Der Orthopäde
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Thoracic and thoracolumbar kyphosis is a common deformity in pediatric and adolescent populations. Kyphotic deformation of the spine is defined as a curve which shows an increase in the dorsal convex angulation. The most common causes of kyphosis in pediatric and adolescent populations are Scheuermann's disease, postural and congenital kyphosis. ⋯ Clinically significant sagittal deformities can lead to severe pain, substantial cosmetic alterations, spinal cord dysfunction, problems with swallowing, gastrointestinal and cardiopulmonary complications. When the kyphotic deformity exceeds a certain point and conservative therapy options are no longer sufficient surgical intervention is indicated. The available operative options for treatment of the various types of pediatric and adolescent thoracolumbar kyphosis include dorsal instrumentation and fusion combined with ventral fusion and purely ventral instrumentation and fusion.
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Short-stemmed cementless femoral components in total hip arthroplasty have been designed to preserve the proximal femoral bone stock by load transfer to the femoral metaphysis. An in vivo method of computed tomography-assisted (CT) osteodensitometry after total hip arthroplasty is presented which differentiates between cortical and cancellous bone density (BD) changes around uncemented femoral components. ⋯ Periprosthetic CT osteodensitometry has the technical ability to discriminate between cortical and cancellous bone structures with respect to strain-adapted remodeling. Progressive proximal cortical and cancellous BD loss indicates that metaphyseal fixation cannot be achieved with the analyzed C.F.P. stem design. The lack of cortical BD loss below the trochanter minor suggests diaphyseal fixation of the implanted stem.
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Despite modern diagnostic imaging options pyogenic infections of the spine are often detected tardily and therefore accompanied by a high mortality rate. To ensure an efficient and adequate therapy it is necessary to identify and treat the focus of inflammation. The recommendations for the operative strategy are still a highly controversial issue. ⋯ From 1994 until 2008, 269 patients suffering from an infection of the thoracic and lumbar spine were treated in the Department of Orthopedic Surgery Heidelberg and 221 patients underwent surgery. Within the scope of a clinical trial clinical aspects and therapeutic consequences of patients with pyogenic spinal infections were retrospectively investigated. Based on the study data a classification of pyogenic spinal infections of the thoracic and lumbar spine and a guide for surgical decision-making was developed.
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The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of tourniquet use with constant pressure until wound closure on perioperative blood loss in total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Sufficient patients were included in the study to produce statistically relevant conclusions. In this retrospective case control study 547 patients who were treated with TKA because of osteoarthritis of the knee joint were included and of these 262 patients were operated with the use of a tourniquet (300 mmHg) and 285 without. ⋯ The average perioperative blood loss without tourniquet use was 1.5±0.6 l (range -0.2 to 4.3 l). In contrast patients treated with the use of a tourniquet lost on average only 1.2±0.5 l (range -0.2 to 3.4 l) (p<0.001). The use of a tourniquet reduces the perioperative blood loss in TKA if it is kept tight during the operation.