The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Sep 1998
Case ReportsPostoperative mortality after total hip arthroplasty. An analysis of deaths after two thousand seven hundred and thirty-six procedures.
We retrospectively determined the prevalence and nature of mortality as many as ninety days after 2736 primary and revision total hip arthroplasties performed in 2002 patients by one surgeon at a teaching hospital between January 1969 and December 1996. All but seventy-one of the patients had received prophylaxis against venous thromboembolic disease. There were no intraoperative deaths, and no events during the operation could be linked directly to postoperative mortality. ⋯ The ninety-day postoperative mortality rate after 2736 procedures performed over nearly three decades was low (0.3 per cent). This span of time included the period before the introduction of many current improvements in perioperative care, such as routine intubation of patients under general anesthesia, continuous monitoring of the electrocardiogram intraoperatively, and blood-gas determinations. When the patients who died as a result of known, severe preexisting disease were excluded, the mortality rate was 0.18 per cent (five of 2733).
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Sep 1998
Total hip arthroplasty after operative treatment of an acetabular fracture.
Sixty-six primary total hip arthroplasties were performed to treat post-traumatic osteoarthrosis that had developed following an acetabular fracture and subsequent open reduction and internal fixation. The mean age of the patients at the time of the total hip arthroplasty was fifty-two years (range, nineteen to eighty years). The arthroplasty was performed with cement in forty-four hips and without cement in twenty hips; in the remaining two hips, the acetabular component was inserted without cement and the femoral component was inserted with cement (a so-called hybrid procedure). ⋯ An age of less than fifty years (p = 0.02), a weight of eighty kilograms or more (p = 0.047), and large residual combined segmental and cavitary deficiencies in the acetabular bone (p < 0.0001) were significant risk factors for revision because of aseptic loosening. At the ten-year follow-up, none of the twenty-two acetabular components that had been inserted without cement had been revised or demonstrated radiographic loosening. The ten-year rate of failure due to aseptic loosening was higher than that in many reported series of total hip arthroplasties performed for other indications; this was probably partly because of the young mean age of the patients, the high number of patients who had Charnley class-A involvement, and the predominantly male cohort.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Aug 1998
Biomechanical and histological evaluation of a calcium phosphate cement.
It is often difficult to achieve stable fixation of a comminuted fracture associated with a metaphyseal defect. The injection of a resorbable cement into an osseous defect may help to stabilize the fracture and to maintain osseous integrity as the cement is resorbed and replaced by bone. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the repair of a metaphyseal defect after treatment with an injectable calcium-phosphate cement. ⋯ At no time was fibrous tissue present between the cement and the bone, and there was no evidence of acute inflammation. Small particles of cement were present within occasional macrophages during the process of cement resorption, but the macrophages disappeared over time and were not associated with fibrosis or unexpected resorption of bone. Resorption of the cement was incomplete in the medullary area at seventy-eight weeks, but the pattern of cement resorption and bone-remodeling suggested gradual restoration of a physiological proportion of bone and marrow in both the cortical and the medullary region with maintenance of mechanical function.
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The purpose of the present study was to demonstrate the reliability, validity, and responsiveness of the Activities of Daily Living Scale of the Knee Outcome Survey, a patient-reported measure of functional limitations imposed by pathological disorders and impairments of the knee during activities of daily living. The study comprised 397 patients; 213 were male, 156 were female, and the gender was not recorded for the remaining twenty-eight. The mean age of the patients was 33.3 years (range, twelve to seventy-six years). ⋯ As had been hypothesized, the patients in whom the knee had somewhat improved had a significantly smaller change in the score, both at four weeks (F1,189 = 33.50; p < 0.001) and at eight weeks (F1,156 = 22.48; p < 0.001), compared with those in whom the knee had greatly improved. The test-retest reliability coefficient (intraclass correlation coefficient[2,1]) was 0.97. These results suggest that the Activities of Daily Living Scale is a reliable, valid, and responsive instrument for the assessment of functional limitations that result from a wide variety of pathological disorders and impairments of the knee.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Aug 1998
Interobserver reliability and intraobserver reproducibility of the system of King et al. for the classification of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.
The classification of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis with use of the system of King et al. has become widely accepted since its introduction. The purpose of the present study was to establish the interobserver reliability and intraobserver reproducibility of this classification system. The preoperative radiographs of sixty-three patients who were managed operatively for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis were classified by five observers with the system of King et al. ⋯ The median interobserver reliability kappa coefficient for the classification system of King et al. was 0.44 (range, 0.28 to 0.50), and the median intraobserver reproducibility kappa coefficient was 0.64 (range, 0.44 to 0.72). According to the definition of Landis and Koch, the classification system of King et al. is substantially reproducible but is only moderately reliable. However, according to the stricter definition of Svanholm et al., its reproducibility is only fair and its reliability is poor.