Surgical treatment of high-grade acromioclavicular (AC) joint separations has become analogous to ligament reconstructions elsewhere in the body with the goal being restoration of the native anatomy. Circumferential access to the base of the coracoid is essential to reconstruct the coracoclavicular ligament complex. Using some of the traditional open approaches, this access requires detaching the deltoid insertion and performing extensive soft tissue dissection. Also, poor visualization risks injury to nearby neurovascular structures. An arthroscopically assisted reconstruction offers the advantage of less soft tissue dissection and superior visualization to the base of the coracoid. We have developed a unique arthroscopically assisted technique that uses a subacromial approach to pass suture material and a tendon graft around the coracoid to reconstruct the coracoclavicular ligament complex. We describe our technique and preliminary results in 10 patients who have undergone coracoclavicular ligament reconstruction for high-grade AC separation. All patients improved subjectively with regard to pain and function at a minimum followup of 3 months (mean, 5 months; range, 3-18 months). This arthroscopically assisted technique has the potential to allow for safe and at least in the short term reliable restoration of the coracoclavicular ligament complex and provides an alternative technique to treat AC joint separations.
The purpose of this paper is to report the use of total knee arthroplasty, a megaprosthesis, as a treatment in elderly patients who have a persistent nonunion of a supracondylar femur fracture. This case report includes two elderly patients who sustained supracondylar femur fractures that failed to unite with standard operative fixation methods. Despite multiple procedures during a long period, patients had a persistent nonunion. Both patients underwent total arthroplasty with a cemented kinematic rotating hinge and had significant clinical improvement. The Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) knee scores increased from fifty-four points to seventy points in one patient and forty-two points to seventy-three points after surgery in the other patient. Both patients had excellent range of motion after surgery. A cemented megaprosthesis appears to be a viable treatment option for persistent nonunions of supracondylar femur fractures in elderly patients. It is well tolerated and permits early ambulation and return to activities of daily living.
Improved battlefield survival rates have resulted in a significant number of young active patients with lowerextremity amputations. Because of the increased demands placed on their hips, patients with amputations may be more susceptible to the sequelae of hip pathology and femoroacetabular impingement. Arthroscopic management of hip pathology may be successfully performed in patients with ipsilateral, contralateral, or bilateral lower-extremity amputations. We describe our experience in this unique patient population. A technique for secure patient positioning that provides sufficient countertraction in the case of contralateral amputation is described, as is the use of skeletal traction with a temporary external fixator for joint distraction in patients with ipsilateral amputations. Considerations specific to patients with high transfemoral amputations are discussed as well.
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