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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 348 - 348
1 Sep 2012
Thomas S Bhattacharya R Saltikov J Kramer D
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Background

Injury to the ACL is a significant problem and can cause further damage to the internal structures of the knee. ACL injury is associated with injuries to other structures in the knee such as the meniscus and chondral cartilage. Such intra articular injuries pre-dispose the knee to develop arthritis. This injury is usually seen in young and active people usually related to sporting injuries. There is a paucity of literature on the influence of anthropometric features on the hamstring graft obtained in ACL reconstruction, although there are studies on the sex based differences affecting the hamstring graft. This study was undertaken to assess the influence of anthropometric measurements on the graft thickness obtained at ACL reconstruction surgery within the UK population.

Objective

This study was undertaken to assess the influence of anthropometric measurements (body mass index (BMI), height and weight) on the graft thickness obtained at anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 170 - 170
1 Sep 2012
Scott C Bhattacharya R Macdonald D Wade F Nutton R
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Unicompartmental knee replacements (UKRs) have inconsistent and variable survivorships reported in the literature. It has been suggested that many are revised for ongoing pain with no other mode of failure identified. Using a medial UKR with an all-polyethylene non-congruent tibial component from 2004–7, we noted a revision rate of 9/98 cases (9.2%) at a mean of 39 months. Subchondral sclerosis was noted under the tibial component in 3/9 revisions with well fixed implants, and the aim of this study was to investigate this as a mode of failure. 89 UKRs in 77 patients were investigated radiographically (at mean 50 months) and with SF-12 and Oxford Knee scores at mean follow up 55 months. Subjectively 23/89 cases (25%) had sclerosis under the tibial component. We describe a method of quantifying this sclerosis as a greyscale ratio (GSR), which was significantly correlated with presence/absence of sclerosis (p<0.001). Significant predictors of elevated GSR (increasing sclerosis) were female sex (p<0.001) and elevated BMI (P=0.010) on both univariate and multivariate analysis. In turn, elevated GSR was significantly associated with poorer improvement in OKS (p<0.05) at the time of final follow up. We hypothesise that this sclerosis results from repetitive microfracture and adaptive remodelling in the proximal tibia due to increased strain. Finite element analysis is required to investigate this further, but we suggest caution should be employed when considering all polyethylene UKR implants in older women and in those with BMI >35.