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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 41 - 41
1 Dec 2022
Verhaegen J Innmann MM Batista NA Dion C Pierrepont J Merle C Grammatopoulos G
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The study of spinopelvic anatomy and movement has received great interest as these characteristics influence the biomechanical behavior (and outcome) following hip arthroplasty. However, to-date there is little knowledge of what “normal” is and how this varies with age. This study aims to determine how dynamic spino-pelvic characteristics change with age, with well-functioning hips and assess how these changes are influenced by the presence of hip arthritis.

This is an IRB-approved, cross-sectional, cohort study; 100 volunteers (asymptomatic hips, Oxford-Hip-sore>45) [age:53 ± 17 (24-87) years-old; 51% female; BMI: 28 ± 5] and 200 patients with end-stage hip arthritis [age:56 ± 19 (16-89) years-old; 55% female; BMI:28 ± 5] were studied. All participants underwent lateral spino-pelvic radiographs in the standing and deep-seated positions to determine maximum hip and spine flexion. Parameters measured included lumbar-lordosis (LL), pelvic incidence, pelvic-tilt (PT), pelvic-femoral angles (PFA). Lumbar flexion (ΔLL), hip flexion (ΔPFA) and pelvic movement (ΔPT) were calculated. The prevalence of spinopelvic imbalance (PI–LL>10?) was determined.

There were no differences in any of the spino-pelvic characteristics or movements between sexes. With advancing age, standing LL reduced and standing PT increased (no differences between groups). With advancing age, both hip (4%/decade) and lumbar (8%/decade) flexion reduced (p<0.001) (no difference between groups). ΔLL did not correlate with ΔPFA (rho=0.1). Hip arthritis was associated with a significantly reduced hip flexion (82 ±;22? vs. 90 ± 17?; p=0.003) and pelvic movements (1 ± 16? vs. 8 ± 16?; p=0.002) at all ages and increased prevalence of spinopelvic imbalance (OR:2.6; 95%CI: 1.2-5.7).

With aging, the lumbar spine loses its lumbar lordosis and flexion to a greater extent that then the hip and resultantly, the hip's relative contribution to the overall sagittal movement increases. With hip arthritis, the reduced hip flexion and the necessary compensatory increased pelvic movement is a likely contributor to the development of hip-spine syndrome and of spino-pelvic imbalance.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 106 - 106
1 Jul 2020
Dion C Lanting B Howard J Teeter M Willing R
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During revision total knee arthroplasty (rTKA), proximal tibial bone loss is frequently encountered and can result in a less-stable bone-implant fixation. A 3D printed titanium alloy (Ti6Al4V) revision augment that conforms to the irregular shape of the proximal tibia was recently developed. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the fixation stability of rTKA with this augment in comparison to conventional cemented rTKA.

Eleven pairs of thawed fresh-frozen cadaveric tibias (22 tibias) were potted in custom fixtures. Primary total knee arthroplasty (pTKA) surgery was performed on all tibias. Fixation stability testing was conducted using a three-stage eccentric loading protocol. Static eccentric (70% medial/ 30% lateral) loading of 2100 N was applied to the implants before and after subjecting them to 5×103 loading cycles of 700 N at 2 Hz using a joint motion simulator. Bone-implant micromotion was measured using a high-resolution optical system. The pTKA were removed. The proximal tibial bone defect was measured. One tibia from each pair was randomly allocated to the experimental group, and rTKA was performed with a titanium augment printed using selective laser melting. The contralateral side was assigned to the control group (revision with fully cemented stems). The three-stage eccentric loading protocol was used to test the revision TKAs. Independent t-tests were used to compare the micromotion between the two groups.

After revision TKA, the mean micromotion was 23.1μm ± 26.2μm in the control group and 12.9μm ± 22.2μm in the experimental group. There was significantly less micromotion in the experimental group (p= 0.04). Prior to revision surgery, the control and experimental group had no significant difference in primary TKA micromotion (p= 0.19) and tibial bone loss (p= 0.37).

This study suggests that early fixation stability of revision TKA with the novel 3D printed titanium augment is significantly better then the conventional fully cemented rTKA. The early press-fit fixation of the augment is likely sufficient for promoting bony ingrowth of the augment in vivo. Further studies are needed to investigate the long-term in-vivo fixation of the novel 3D printed augment.