scholarly journals Systematic Review of Accelerometer Based Navigation in Total Knee Arthroplasty: Improved Alignment, Clinical Results, and Patient Reported Outcomes Compared to Conventional Guides?

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Stephen T. Duncan ◽  
Stephen T. Duncan ◽  
Cale Jacobs ◽  
Lucian Warth ◽  
Syed K. Mehdi

Background: There have been significant advancements to restore knee alignment postoperatively in the TKA population. This includes the use of accelerometer-based portable navigation (ABN). ABN can lead to a more precise restoration of the neutral mechanical axis, improve efficiency and potentially decrease early- and long-term complications. The degree with which ABN can achieve this remains unclear. We performed a systematic review to answer this question. Methods: We performed a systematic review in accordance with Cochrane guidelines of controlled studies (prospective and retrospective) in MEDLINE with an emphasis on studies comparing postoperative outcomes such as mechanical axis alignment, operative time, blood loss, complications and clinical outcome scores in total knee arthroplasty patients using ABN versus conventional intramedullary guides. Results: ABN was associated with significantly fewer outliers in hip-knee-ankle alignment (p = 0.0006), femoral component alignment (p < 0.0001). ABN was associated with significantly less estimated blood loss (p = 0.05) and no difference in operative times (p = 0.21). Finally, there was no difference regarding functional outcomes or DVT. Conclusion: ABN more accurately achieves neutral mechanical alignment with a smaller incidence of outliers. There was not an increase in operative time with using ABN and there were reductions in blood loss as well. We conclude that ABN offers the benefit of improved mechanical alignment.

Author(s):  
Junren Zhang ◽  
Wofhatwa Solomon Ndou ◽  
Nathan Ng ◽  
Paul Gaston ◽  
Philip M. Simpson ◽  
...  

A correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00167-021-06522-x


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dongquan Shi ◽  
Xingquan Xu ◽  
Anyun Guo ◽  
Jin Dai ◽  
Zhihong Xu ◽  
...  

Introduction. Mechanical alignment deviation after total knee arthroplasty is a major reason for early loosening of the prosthesis. Achieving optimum cement penetration during fixation of the femoral and tibial component is an essential step in performing a successful total knee arthroplasty. Bone cement is used to solidify the bone and prosthesis. Thickness imbalance of bone cement leads to the deviation of mechanical alignment. To estimate the influence of bone cement, a retrospective study was conducted.Materials and Methods. A total of 36 subjects were studied. All the TKA were performed following the standard surgical protocol for navigated surgery by medial approach with general anaesthesia. Prostheses were fixed by bone cement.Results. We compared the mechanical axis, flexion/extension, and gap balance before and after cementation. All the factors were different compared with those before and after cementation. Internal rotation was reached with statistical significance (P=0.03).Conclusion. Bone cement can influence the mechanical axis, flexion/extension, and gap balance. It also can prompt us to make a change when poor knee kinematics were detected before cementation.


Arthroplasty ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Lei ◽  
Li-Ming Liu ◽  
Peng-Fei Yang ◽  
Ran Xiong ◽  
De-Jie Fu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background This study aimed to compare the short-term clinical results of slight femoral under-correction with neutral alignment in patients with preoperative varus knees who underwent total knee arthroplasty. Methods The medical records and imaging data were retrospectively collected from patients who had undergone total knee arthroplasty in our hospital from January 2016 to June 2019. All patients had varus knees preoperatively. Upon 1:1 propensity score matching, 256 patients (256 knees) were chosen and divided into a neutral alignment group (n=128) and an under-correction group (n=128). The patients in the neutral group were treated with the neutral alignment. In the under-correction group, the femoral mechanical axis had a 2° under-correction. The operative time, tourniquet time and the length of hospital stay in the two groups were recorded. The postoperative hip-knee-ankle angle, frontal femoral component angle and frontal tibial component angle were measured. Patient-reported outcome measures were also compared. Results The operative time, tourniquet time and the length of hospital stay in the under-correction group were significantly shorter than the neutral alignment group (P<0.05). At the 2-year follow-up, the under-correction group had a larger varus alignment (P<0.05) and a larger frontal femoral component angle (P<0.05), and the frontal tibial component angles of the two groups were comparable. Compared with the neutral alignment group, the slight femoral under-correction group had significantly better patient-reported outcome measures scores (P<0.05). Conclusion For varus knees treated with total knee arthroplasty, alignment with a slight femoral under-correction has advantages over the neutral alignment in terms of the shorter operative time and better short-term clinical results. Level of evidence III


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanna House, BS ◽  
Mary Ziemba-Davis, BA ◽  
Michael Meneghini, MD

Background and Hypothesis: Treatment for infected total knee arthroplasty (TKA) employs antibiotic-eluding articulating or static spacers, with or without intramedullary (IM) dowels between implant resection and reimplantation. While it is unknown which spacer type is more efficient intra-operatively, IM dowels require additional time for fabrication. Surgical efficiency is critical to minimizing anesthesia time and blood loss, especially in complex surgeries with compromised hosts. We quantified operative time and postoperative intra-articular blood loss based on spacer type and the use of IM dowels. Project Methods: 103 consecutive infected TKAs treated from 2010-2019 were retrospectively reviewed. Outcome variables included operative time and intraarticular drain rate. Covariates included sex; age, BMI; ASA-PS classification; surgeon; McPherson infection classification; tourniquet time; tranexamic acid (TXA) use; intrathecal anesthesia, length of stay, and blood transfusion. Multivariate analyses were used. Results: The sample was 52% female with average age of 66±9 years and average BMI of 36±9 kg/m2. Articulating spacers without dowels (ASwoD), articulating spacers with dowels (ASwD), and static spacers with dowels were used in 57.3%, 21.4%, and 21.4% of knees, respectively. Longer mean operating time was observed when static spacers with dowels were used at resection (162 vs.130 ASwoD/140 ASwD minutes; p=0.001) and reimplantation (187 vs. 149 ASwoD/148 ASwD minutes; p=0.017). At reimplantation, drain rate was highest when articulating spacers with dowels were used (37 vs. 20/26 mL/hr), but not when TXA was used (p=0.002). Conclusion and Potential Impact: Articulating and static spacers provide equivalent infection eradication, and the necessity of IM dowels has not been thoroughly studied. In light of this equivalency, it is important to understand other costs associated with spacer types and IM dowels. Our observations that spacer/dowel constructs affect time under anesthesia and blood loss may contribute to the efficiency and safety of the two-stage treatment protocol.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1181-1181
Author(s):  
John Murnaghan ◽  
Yulia Lin ◽  
Helen Razmjou ◽  
Jeffrey Gollish ◽  
Deborah Murnaghan

Abstract Abstract 1181 Use of allogeneic blood in elective procedures should be minimized due to risks of transfusion, potential adverse impact on outcomes, inconvenience to the patient, high cost and limited supply of blood. The purpose of this study was to examine the rate of transfusion following elective total hip (THA) and total knee arthroplasties (TKA) within a preoperative and perioperative blood management program and to examine the relationship between clinical and surgical parameters and blood transfusion. Methods: This was a secondary analysis of prospectively collected data of all consented patients who had undergone joint arthroplasty surgery between January and December, 2011. All patients attended a preoperative clinic 7–14 days prior to their surgery. The preoperative hemoglobin (Hgb) was measured. Transfusion rate was calculated for type of surgery (primary vs. revision and unilateral vs. bilateral). Impact of preoperative Hgb, age, sex, Body Mass Index (BMI), estimated blood loss, type of anaesthetic, type of anticoagulant (rivaroxaban vs. no rivaroxaban), surgeon and drop in hemoglobin (preoperative hemoglobin minus lowest post-operative hemoglobin documented on postoperative day 1, 2 or 3) were examined. Descriptive statistics examined the rate of transfusion in different procedures. Univariate analysis examined the relationship between each factor and having a transfusion. Stepwise logistic regression examined the impact of all factors together. Statistical significance was set at p<0.05. Results: 1605 patients [989 females (62%), mean age 66 (SD:11)] had surgery during 2011. Primary TKA: Unilateral 821 (51%), Bilateral TKA: 41 (3%), Revision TKA: 91 (6%), Primary THA: 588 (37%), Bilateral THA: 4 (0.02%), Revision THA: 60 (4%). Four percent (4%) of females had an Hgb <120 mg/L and 3% of males had an Hgb <130 mg/L at the preoperative visit. There were 1555 cases done under regional anaesthesia (spinal or epidural) and 129 cases received a general anaesthetic. Sixty-seven patients (4%) had a blood transfusion while in hospital. Thirty percent (30%) of the transfused women and 9% of the men had a low pre-operative Hgb. THA procedures required more transfusions than TKA (p=0.0012). Transfusion was associated with the following individual factors: age ≥ 80 years, female sex, low BMI (<18.5), increased estimated blood loss, larger drop in hemoglobin, type of anticoagulant (4% in rivaroxaban vs. 8% in non-rivaroxaban), revision surgery (vs. primary), simultaneous bilateral arthroplasty, general anesthesia (vs. spinal), and surgeon. Stepwise logistic regression analysis maintained the intra-operative blood loss, drop in Hgb, female sex, and age as significant independent factors in explaining the variation in blood transfusion. Discussion: This study was carried out in an independent orthopaedic facility for elective joint surgery. All patients are assessed medically prior to surgery and advised to take supplemental iron for 2 months prior to surgery. Four percent of females and 3% of males were found to be anemic preoperatively. Patients are admitted the morning of their surgery. Approximately 97% of the consented patients had a regional anesthetic (spinal and/or epidural) with sedation. Patients are transferred into the operating room after the anaesthetic was administered. Surgery is carried out without the routine use of cell saver, tranexamic acid or drains. Approximately 50% of the surgeons deflate the tourniquet in a total knee arthroplasty prior to closure of the capsule. Thromboprophylaxis is initiated with rivaroxaban 10 mg on postoperative day 1. The general transfusion trigger for symptomatic patients is a hemoglobin of 80 g/L. Transfusions can be ordered by staff surgeon, hospitalist, medical consultant or Orthopaedic fellow. The blood bank does not group and screen patients scheduled for routine primary total hip or total knee arthroplasty. Following these practices, we observed a transfusion rate for primary THA of 5% and primary TKA of 3% while using rivaroxaban for thromboprophylaxis starting on postoperative day 1. Conclusion: The present study confirmed that intra-operative blood loss, drop in the hemoglobin, being a female, and older than 80 years of age as risk factors in relation to need for blood transfusion following elective total joint arthroplasty. Transfusion rates were not higher when rivaroxaban was used for thromboprophylaxis. Disclosures: Murnaghan: Bayer Healthcare: Honoraria, Research Funding. Off Label Use: Rivaroxaban was used perioperatively for thromboprophylaxis. Our protocol gave the intial dose on postoperative day 1 rather than the 6–10 hours post-operatively recommended by the manufacturer in product monograph. Gollish:Bayer Healthcare: Honoraria, Research Funding.


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