Clinical orthopaedics and related research
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Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. · Oct 1999
Pain at the end of the stem after revision total knee arthroplasty.
A consecutive series of patients undergoing revision total knee arthroplasty was studied prospectively. Clinical and radiographic assessment was performed preoperatively, 6 and 12 months postoperatively, and annually thereafter. Evaluation consisted of a Knee Society clinical score and assessment of patient satisfaction. ⋯ There was no correlation between the stem diameter and the occurrence of pain; however, there was a trend for percent canal fill to be higher on the tibial side in patients with pain (71% versus 63%), but this was not statistically significant. Three of the 16 patients with cemented tibial stems (19%) experienced pain at the end of the stem. Patients with press fit stems who had pain at the end of the stem were more likely to express dissatisfaction with the surgical procedure than patients without pain at the end of the stem.
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Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. · Oct 1999
Popliteal vessels in knee surgery. A magnetic resonance imaging study.
Popliteal artery injury during surgery of the knee is rare but can have devastating consequences. The position of knee flexion has been thought to be protective for the popliteal artery, allowing it to fall back from the knee joint. No prior study has provided in vivo cross sectional evidence of the behavior of the popliteal vessels during knee flexion with the effect of gravity. ⋯ Considerable variation in behavior of the vein and the artery was observed at the high tibial osteotomy cross sectional level and the total knee arthroplasty cross sectional level. In two knees at the high tibial osteotomy cross sectional level and in two knees at the total knee arthroplasty cross sectional, level the artery moved closer to the posterior tibia with knee flexion. Even with the effect of gravity included, knee flexion does not guarantee removal of the popliteal vessels from potential harm during surgery of the knee.
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Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. · Oct 1999
Blood management in two-stage revision knee arthroplasty for deep prosthetic infection.
Treatment of infected total knee arthroplasty requires aggressive management to treat the infection and restore joint function. For patients with infected knee arthroplasties, a two-stage procedure is used that involves resection of the joint and placement of an antibiotic impregnated cement spacer followed by implantation of a new prosthetic 6 weeks later. Patients undergoing the two-stage procedure typically endure high allogeneic blood transfusion rates (82% to 88%) and progressive anemia because the two surgeries are spaced closely and because the infection precludes the use of alternatives to allogeneic blood. ⋯ After the first stage, allogeneic blood transfusion failed to improve postoperative hemoglobin levels enough to prevent transfusions associated with the second-stage. Patients undergoing two-stage total knee arthroplasty have anemia, and a substantial proportion of these patients require allogeneic blood transfusion at both stages. Thus, novel blood management practices are required to improve hemoglobin levels and reduce allogeneic transfusion rates in this patient population.