The present investigation aims to evaluate periprosthetic bone remodelling after total knee arthroplasty by the use of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Twelve patients affected by osteoarthrosis of the knee joint underwent primary total knee arthroplasty at an average age of 70.5 years. None of them had received a knee prosthesis before on the contralateral side. Anteroposterior and lateral DXA measurements of the femur, tibia and total knee (both sides) were taken 2 weeks, 3 and 9 months postoperatively. The 2-week measurement was used as an individual reference value to be compared with the 3- and 9-month findings. In addition, the contralateral knee was investigated also in order to estimate how far bone mineral loss was due to implantation or to an individual decline in bone mineral density (BMD). The comparison of BMD values after knee arthroplasty revealed a conspicuous decrease of bone density within 9 months. Bone mineral loss amounted to an average of 9.2% in anteroposterior and 17.8% in lateral DXA measurements. Lateral femur shots showed an average decrease of density of even 21.5%. In contrast, the BMD values of the contralateral knees remained almost unchanged. DXA, especially lateral shots of the femur, promises to be a suitable method for early assessment of periprosthetic bone remodelling after total knee arthroplasty.
The mRNA fingerprinting technique, differential display reverse transcription polymerase chain (DDRT-PCR), was used to detect changes in the overall pattern of gene expression in human articular knee chondrocytes-induced by interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), the prototypical inducer of catabolic responses in degenerate joint diseases. One hundred different primer combinations generated approximately 10,000 different PCR fragments for IL-1 beta treated, as well as for untreated human chondrocytes, cultivated in alginate beads. This represented 53% of all expressed chondrocyte genes as based on statistical considerations. Side by side comparisons of differential display patterns originating from two different donor tissues yielded 44 reproducibly, differentially-displayed cDNA fragments, which were subcloned and sequenced. Sequence homology searches revealed sequence identities to the human necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and IL-1 regulated gene TSG-6, fibronectin, osteopontin, calnexin, and the DNA repair enzyme ERCC5. The differential expression was confirmed with Northern and quantitative PCR analyses. The known function of these genes and their known IL-1 responsiveness indicate that the employed model system reflects the pleiotropic effects of IL-1 on the overall gene expression in human articular chondrocytes and identifies genes involved in very different biochemical pathways. Twenty-seven cDNAs lacked sequence homologies to known genes and may represent novel genes.
We concluded that the use of Bailey-Dubow rods in early childhood can be recommended for the femur, whereas insertion into the tibia or humerus is associated with a considerable complication rate.
We analyzed the time-dependent results after Coventry osteotomy in 118 patients (129 cases) with uni-compartmental osteoarthrosis of the knee. The median follow-up was 11.6 years (range 0.7-17 years). Data were noted according to the time since surgery. Group I (> 2 years) consisted of all 129 cases, group II (> 4 years) of 41 cases and group III (> 8 years) of 15 cases. The HSS knee score (max. 100 points) improved from 33.2 +/- 20.4 (range 17-60) to 68.3 +/- 25.3 (range 30-90) in group I, to 54.7 +/- 18.9 (range 29-90) in group II and to 43.7 +/- 20.9 (range 23-85) in group III. The improvement started 4.6 +/- 7.8 months (range 0-60 months) after the operation and persisted for 4 years +/- 37.4 months (range 0-125 months). The functional knee score (max. 100 points) changed from 61.7 +/- 14.1 (range 41-70) to 71.7 +/- 13.1 (range 53-87) in group I, to 70.0 +/- 11.8 (range 54-88) in group II and to 64.2 +/- 8.0 (range 42-90) in group III. The initial loss in knee flexion was 5.6 degrees (range 0 degree-20 degrees) and for extension 1.0 degree (range -5 degrees-25 degrees). Anteroposterior ligament stability (max. 10 points) decreased from 9.2 +/- 2.1 (range 2-10) to 5.6 +/- 1.7 (range 2-9) in group III. Lateral ligament stability (max. 15 points) was relatively constant, from 12.6 +/- 1.9 (range 4-15) to 9.7 +/- 1.9 (range 2-14). Complications included one tibia fracture, one infection, six peroneus pareses, four haematomas and one pseudarthrosis. The mechanical axis was corrected to an average knee valgu2 of 5.2 degrees +/- 7.4 degrees, which deteriorated over time. Radiographic evidence of arthrosis appeared independent of the operation.
Purpose: Overall Total hip arthroplasty (THA) is a very successful procedure. However, in case of complication dedicated management is required. Two major complications of THA failures are aseptic loosening (AL) and periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). The primary hypothesis of this study was that joint aspirations in patients with signs of loosening after THA are capable to detect PJI in suspected AL with negative serologic testing. Methods: In this study a total of 108 symptomatic patients with radiographic signs of prosthetic loosening and hip pain in THA were included. Based on a standardized algorithm all patients underwent serological testing followed by joint aspiration preoperatively. Intraoperatively harvested samples were subjected to microbiological testing and served as the gold standard in differential diagnosis. Demographics, as well as the results of serologic and microbiological testing were collected from the medical records. Results: Of the included patients 85 were finally diagnosed with an AL and 23 with PJI. Within the patients with PJI 13 (56%) patients demonstrated elevated CRP and WBC counts, as well as positive synovial cultures after joint aspiration. In ten patients (44%) diagnosed with PJI neither CRP nor WBC were abnormal.
Conclusion:The diagnosis of PJI can be difficult in THA with radiographic signs of loosening. Clinical features including pain, fever, and local sings of infection are uncommon especially a long period after index operation. First-line screening testing relies on serological evaluation of CRP and WBC. However, normal CRP and WBC values cannot rule out a PJI. These cases can be detected by joint aspiration and synovial cultures reliably.
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