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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 202 - 202
1 Sep 2012
Griffin D Pattison G Ribbans W Burnett B
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Introduction

Simulation is increasingly perceived as an important component of surgical training. Cadaveric simulation offers an experience that can closely simulate operating on a living patient. We have explored the feasibility of providing cadaveric training for the whole curriculum for trauma and orthopaedic surgery speciality trainees, before they perform those operations on living patients.

Methods

An eight station surgical training centre was designed and built adjacent to the mortuary of a University Hospital. Seven two-day courses for foot and ankle, knee, hip, spine, shoulder and elbow, hand and wrist, and trauma surgery were designed and delivered. These courses, designed for 16 trainees, were delivered by eight consultant trainers and a course director. Each was structured to allow every trainee to perform each standard operation in the curriculum for that respective subspecialty. We designed the courses to maximise simulated operating time for the trainees and to minimise cost. We surveyed trainers and trainees after the courses to qualitatively assess their value.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 81 - 81
1 Mar 2012
Griffin D Karthikeyan S
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Background

Cam-type femoro-acetabular impingement (FAI) is increasingly recognised as a cause of mechanical hip symptoms in young adults. It is likely that it is a cause of early hip degeneration. Ganz et al have developed a therapeutic procedure involving trochanteric flip osteotomy and dislocation of the hip, and have reported good results. We have developed an arthroscopic osteochondroplasty to reshape the proximal femur and relieve impingement.

Methods

Fifty patients who presented with mechanical hip symptoms and had demonstrable cam-type FAI on radially-reconstructed MR arthrography, were treated by arthroscopic osteochondroplasty. Ten patients had a post-operative CT; from these images flexion and internal rotation range was tested in a virtual reality (VR) model to determine adequacy of resection. All patients were followed up for a minimum of one year, and post-operative Non-Arthritic Hip Scores (NAHS, maximum possible score 100) compared with pre-operative NAHS.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 31 - 31
1 Mar 2012
Griffin D Karthikeyan S
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Background

Femoro-acetabular impingement (FAI) is increasingly recognised as a cause of mechanical hip symptoms in sportspersons. In femoro-acetabular impingement abnormal contact occurs between the proximal femur and the acetabular rim during terminal motion of the hip as a result of abnormal morphologic features involving the proximal femur (CAM) or the acetabulum (Pincer) or both (Mixed) leading to lesions of acetabular labrum and the adjacent acetabular cartilage. It is likely that it is a cause of early hip degeneration. Ganz developed a therapeutic procedure involving trochanteric flip osteotomy and dislocation of the hip, and have reported good results. We have developed an arthroscopic technique to reshape the proximal femur and remove prominent antero-superior acetabular rim thereby relieving impingement.

Methods

Twelve patients presented with mechanical hip symptoms and had demonstrable cam-type (eight patients) or mixed (four patients) FAI on radially-reconstructed MR arthrography, were treated by arthroscopic femoral osteochondroplasty and acetabular rim resection if indicated. All patients were competing at the highest level in their respective sport (football, rugby and athletics). All patients were followed up and post-operative Non-Arthritic Hip Scores (NAHS, maximum possible score 100) compared with pre-operative NAHS.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 6 - 6
1 Mar 2012
Amarasekera H Roberts P Griffin D Krikler S Prakash U Foguet P Williams N Costa M
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We investigated the blood flow to the femoral head during and after Resurfacing Arthroplasty of the hip.

In a previous study, we recorded the intra-operative blood flow in 12 patients who had a posterior approach to the hip and 12 who had a trochanteric flip approach. Using a LASER Doppler flowmeter, we found a 40% drop in blood flow in the posterior group and an 11% drop in the trochanteric flip group (p<0.001). The aim of this current study was to find out whether the intra-operative fall in blood flow persists during the post-operative period.

We therefore conducted a Single Positron Emission Tomography (SPECT) scan on 14 of the same group of patients. The proximal femur was divided into four regions of interest. These were the mid-shaft, proximal shaft, inter-trochanteric and head-neck regions. The data was analysed for bone activity and comparisons made between the two groups for each region of the femur. We found that the bone activity in the mid-shaft, upper-shaft, and head-neck regions was the same eleven months after the surgery irrespective of the approach to the hip. However there was higher activity in the trochanteric flip group in the inter-trochanteric region.

We conclude that the intra-operative deficit in blood flow to the head-neck region of the hip associated with the posterior approach does not seem to persist in the late post-operative period. We believe the reason for increased bone activity in inter-trochanteric region to be due to the healing of the trochanteric flip osteotomy.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 5 - 5
1 Feb 2012
Dalton P Spalding T Gallie P Siddiqui A Dunne D Griffin D
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The aim of this study was to assess the risks and benefits of mini-incision TKR. The limited exposure afforded by the small skin incision in the new technique of mini-incision TKR has the potential for increasing the risk of mal-positioning of components. Minor mal-positioning of components has the potential to increase polyethylene wear and may lead to early loosening and poor functioning of the TKR. The literature supports the concept that alignment within +/- 3 degrees of neutral mechanical alignment in the coronal plane is associated with a better outcome. If the mechanical axis falls outside this range it may have up to a 30% failure rate at 10 years.

We report the results of 166 mini-incision TKR that have been undertaken in 154 patients (96F; 58M; mean age 72; mean BMI 29; 96% OA) since November 2003. The pre-operative mechanical axis ranged from 8 degrees valgus to 15 degrees varus. Surgery was undertaken with a precise skin incision and a midvastus split approach. Specialised cutting blocks were used to facilitate a smaller incision. The prosthesis inserted was a cemented Zimmer NexGen TKR of either posterior stabilised or cruciate retaining form.

Long leg weight bearing alignment radiographs were available in 52% of patients. The mechanical axis was measured in the coronal plane and found to lie within +/- 3 degrees of neutral in 86% of patients. This compares favourably with the current literature which reports the mechanical axis falling within this range in between 72% and 85% of cases.

We believe the mini-incision TKR is a safe, reliable and reproducible technique offering substantial savings to the patient and health service without compromising accuracy.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 79 - 79
1 Feb 2012
Dunbar M Griffin D Surr G
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Several factors have been identified that may affect outcome after total knee replacement (TKR). We performed a systematic review of studies that looked at the association of pre-operative factors and outcome after primary total knee replacement for osteoarthritis.

All study types that investigated TKR for osteoarthritis were considered except retrospective case-series. Studies that included patients undergoing revision TKR were excluded if they did not provide separate results for primary and revision knee replacement. Any patient factor that was measured in the pre-operative period was included.

The factors measured included age, sex, race, income, body mass index (BMI), medical or joint co-morbidity, level of education, disease specific scores and their subcategories and general health scores. Studies that recorded outcome measures were only included if evidence of validation for use after total knee replacement was available.

We identified 590 studies purporting to evaluate TKR for OA. Of these, 25 studies were retrieved for in-depth consideration and 10 were found to meet the inclusion criteria. Most of these were cohort studies that used some form of regression analysis.

The results showed that the strongest and most consistent correlations were between pre-operative pain scores, pre-operative function scores, co-morbidity and post-operative function scores. Age, gender and level of education were not significant predictors of outcome. However, even the best models could only predict 36% of the variance in outcome.

Understanding which factors influence outcome the most will be of great benefit to patients and those who plan and deliver healthcare.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 148 - 148
1 Feb 2012
Amarasekera H Costa M Prakash U Krikler S Foguet P Griffin D
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We used a laser Doppler flow-meter with high energy (20 m W) laser (Moor Instruments Ltd. Milwey, UK) to measure the blood flow to the femoral head during resurfacing arthroplasty.

Twenty-four hips were studied; 12 underwent a posterior approach and twelve a Ganz's trochanteric flip osteotomy. The approach was determined according to surgeon preference. Three patients were excluded, The exclusion criteria were previous hip surgery, history of hip fracture and avascular necrosis (AVN). All patients had the hybrid implant with cemented femoral component.

During surgery a 2.0mm drill bit was passed via the lateral femoral cortex to the superior part of the head neck junction. The position was confirmed using fluoroscopy. The measurements were taken during five stages of the operation: when the fascia lata was opened (baseline), at the end of soft tissue dissection, following dislocation of the hip, after relocation back into the socket, after inserting the implants prior to closing the soft tissues and, finally, at the end of soft tissue closure.

The results were analysed and the values were normalised to a percentage of the baseline value. We found a mean drop of 38.6 % in the blood flow during the posterior approach and a drop of 10.34% with the trochanteric flip approach. The significant drop occured between the baseline (1st stage) and the end of the soft-tissue dissection (2nd stage). In both groups the blood flow remained relatively constant afterwards.

Our study shows that there is a highly significant drop in blood flow (p<0.001) during the posterior approach compared with the trochanteric flip approach.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 82 - 82
1 Feb 2012
Dunbar M Griffin D Copas J Marsh J Lozada-Can C Kwong H Upadhyay P
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Thromboprophylaxis remains a controversial issue and many disagree about the optimum method or even if it is required at all.

We present a new method of performing meta-analysis incorporating studies with both experimental and observational study designs. We have developed a model that compares study cohorts of several different methods of thromboprophylaxis with a simulated matched control group whose variance helps to adjust for bias. This allows meaningful comparisons between studies and treatments that have not been directly compared.

We performed a systematic review of the literature from 1981 to October 2004. Studies where more than one method of prophylaxis was used were excluded from analysis. For each individual method of prophylaxis, data was extracted, combined and converted to give estimates of the rates of symptomatic, proximal DVT, fatal PE and major bleeding events. We identified 1242 studies of which 203 met the inclusion criteria for further analysis. This represented the results of over fifty thousand studied patients. We expressed the results for the different prophylactic methods as odds ratios compared to no prophylaxis.

All methods showed a beneficial effect in reducing VTEs apart from stockings and aspirin which showed an increase in the number of PE events. These results are particularly interesting when viewed from the standpoint of an individual NHS hospital trust that performs around 500 hip and knee replacements per year. Over a 5 year period, the more effective methods of prophylaxis prevented between 15 and 40 symptomatic DVTs and up to 3 fatal PEs compared to no treatment. However, they cause between 8 and 40 more major bleeding events. We do not know the proportion of these major bleeding events that are fatal.