Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1999
Postoperative ossifications of the shoulder. Incidence and clinical impact.
Periarticular ossifications of the shoulder after surgery have been described since the beginning of the century. Risk factors and the clinical impact of heterotopic bone formation have been discussed controversially. After open surgery on the shoulder, 131 patients (rotator cuff repair n = 106, acromioplasty n = 25) were included in a retrospective study if pre- and postoperative X-rays were available. ⋯ As significant risk factors for the formation of heterotopic bone, the existence of osteoarthritis and the duration and complexity of the procedure could be cited. The appearance of periarticular ossifications after surgery of the shoulder seems to be of minor clinical impact. Severe cases with major functional deficits should and can be prevented by a fast and atraumatic operation technique.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1999
Prophylaxis of secondary osteoarthrosis with spherical osteotomy in residual acetabular dysplasia. Analysis of predictive factors of success.
The aim of this study was to evaluate whether or not spherical acetabular osteotomy prevents progression of osteoarthrosis in hip joints with residual dysplasia and which radiological parameters can be used postoperatively as predictive factors concerning the outcome. Sixty-eight out of 78 joints were re-investigated with a mean follow-up of 11.2 years after the index operation. Twenty-three Wagner type 1 and 45 type II osteotomies were performed. ⋯ The weight-bearing zone of the acetabulum showed an acetabular index (AC) angle of 27 degrees preoperatively and 14 degrees postoperatively. Statistical analysis proved a significant correlation between the normal postoperative values of the acetabulum/femoral-head index of Heyman and Herndon and the absence of degenerative joint changes at follow-up. 73.5% of the hips had not markedly progressed to secondary osteoarthrosis, but 26.5% of joints had deteriorated: 7.4% of them due to perioperative complications and early postoperative trauma. In 8.8% (severe dysplasia) only partial reorientation was possible, which explains the progression of arthrosis, but 10.2% progressed despite sufficient correction.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1999
Shear strength of the cement metal interface--an experimental study.
The shear strength of the cement-metal interface using rods with different surface treatments and a clinical standardized cementing technique was studied. Under "dry" conditions, a low interface shear strength can be obtained with polished and smooth CoCrMo surfaces (peak-to-valley height Rt: 1 microm, average 0.2 MPa; 5 microm, 0.38 MPa). Grit-blasted and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA)-precoated surfaces achieved higher values (PMMA precoat: average 5.16 MPa; CoCrMo peak-to-valley height Rt: 20 microm, average 8.61 MPa: 60 microm, average 7.8 MPa). ⋯ A microscopic analysis of cross-sections revealed gap formations at the cement-metal interface to varying degrees (1-16 microm). PMMA-precoated rods rarely showed any gap formation at all. The above-mentioned gap formation was seen independently of the porosity at the cement-metal interface and corresponds to the clinical and postmortem observed debonding of the interface.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1999
High tibial osteotomy: factors influencing the duration of satisfactory function.
In 94 patients 112 knees were examined after high tibial osteotomy for varus and valgus gonarthrosis. Preoperatively, there were 71 varus and 23 valgus deformities. The mean follow-up period was 9.0 years (range 2-21 years). ⋯ The data were subjected to multivariate statistical analysis in which three of four evaluated risk factors were found to be associated with the duration of pain-free survival: certain preoperative injuries, preoperative meniscopathies and a deterioration of the stage of arthrosis (P < 0.05). There was no significance for weight in excess of 10% above the normal body mass index (BMI) limits. However, in a Kaplan-Meier survival analysis this parameter could be determined as a significant factor for a reduced pain-free survival interval (P < 0.05): patients with a BMI of more than 10% above normal limits had a pain-free period of 5.07 years, whereas those with a BMI of less than 10% had a pain-free period of 7.80 years.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1999
Functional results after partial pelvic resection in Ewing's sarcoma of the ilium.
Ewing's sarcoma of the pelvis has an unfavourable prognosis. The clinical and functional results of 7 patients who had a Ewing's sarcoma of the pelvis stage IIB were reviewed. All patients received multiple-agent chemotherapy pre- and postoperatively (modified T6 and T2 protocol according to Rosen) and underwent local resection of the pelvic tumour. ⋯ All were free of disease and had neither local recurrence nor metastases. In five patients the functional results were rated as "good" or "excellent". The good results depend mainly on the reconstruction of the pelvic girdle and its mechanical stability.