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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 7 - 7
1 Jan 2016
Goto K Kitamura N Koichi S Yokota M Wada S Yasuda K
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Introduction

Modular stems are commonly used to improve fixation in revision total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Hybrid fixation, in which cement is placed around the metaphysical portion of the component combined with an uncemented diaphyseal modular stem, has potential advantages including ease of insertion, improved component alignment, and ease of removal if needed. The aim of this study was to evaluate clinical results of revision total knee arthroplasty with uncemented modular stems using a hybrid fixation technique with a minimum 5-year follow-up.

Methods

23 revision TKAs were performed in 21 patients with hybrid fixation using uncemented modular stems. 3 patients (3 knees) had died of causes unrelated to the index arthroplasty at the time of the study, and 1 patient (1 knee) was lost to the follow-up. The remaining 19 knees were clinically and radiographically evaluated for the present study. The average follow-up time was 9.5 years. The average age of the patients was 70.5 years at the time of the revision surgery. The average time between the primary and revision surgeries was 10.6 years.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 110 - 110
1 Jan 2016
Kitamura N Goto K Kondo E Thoyama H Yasuda K
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Introduction

Ceramic total knee arthroplasty (TKA) was introduced as a new-generation of knee prostheses in clinical practice, and are expected to reduce polyethylene wear due to its resistance to abrasion and lubrication. In 1992, we developed a cruciate retaining LFA-I total knee prosthesis (KYOCERA Medical Co., Japan), which comprises an alumina ceramic femoral component and a titanium-alloy tibial component with a polyethylene insert. The purpose of this study was to evaluate clinical results in rheumatoid patients who were treated with the alumina-ceramic LFA-I prosthesis with a minimum 15-year follow-up period.

Methods

A total of 70 primary TKAs were performed in 51 patients between 1993 and 1996 using the cemented alumina-ceramic LFA-I prosthesis. Sixteen of these patients (20 knees) had died by the time of this study, of causes unrelated to the index arthroplasty, and 11 patients (16 knees) were lost to the follow-up. The remaining 34 knees were clinically and radiographically evaluated in the present study. The average follow-up time was 16.7 years. The average age of the patients was 58.2 years at the time of the operation. The clinical assessment was conducted with the Hospital for Special Surgery Knee rating score and the Knee Society scoring system. The component alignment and bone-implant interface were evaluated according to the Knee Society Roentgenographic Evaluation System.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 5 - 5
1 Jan 2016
Goto K Kitamura N Kondo E Yokota M Wada S Thoyama H Yasuda K
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Introduction

Metals used for total knee arthroplasty (TKA) are well known for their good biocompatibility, but may be a source of a release of metal ions that can be a cause of local and systemic adverse effects, aseptic loosening, and hypersensitivity reactions. One of the major difficulties in performing TKA is the selection of implants for patients who are preoperatively diagnosed as subject to metal sensitivity. Alternative solutions in cases of hypersensitivity are implants without metal constituents or metallic implants treated with a non-sensitive surface process. The aim of this study was to evaluate clinical results in patients who had been preoperatively diagnosed with metal sensitivity and who subsequently were provided with the zirconia-ceramic LFA-III TKA, and with a minimum 5-year follow-up.

Methods

Five patients (8 knees) with metal sensitivity underwent TKA using cemented zirconia-ceramic LFA-III implants. The LFA-III implant (KYOCERA Medical Co., Japan) is composed of a zirconia ceramic femoral component and a titanium-alloy tibial component with a polyethylene insert. All patients were female andthe average age at the time of surgery was 76.1 years. The average follow-up time was 7.2 years. Clinical and radiographic assessments were conducted with the Knee Society scoring system.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 471 - 471
1 Nov 2011
Kitamura N Arakaki K Fujiki H Kurokawa T Iwamoto M Ueno M Kanaya F Osada Y Gong JP Yasuda K
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Development of artificial cartilage has been one of the future goals in the field of orthopaedic surgery. A few investigators have applied polyvinyl-alcohol hydrogel (single-network) to develop the artificial cartilage. However, it could not be applicable for clinical use due to insufficiency of the strength, the toughness, and the friction properties. The authors have conducted a fundamental study to apply a novel double-network (DN) hydrogel to develop the artificial cartilage. This hydrogel is composed of two independently crosslinked hydrophilic networks of poly-2-acrylamido-2-methyl-propanesulfonic acid (PAMPS) and poly-N,N′-Dimetyl acrylamide (PDMAAm) that are physically entangled with each other. This study evaluated the in vivo influence of a PAMPS/PDMAAm DN hydrogel on counterface cartilage in rabbit knee joints and its ex-vivo frictional properties on normal cartilage.

In the first experiment, the DN gel was implanted in a surgically created defect in the femoral trochlea of rabbit knee joints and the left knee was used as the control.

Evaluations using a confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated that the DN gel did not affect the surface microstructure (surface roughness, the number of small pits) of the counterface cartilage in vivo at 4 and 12 weeks. The histology also showed the DN gel had no pathological damage on the cartilage matrices and cells at 4 weeks.

However, 2 of the 5 DN gel-implanted knees showed mild irregularity on the counterface cartilage surface at 12 weeks. In the second experiment, the friction property between the normal and artificial cartilage was determined using a joint simulator apparatus. The ex-vivo mean friction coefficient of the DN gel to normal cartilage was 0.029, while that of the normal-to-normal cartilage articulation was 0.188. The coefficient of the DN gel-to-normal cartilage articulation was significantly lower that of the normal-to-normal cartilage articulation (p< 0.0001). This study suggested that the PAMPS/PDMAAm DN gel has very low friction coefficient on normal cartilage and has no significant detrimental effects on counterface cartilage in vivo, and can be a promising material to develop the artificial cartilage.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 425 - 425
1 Nov 2011
Kitamura N Arakaki K Susuda K Kondo E Yasuda K
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Introduction: While plain radiographs are the clinical standard for routine follow-up after total knee arthroplasty (TKA), periprosthetic osteolysis can be difficult to identify on radiographs because it is often obscured by the metallic prosthesis. This study sought to evaluate the pattern and size of periprosthtic osteolytic lesions after TKA in patients with rheumatoid arthritis using multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT).

Methods: We evaluated 25 primary cemented alumina-ceramic TKAs (LFA-I, Kyocera) using minimum 10-year CT scans. All TKAs had an alumina-ceramic femoral component, a titanium tibial baseplate with a poly-ethylene insert, and a polyethylene patella component, which had been fixed with cement. The average age at the time of surgery was 54.1 years. The average time interval between surgery and the computed tomography scan was 12.6 years. None of the patients in this study documented periprosthetic infection or had undergone bone grafting.

Results: The MDCT detected 31 lesions in 12 knees: 23 femoral and 8 tibial lesions.

All lesions occurred around the prosthetic rim, and the mean size of osteolysis per knee was 2.1 +/−1.5 cc (range, 0.4–4.7 cc). Only seven lesions in 6 knees were diagnosed as osteolysis on plain radiographs: 2 lesions at anterior femoral condyle and 5 lesions at tibial condyles. None of the lesions around the posterior condylar flanges detected on CT was identified on plain radiographs. None of the implants showed radiographic loosening or required reoperation.

Discussion: As the alumina-ceramic TKA allowed the CT scans to obtain clear images with little metal artifact, we could easily detect lesions and joint space communication. This study demonstrated that plain radiographs underestimated osteolysis, and that lesions around posterior femoral condyles were the most difficult to identify on radiographs. Although most of the lesions were small and may be of little clinical importance, this study confirmed that MDCT can accurately detect osteolysis and measure lesion volumes in alumina-ceramic TKA.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 103 - 103
1 Mar 2008
Naudie D Kitamura N Leung S Engh CA
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This study evaluates forty-four consecutive autopsy specimens of the senior author’s own patients in attempt to locate and measure periacetabular bone defects and correlate this information with their communication pathways with the joint space.

The purpose of this study was to evaluate autopsy retrieved hemipelves of previously well-functioning total hip arthroplasties (THAs) with computed tomography (CT) to better understand patterns of osteolysis around modular uncemented acetabular components.

Forty-four hemipelves containing titanium porous-coated modular acetabular components were retrieved at autopsy, imaged with CT, and analyzed to determine the location and volume of osteolytic lesions. The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was seventy years. The mean time in situ for the implants was eight years.

A total of forty-six osteolytic lesions were identified in twenty-eight of the forty-four cases (64%). Thirty-one of forty-six lesions (67%) had one or more apparent communications with the joint space. We identified four types of communication pathways between osteolytic lesions and the joint space: around the rim, through a central dome hole, in association with a screw or screw hole, or around a non-ingrown interface. The mean volume of lesions that had a clear communication pathway was significantly larger than those lesions that did not have a clear communication pathway (p=0.012). Thirteen of the fifteen lesions that did not have a clear communication with the joint space represented bone defects that had existed prior to total hip arthroplasty.

Osteolysis was commonly observed at early time intervals around modular uncemented acetabular components. The communication with the joint space is important for developing osteolysis, as well as in the detection of true osteolytic lesions.