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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 525 - 525
1 Nov 2011
Marcheix P Dotzis A Siegler J Benkö P Mabit C Arnaud J Charissoux J
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Purpose of the study: The purpose of this study was to compare two types of treatment for fractures of the distal radius with posterior shift: the volar locking plate (c) or mixed multiple pinning (MMP). We conducted a prospective randomised trial.

Material and methods: One hundred ten patients aged over 50 years victims of an articular or extra-articular fracture of the distal radius with posterior shift were included in this study. Mean age was 74 years. Patients were recruited via our emergency unit. After obtaining the written informed consent of the patients, patients were assigned to a treatment group using the nQuery Advisor 6.01 available on the internet, 24 hours/d 7d/7. Patients were treated by one of the two surgical techniques according to the randomisation. Patients were reviewed at 3 and 6 weeks and at 3 and 6 months. The DASH and Herzberg scores were noted and plain x-rays of the wrist (ap and lateral views) were obtained at each visit.

Results: Fifty-two patients were treated with MMP and 50 with VLP. Postoperative anteversion of he radial glenoid was significantly better in patients treated with MMP. At six months, the DASH and Herzberg score were significantly better in the LAP group.

Discussion: MMP allows better anteversion of the glenoid than VLP. However, with MMP there is a risk of over reduction (15% of patients in our series). Treatment with VLP should enable restoration of better radius length with a lesser loss at three months than with MMP. All studies reported, irrespective of the function score used, have found better functional outcome with plating than with pinning.

Conclusion: MMP offers a less costly alternative for the treatment of most all distal fractures of the radius with posterior shift. This option provides quite satisfactory clinical and radiographic outcomes. There is a risk of postoperative defect in reduction or stability with MMP, suggesting surgeons should opt for another technique, VLP for example.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 269 - 269
1 Jul 2008
ARNAUD J COSTE C CHARISSOUX J MABIT C SETTON D PECOUT C
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Purpose of the study: The introduction of ceramic bearings in the 1970s raised several issues, including the definition of what should be considered as a ceramic. The simplest definition would appear to refer to the periodic table: a ceramic is composed of a non-metal ion, generally with oxygen as the covalent ion. Alumina is the most commonly used bearing, and is generally considered the most reliable despite certain worrisome reports. Zirconium is also a very promising ceramic as was shown by a review of our firs 97 cases at ten years follow-up.

Material and methods: All patients were reviewed by the same investigator who was not one of the operating surgeons. The patients were classified by group according to their BLMI correlated by the Tanner curve, associated with the Charnley index and the Devane classification

Results: There were no septic complications. There was one dislocation and one head fracture. For the other patients, no revision was required nor planned. Preoper-ative Postel-Merle-d’Aubigné (PMA) score was 8.8 pre-operatively and 17.3 postoperatively. Radiographically, the Barrack, Guen, DeLee and Charnley and Brooker classifications for filling, lucent lines and periprosthetic calcifications were assessed on digitalized films with 115% magnification. Wear was measured on 250% magnification weight-bearing images two or three times more accurate than the classical Charnley Cupic, Liver-more or Ebra methods. This study found that 72% of the prostheses were free of femoral lucent lines, that 82% had no acetabular lucent line, and that wear was 0.114 mm/yr with an accuracy two or three times better than classical non-weight-bearing methods. There were no revisions for loosening and none were planned.

Discussion: These good results should be considered with caution because of the presence of one head fracture. In the event of a head fracture, use of these ceramic bearings almost always requires the use of another ceramic bearing, raising many technical, ethical, and legal problems which do not all have an adequate solution.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 86-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 52 - 52
1 Jan 2004
Fiorenza F Grimer RG Abudu A Ayoub K Tillman R Charissoux J Carter S
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Purpose: The purpose of this work was to analyse survival and prognostic factors in a series of patients treated for pelvic chondrosarcoma.

Material and methods: This series included 67 patients (27 women and 40 men) treated between 1971 and 1996 for pelvic chondrosarcoma. Mean age at diagnosis was 45 years (range 18–78). Forty percent of the tumours were grade I. The most frequent localisation was the iliac bone. Conservative surgery was performed in 45 patients. The only surgical treatment possible in 22 patients was an inter-ilioabdominal disarticulation. Resection margins were adequate for only 19 patients (wide resection). Marginal resection was noted in 14 patients with intra-tumour resection in 17.

Results: Overall 5- and 8-year survival was 65% and 58% respectively. Local recurrence rate was 40%, occurring a mean 27 months after initial surgery. Statistical analysis did not reveal any correlation between tumour size, tumour grade, type of surgery, resection margin, and local recurrence. Results were nevertheless less favourable in case of inadequate surgical margins. Tumour grade, tumour size, patient age, gender, and quality of resection did not have a significant effect on overall survival. Local recurrence was the only negative factor predictive of survival (p< 0.05).

Discussion: Development of local recurrence appears to be the most important negative predictive factor in patients with pelvic chondrosarcoma. In this localisation, satisfactory resection margins are often difficult to achieve. Most authors propose inter-ilioabdominal disarticulation as a last resort procedure. The question of the indication for more aggressive initial surgery to obtain more radical resection margins remains open.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 86-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 37 - 37
1 Jan 2004
Cochu G Baertich C Fiorenza F Charissoux J Arnaud J Mabit C
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess outcome after first-intention total hip arthroplasty for fresh fractures of the acetabulum in elderly patients.

Material and methods: We present a retrospective analysis of 18 recent fractures of the acetabulum observed in nine men and nine women, mean age 74.8 years which were treated by first-intention total hip arthroplasty. The fractures were considered equivalent to acetabular bone deficits observed at revision of total arthroplasty (five grade III, 13 grade IV in the SOFCT 1988 classification).

The prosthesis was implanted 15.6 days (mean) after initial trauma and included a metal-backed acetabular implant (except one case) and a bone autograft (except three cases). Complete weight bearing was authorised on day 3 postop for five patients, and at six weeks for ten; at three months for the other three.

Mean follow-up was 2.5 years. Thirteen surviving patients were reviewed clinically and radiographically. Five patients who had died were also included in the analysis using data reported by family before death.

The Postel-Merle d’Aubigné (PMA) and Harris scores were recorded. Survival curves were plotted. Radiological assessment included bone healing, status of the prosthetic assembly, presence of a lucent line or signs of loosening in the three acetabular zones described by De Lee and Charnley.

Results: The mean functional scores were 13.6/18 (PMA) and 71.8/100 (Harris). There were no cases of infection or dislocation. Median Kaplan-Meier survival was six years. The one-year survival rate was 94.4%. Five deaths were recorded, all due to causes independent of the surgical intervention.

Radiologically, all fractures had healed. There were no mechanical complications and no signs of acetabular loosening.

Discussion: Several authors have demonstrated that prognosis is poor in elderly subjects undergoing surgical osteosynthesis or functional treatment due to the presence of risk factors (osteoporosis, comminution, deferred surgery due to poor general status). Prolonged bed rest may also have life-threatening consequences. Other work has emphasised the very high rate of complications after revision surgery for dismounted material, post-traumatic deterioration, or osteonecrosis.

The absence of early deaths and the low rate of intervention-related morbidity in this series of elderly patients is in agreement with a very small number of publications devoted to this topic.

Conclusion: This therapeutic attitude enables early verticalisation avoiding the complications related to the bedridden state in the elderly. In addition, subsequent revision for osteonecrosis of the femoral head or post-traumatic deterioration can be avoided. These results have incited us to pursue this therapeutic option.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 86-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 65 - 66
1 Jan 2004
Fiorenza F Kulkarni A Grimer R Carter S Tillman R Charissoux J Pynsent P
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Purpose: Primary bone tumours situated at the distal end of the humerus are exceptional and observed in only 1% of the cases. Reconstruction at this level is often difficult due to the wide bone resection. Choosing a massive prosthesis is an interesting method allowing correct carcinological and functional results. We report a series of ten patients who underwent reconstruction of the lower end of the humerus between 1970 and 2001 with a massive prosthesis after tumour resection.

Material and methods: This series included four men and six women, mean age 51 years (15–76). Eight patients had primary bone tumours and two had secondary bone lesions. Mean follow-up was 79 months (9–372). The custom-made constrained hinge prosthesis composed of chromium-cobalt and titanium was cemented. Regular clinical and radiological follow-up data were recorded. The Henneking score and the Toronto Extremity Survival Score (TESS) were used to assess functional outcome.

Results: Three patients underwent revision for aseptic loosening of the humeral component at 48, 56 and 366 months with problem of polyethylene insert wear for two of them. There were no infctions or local recurrences and no secondary amputations. The posterior or anterolateral approach was used for humeral resection (mean 153 mm, 63–160 mm). Postoperatively, three patients developed transient palsy (one radial and two ulnar) which regressed. Four patients died from metastasis and had a satsifactory prosthesis result at time of death. The mean TESS was 73% (29–93%) at last follow-up

Discussion: Although this is a small series, the long-term results appear to indicate that reconstruction of the lower extremity of the humerus with a massive prosthesis is a satisfactory option for this rare tumour localisation.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 84-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages - 25
1 Mar 2002
Desnoyers V Charissoux J Aribit F Arnaud J
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We report a case of an aneurysmal cyst localized in the patella of a 37-year-old man. The lesion was secondary to a chondroblastoma at six years follow-up after initial curettage and bone graft. It were no recurrence. Treatment of aneurysmal cysts depends on the degree of articular involvement. We made a detailed study of 11 cases of this rare localization of aneurysmal cysts reported in the literature.