The Journal of arthroplasty
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A study was undertaken to determine the frequency with which patients had pain that they attributed to their hip after total hip arthroplasty. Pain drawings were used to allow patients to localize the area of their symptoms, and the degree of pain was quantified with visual analog scales. Complete clinical and radiographic data were collected on all patients so that the occurrence of pain could be correlated with a number of parameters previously reported to affect the incidence of pain, including age, sex, activity level, length of follow-up, stem size, bone type (Dorr index), and type of stem fixation (proximally coated, fully coated, or cemented). ⋯ Patients with proximally coated stems were more than twice as likely to complain of pain than patients with fully coated or cemented hips (P < .01). Although the incidence of thigh pain was significantly higher with proximally coated stems, the severity was not, averaging 3.0 to 3.5 out of 10 on visual analog scale in all 3 groups. The results indicate that patients perceived pain as originating in the hip in a high percentage of cases, particularly when proximally coated stems were used.
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Deep venous thrombosis is 1 of the most common postoperative complications resulting in significant mortality and morbidity in patients undergoing total hip and total knee arthroplasty. Research has shown that the effectiveness and safety of low-molecular-weight heparins depend on the timeliness of their administration, particularly when used in conjunction with spinal or epidural anesthesia, both of which are effective and safe treatment modalities for knee and hip arthroplasty. ⋯ We reviewed the perioperative management of patients who had a total hip or total knee arthroplasty in which there was the combined use of epidural or spinal anesthesia and enoxaparin. Our results show a 52% (26 of 50) noncompliance rate in the administration of enoxaparin as compared with the published protocol for using this treatment modality safely and effectively.
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To assess the effect of extensive surgery and delayed mobilization on postoperative incidence of fatal pulmonary embolism, we reviewed the mortality rate in 1,294 patients undergoing 1,483 revisions of failed total hip arthroplasties, in which mobilization of the patients was delayed for up to 3 weeks. There were 6 deaths (mortality rate, 0.4%). All were submitted to autopsy; only 1 death was the result of pulmonary embolism. The results of our review do not support the view that more extensive surgery and delayed mobilization of the patient, as in revision of failed total hip arthroplasties, carries a high incidence of fatal pulmonary embolism.
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This study evaluated 5 currently used periprosthetic femoral shaft fracture fixation techniques to determine which technique provided the greatest fixation stability. Periprosthetic fractures in 30 synthetic femurs were fixed with a plate with cables, plate with proximal cables and distal bicortical screws (Ogden concept), plate with proximal unicortical screws and distal bicortical screws, plate with proximal unicortical screws and cables and distal bicortical screws, or 2 allograft cortical strut grafts with cables. These specimens were then tested in 3 physiologic loading modes. The plate constructs with proximal unicortical screws and distal bicortical screws or with proximal unicortical screws, proximal cables, and distal bicortical screws were significantly more stable in axial compression, lateral bending, and torsional loading than the other fixation constructs studied.
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Case Reports
Acute cauda equina syndrome after total knee arthroplasty as a result of epidural anesthesia and spinal stenosis.
An unusual complication of epidural anesthesia performed for routine total knee arthroplasty is presented. Epidural catheter placement or removal resulted in an acute cauda equina syndrome in a patient with asymptomatic high-grade lumbar spinal stenosis at L3-4. The case is presented along with a literature review.