We measured the driver reaction times of 40 patients before total knee replacement (TKR) and 4, 6, 8 and 10 weeks after operation. The ability to perform an emergency stop was assessed as the time taken to achieve a brake pressure of 100 N after a visual stimulus. There were 18 drivers and 11 non-drivers; the latter had longer reaction times. In drivers, the ability to transfer the right foot from accelerator to brake pedal did not recover to preoperative levels for eight weeks after right TKR and was unchanged after left TKR. Patients should be advised that they should not drive for at least eight weeks after right TKR.
We performed a prospective, double-blind, randomised, clinical trial to investigate the efficacy of two regimes of rehabilitation for knees with anterior cruciate ligament deficiency (ACLD). Fifty ACLD patients were randomly allocated to one of two treatment groups: a programme of muscle strengthening (T) or a programme designed to enhance proprioception and improve hamstring contraction reflexes (P). An indirect measure of proprioception, the reflex hamstring contraction latency (RHCL), and a functional scoring system were used to record the status of the knee before and after the 12-week course of physiotherapy. Sagittal knee laxity was also measured. There was improvement in mean RHCL and in the mean functional score in both groups after treatment. The improvement in group P was significantly greater than that in group T. There was no significant change in joint laxity after treatment in either group. In both groups there was a positive correlation between improvement in RHCL and functional gain.
D istraction osteogenesis is widely used for leg lengthening, but often requires a long period of external fixation which carries risks of pin-track sepsis, malalignment, stiffness of the joint and late fracture of the regenerate. We present the results of 20 cases in which, in an attempt to reduce the rate of complications, a combination of external fixation and intramedullary nailing was used. The mean gain in length was 4.7 cm (2 to 8.6). The mean time of external fixation was 20 days per centimetre gain in length. All distracted segments healed spontaneously without refracture or malalignment. There were three cases of deep infection, two of which occurred in patients who had had previous open fractures of the bone which was being lengthened. All resolved with appropriate treatment. This method allows early rehabilitation, with a rapid return of knee movement. There is a lower rate of complications than occurs when external fixation is used on its own. The time of external fixation is shorter than in other methods of leg lengthening. The high risk of infection calls for caution.
This study investigated the angiogenic response to four varying rates (0.3,0.7,1.3, and 2.7 d d a y ) of distraction in a rabbit model of leg-lengthening. Immunostaining was performed with use of specific antibodies to type-IV collagen and endothelial cell antigen to examine semiquantitatively the presence of blood vessels in the developing tissues. With use of the Chalkley counting method, the greatest number of positivestaining blood vessel cells was found in the central fibrous zone of the groups that underwent lengthening at 0.7 and 1.3 mmlday compared with any other zone in any group (p < 0.05, t test). There were no statistical differences in the positive labeling indices in the mineralization front and the new bone zone adjacent to the mineralization front in any of the groups. However, the decrease in the number of positive-staining blood vessel cells in the new bone zone distant to the mineralization front compared with any other zone in any group was statistically significant. The results suggest that during distraction osteogenesis. the precursor cells of new capillaries were present in abundance within the fibrous interzone. These cells connected into the capillary network at the junction of the mineralization front and the fibrous zone. The angiogenic response was weaker in the more mature regions within the new bone zones. A slow rate of distraction (0.3 d d a y ) did not maximally stimulate angiogenesis in the central fibrous zone, whereas high rates (2.7 d d a y ) appeared to impair this response. In this model of distraction osteogenesis, the vascularization process in the central fibrous zone was maximally stimulated at distraction rates of 0.7 and 1.3 mdday. Miner Res 8(SuppI2):S499-S502.1993Schor AM, Canfield AE, Sutton AB. Arciniegas E. Allen TD:Pericyte differentiation. Clin Orthop 31381-91.1995 Trueta J Blood suppIy and the rate of healing of tibia1 fractures.
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