functioning implant.


J. Lavery M. Blyth B. Jones I. Anthony

To validate the Modified Forgotten Joint Score (MFJS) as a new patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) in hip and knee arthroplasty (THR/TKR) against the UK's gold standard Oxford Hip and Knee Scores (OHS/OKS).

The MFJS is a new assessment tool devised to provide a greater discriminatory power, particularly in well performing patients. It measures an appealing concept; the ability of a patient to forget about their artificial joint in everyday life.

Postal questionnaires were sent out to 400 THR and TKR patients who were 1–2 years post-op. The data collected from the 212 returned questionnaires was analysed in relation to construct and content validity. 77 patients took part in a test-retest repeatability assessment.

The MFJS proved to have an increased discriminatory power in high-performing patients in comparison to the OHS and OKS, highlighted by its more normal frequency of distribution and reduced ceiling effects. 30.8% of patients (n=131) achieved excellent OHS/OKS scores of 42–48 this compared to just 7.69% of patients who achieved a proportionately equivalent MFJS score of 87.5–100. The MFJS proved to have an increased test-retest repeatability based upon its intra-class correlation coefficient of 0.97 compared to the Oxford's 0.85.

The MFJS provides a more sensitive tool in the assessment of well performing hip and knee arthroplasties in comparison to the OHS/OKS. The MFJS tests the concept of awareness of a prosthetic joint, rather than pain and function and therefore should be used as adjunct to the OKS/OHS.


C.E.H. Scott M.J. Eaton R.W. Nutton F.A. Wade P. Pankaj S.L. Evans

Joint registries report that 25–40% of UKR revisions are performed for pain. Proximal tibial strain and microdamage are possible causes of this “unexplained” pain. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of UKR implant design and material on proximal tibial cortical strain and cancellous microdamage.

Composite Sawbone tibias were implanted with cemented UKR components: 5 fixed bearing all-polyethylene (FB-AP), 5 fixed bearing metal backed (FB-MB), and 5 mobile bearing metal backed implants (MB-MB). Five intact tibias were used as controls. Tibias were loaded in 500N increments to 2500N. Cortical surface strain was measured using digital image correlation (DIC). Cancellous microdamage was measured using acoustic emission (AE), a technique which detects elastic waves produced by the rapid release of energy during microdamage events.

DIC showed significant differences in anteromedial cortical strain between implants at 1500N and 2500N in the proximal 10mm only (p<0.001) with strain shielding in metal backed implants. AE showed significant differences in cancellous microdamage (AE hits), between implants at all loads (p=0.001). FB-AP implants displayed significantly more hits at all loads than both controls and metal backed implants (p<0.001). FB-AP implants also differed significantly by displaying AE hits on unloading (p=0.01), reflecting a lack of implant stiffness. Compared to controls, the FB-AP implant displayed 15x the total AE hits, the FB-MB 6x and the MB-MB 2.7x. All-polyethylene medial UKR implants are associated with greater cancellous bone microdamage than metal backed implants even at low loads.


J. Whitgift C. Howie D. Mandziak C. Cheng D. MacDonald

Nerve damage is a complication of THA and TKA procedures. The incidence of subclinical nerve injury following arthroplasty is unknown. The aim was to determine the prevalence of asymptomatic nerve deficits in an arthroplasty population group, and the incidence of post-operative changes in nerve function. A Secondary aim was to identify the nature of any deficits. And the association between nerve deficits and history of backache.

A non-randomised prospective series of patients undergoing lower limb arthroplasty for osteoarthritis were studied at a single hospital. The peroneal nerve was investigated using nerve conduction in forty patients. Twenty patients had upper limb testing to differentiate between a polyneuropathy or isolated lower limb neuropathy.

Nerve function deficits were detected in the peroneal nerve in fifteen patients pre-operatively and fifteen post-operatively, of those twelve had A waves detected suggestive of a generalised neuropathy. Ten patients who had upper limb testing had a conduction defect (five had asymptomatic Carpal tunnel). There was a positive correlation between presence of post-operative deficit and age(r=0.389, p=0.013). A negative correlation was found for presence of post-operative A waves and BMI(r=−0.370, p=0.019).

The prevalence of pre-operative subclinical peroneal neuropathy is much higher than expected in this group (37.5%) of arthroplasty patients. There is a strong correlation between presence of post-operative conduction abnormalities and age. There is no relationship between peripheral neuropathy and history of backache or residual post-operative deficit.


C. Jensen S. Gupta A. Sprowson S. Chambers D. Inman S. Jones N.M. Aradhyula M.R. Reed

The cement used for hemiarthroplasties by the authors and many other surgeons in the UK is Palacos® (containing 0.5g Gentamicin). Similar cement, Copal® (containing 1g Gentamicin and 1g Clindamycin) has been used in revision arthroplasties. We aim to investigate the effect on SSI rates of doubling the gentamicin dose and adding a second antibiotic (clindamycin) to the bone cement in hip hemiarthroplasty.

We randomised 848 consecutive patients undergoing cemented hip hemiarthroplasty for fractured NOF into two groups: Group I, 464 patients, received standard cement (Palacos®) and Group II, 384 patients, received high dose, double antibiotic-impregnated cement (Copal®). We calculated the SSI rate for each group at 30 days post-surgery. The patients, reviewers and statistician were blinded as to treatment group.

The demographics and co-morbid conditions were statistically similar between the groups. The combined superficial and deep SSI rates were 5 % (20/394) and 1.7% (6/344) for groups I and II respectively (p=0.01). Group I had a deep infection rate 3.3 %(13/394) compared to 1.16% (4/344) in group II (p=0.082). Group I had a superficial infection rate 1.7 % (7/394) compared to 0.58% (2/344) in group II (p=0.1861). 33(4%) patients were lost to follow up, and 77 (9%) patients were deceased at the 30 day end point.

Using high dose double antibiotic-impregnated cement rather than standard low dose antibiotic-impregnated cement significantly reduced the SSI rate (1.7% vs 5%; p=0.01) after hip hemiarthroplasty for fractured neck of femur in this prospective randomised controlled trial.


C Munro SL Barker K Kumar

Frozen shoulder is a common condition that affects the working population. The longevity and severity of symptoms often results in great economic burden to health services and absence from work. This prospective cohort study aimed to investigate whether early intervention with arthroscopic capsular release resulted in improvement of symptoms and any potential economic benefit to society.

Patients were recruited prospectively. Data was gathered by way of questionnaire to ascertain demographics, previous primary care treatment and absence from work. Oxford Shoulder Score (OSS) was also calculated. Arthroscopic capsular release was performed and further data gathered at four week post-operative follow up. Economic impact of delay to treatment and cost of intervention was calculated using government data from the national tariff which costs different forms of treatment. Statistical analysis was then performed on the results.

Twenty five patients enrolled. Mean pre-operative OSS: 37.4 (range 27–58, SD 7.4). Mean post-operative OSS: 15.9 (range 12–22, SD 2.3). P<0.01. Mean improvement in OSS: 21.5 (range 12–38, SD 7.1)

The cost of non-operative treatment per patient was £3954. The cost of arthroscopic capsular release per patient was £1861, a difference of £2093. There were no complications

Arthroscopic capsular release improved shoulder function on OSS within four weeks. The cost of arthroscopic capsular release is significantly less than the cost of treating the patients non-operatively. Early surgical intervention may improve symptoms quickly and reduce economic burden of the disease. A randomised controlled trial comparing timings of intervention would further elucidate potential benefits.