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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 20 - 20
11 Apr 2023
Hamilton R Holt C Hamilton D Garcia A Graham C Jones R Shilabeer D Kuiper J Sparkes V Khot S Mason D
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Mechanical loading of joints with osteoarthritis (OA) results in pain-related functional impairment, altered joint mechanics and physiological nociceptor interactions leading to an experience of pain. However, the current tools to measure this are largely patient reported subjective impressions of a nociceptive impact. A direct measure of nociception may offer a more objective indicator. Specifically, movement-induced physiological responses to nociception may offer a useful way to monitor knee OA. In this study, we gathered preliminary data on healthy volunteers to analyse whether integrated biomechanical and physiological sensor datasets could display linked and quantifiable information to a nociceptive stimulus.

Following ethical approval, 15 healthy volunteers completed 5 movement and stationary activities in 2 conditions; a control setting and then repeated with an applied quantified thermal pain stimulus to their right knee. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) and an electromyography (EMG) lower body marker set were tested and integrated with ground reaction force (GRF) data collection. Galvanic skin response electrodes for skin temperature and conductivity and photoplethysmography (PPG) sensors were manually timestamped to the integrated system.

Pilot data showed EMG, GRF and IMU fluctuations within 0.5 seconds of each other in response to a thermal trigger. Preliminary analysis on the 15 participants tested has shown skin conductance, PPG, EMG, GRFs, joint angles and kinematics with varying increases and fluctuations during the thermal condition in comparison to the control condition.

Preliminary results suggest physiological and biomechanical data outputs can be linked and identified in response to a defined nociceptive stimulus. Study data is currently founded on healthy volunteers as a proof-of-concept. Further exploratory statistical and sensor readout pattern analysis, alongside early and late-stage OA patient data collection, can provide the information for potential development of wearable nociceptive sensors to measure disease progression and treatment effectiveness.


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This prospective randomised trial aimed to assess the superiority of internal fixation of well-reduced medial malleolar fractures (displacement □2mm) compared with non-fixation, following fibular stabilisation in patients undergoing surgical management of a closed unstable ankle fracture.

A total of 154 adult patients with a bi- or trimalleolar fracture were recruited from a single centre. Open injuries and vertically unstable medial malleolar fractures were excluded. Following fibular stabilisation, patients were randomised intra-operatively on a 1:1 basis to fixation or non-fixation after satisfactory fluoroscopic fracture reduction was confirmed. The primary outcome was the Olerud Molander Ankle Score (OMAS) at 12 months post-randomisation. Complications were documented over the follow-up period.

The baseline group demographics and injury characteristics were comparable. There were 144 patients reviewed at the primary outcome point (94%). The median OMAS was 80 (IQR, 60-90) in the fixation group vs. 72.5 (IQR, 55-90) in the non-fixation group (p=0.165). Complication rates were comparable, although significantly more patients (n=13, 20%) in the non-fixation group developed a radiographic non-union (p<0.001). The majority (n=8/13) were asymptomatic, with one patient requiring surgical reintervention. In the non-fixation group, a superior outcome was associated with an anatomical medial malleolar fracture reduction.

Internal fixation is not superior to non-fixation of well-reduced medial malleolar fractures when managing unstable ankle fractures. However, one in five patients following non-fixation developed a radiographic non-union and whilst the re-intervention rate to manage this was low, the longer-term consequences of this are unknown. The results of this trial may support selective non-fixation of anatomically reduced fractures.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Oct 2022
Shivji N Geraghty A Birkinshaw H Pincus T Johnson H Little P Moore M Stuart B Chew-Graham C
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Background and study purpose

Low mood and distress are commonly reported with by people with persistent musculoskeletal pain and may be mislabelled as ‘depression’. In order to understand how pain-related distress is conceptualised and managed in primary care consultations, we explored understanding of pain-related distress and depression from the perspectives of people with persistent musculoskeletal pain and general practitioners (GPs).

Method and results

Semi-structured interviews with 21 GPs and 21 people with persistent musculoskeletal pain were conducted. The majority of people with pain had back pain (15/21). Data were analysed thematically using constant comparison techniques. Participants described challenges distinguishing between distress and depression in the context of persistent pain but described strategies to make this distinction. Some people with pain described how acceptance of their situation was key, involving optimism about the future and creation of a new identity. Some GPs expressed ‘therapeutic nihilism’, with uncertainty about the cause of pain and thus how to manage people with both pain and distress, whilst GPs who could identify and build on optimism with patients described how this could help the patient to move forwards.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 25 - 25
1 Oct 2019
Saunders B Hill J Foster N Cooper V Protheroe J Chudyk A Chew-Graham C Campbell P Bartlam B
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Background

Improving primary care management of musculoskeletal (MSK) pain is a priority. A pilot cluster RCT tested prognostic stratified care for patients with common MSK pain presentations, including low back pain, in 8 UK general practices (4 stratified care; 4 usual care) with 524 patients. GPs in stratified care practices were asked to use i) the Keele STarT MSK tool for risk-stratification and ii) matched treatment options for patients at low-, medium- and high-risk of persistent pain. A linked qualitative process evaluation explored patients' and GPs' views and experiences of stratified care.

Methods

Individual ‘stimulated-recall’ interviews with patients and GPs in the stratified care arm (n=10 patients; 10 GPs), prompted by consultation-recordings. Data were analysed thematically and mapped onto the COM-B behaviour change model; exploring the Opportunity, Capability and Motivation GPs and patients had to engage with stratified care.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 102 - 103
1 Mar 2008
Graham C Dust W
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This study assesses a method of optimizing the polyethylene-cement interface when cementing a constrained liner into a pre-existing acetabular shell. We tested several configurations of liner modification including random roughening, 2mm and 4mm wide grooves Statistical analysis showed that the grooved liners had significantly higher moment to failure than both the unmodified and roughened liners. There was no difference between the 2 and 4mm grooved liners.

The purpose of this study was to answer the question: what liner preparation will provide the most stable polyethylene – cement interface?

Two and 4mm circumferential grooves and meticulous cementing technique can significantly increase the strength of the polyethylene-cement interface.

All samples failed at the polyethylene – cement interface. Statistically significant differences were found between the following groups: unmodified vs. 2mm (p=0.005) and 4mm groove (p=0.012) and roughened vs. 4mm groove (p=0.011).

Modification of a constrained liner with circumferential grooves may improve the stability of the cement interface enough to make this a more reliable technique in revision hip surgery.

Polyethylene was machined into 50mm diameter liners. These were cemented using PMMA into aluminum acetabular shells ensuring a 3mm cement mantle. Lever-out testing was performed on four groups; no modification, random roughening, 2mm and 4mm grooves.

When an acetabular component is well fixed/positioned, the option of cementing a constrained liner into the fixed shell is an option. Experience has shown that the most common mode of failure in this technique is the polyethylene-cement interface.

Funding: This study was funded by the Division of Orthopedics, Department of Surgery, and the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Saskatchewan.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 413 - 414
1 Oct 2006
Gray A Torrens L Christie J Graham C Robinson C
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Background: Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound has been used to detect cerebral micremboli following long bone fractures and intramedullary stabilization. However the clinical effects in terms of cognitive function remain unclear. We aim to measure the cerebral embolic load and to clarify clinical cognitive function following lower limb long bone fractures stabilised by reamed intramedullary fixation.

Methods: 27 femoral and tibial diaphyseal fractures (median age 36 years) were cognitively assessed 3 days following surgery and compared to the normal age and intelligence matched population. A wide range of cognitive tests assessed: global cognitive function; verbal fluency and speed; immediate and delayed memory recall; attention and mental processing speeds. 20 patients had intra-operative transcranial Doppler ultrasound monitoring of the middle cerebral artery for embolic signals. In addition a marker of neuronal injury (S-100B protein) was measured pre-operatively and at 0, 24 and 48 hours following surgery. One sample Wilcoxon signed rank test compared median (percentile) cognitive scores for the fracture patient cohort to a value of 50 representing the normal population.

Results: A significant deterioration in immediate memory recall of unstructured material was noted following surgery. Using established criteria, 4 patients had detectable cerebral emboli with a median count of 3 (range 2–9). Scatter plot graphs indicated no correlation between cerebral embolic events and clinical cognitive dysfunction. S-100B protein levels increased from a pre-operative median (interquartile range) of 0.20 (0.23) to a peak immediately following surgery of 0.51 (0.97) with no correlation to clinical cognitive dysfunction

Conclusions: A small number of cerebral embolic events occur during intramedullary fracture stabilisation but with no direct correlation made to cognitive dysfunction on detailed testing. Recent concerns over the specificity of S100B protein due to extracerebral tissue release appear to be confirmed.

Significance: Clarify cognitive function following intramedullary fracture stabilisation and correlate with cerebral (systemic) embolic load.