The clinical and radiological outcomes of bioactive glass (BAG)-S53P4 and autograft bone (AB) used as bone-graft substitutes in depressed tibial plateau fractures were evaluated in a prospective randomized 11-year follow-up study. All patients (n = 29) had sustained tibial plateau fractures with a joint-line depression of >3 mm. Fifteen patients (5 patients the BAG group, 10 patients in the AB group) participated in this long-term follow-up. X-rays were taken preoperatively, postoperatively, and at the long-term follow-up, and computed tomography (CT) scans were made at the long-term follow-up for evaluation of the bone substitute, osteoarthritis, the tibial-femoral angle, and deviation of mechanical axes. No material-dependent adverse effects were seen in any patient. The means of the articular surface depression on X-rays at the long-term follow-up were 1.4 mm (range: 0-2 mm) in the BAG group and 1.4 mm (range: 0-4 mm) in the AB group, and on CT scans the means were 2.2 mm (range: 2-3 mm), and 2.1 mm (range: 0-3), respectively. No significant difference in the tibial-femoral angle or deviation of mechanical axes was observed between the two groups. BAG-S53P4 can be used as a bone substitute in depressed lateral tibial plateau fractures with good functional and radiological long-term results.
Background and purposeThe role of pelvic incidence in hip disorders is unclear. Therefore, we undertook a literature review to evaluate the evidence on that role.MethodsA search was carried out on MEDLINE, SCOPUS, CENTRAL, and CINAHL databases. Quantitative analysis was based on comparison with a reference population of asymptomatic subjects.ResultsThe search resulted in 326 records: 15 studies were analyzed qualitatively and 13 quantitatively. The estimates of pelvic incidence varied more than 10 degrees from 47 (SD 3.7) to 59 (SD 14). 2 studies concluded that higher pelvic incidence might contribute to the development of coxarthrosis while 1 study reported the opposite findings. In 2 studies, lower pelvic incidence was associated with a mixed type of femoroacetabular impingement. We formed a reference population from asymptomatic groups used or cited in the selected studies. The reference comprised 777 persons with pooled average pelvic incidence of 53 (SD 10) degrees. The estimate showed a relatively narrow 95% CI of 52 to 54 degrees. The 95% CIs of only 4 studies did not overlap the CIs of reference: 2 studies on coxarthrosis, 1 on mixed femoroacetabular impingement, and 1 on ankylosing spondylitisInterpretationWe found no strong evidence that pelvic incidence plays any substantial role in hip disorders. Lower pelvic incidence may be associated with the mixed type of femoroacetabular impingement and hip problems amongst patients with ankylosing spondylitis. The evidence on association between pelvic incidence and coxarthrosis remained inconclusive.
Purpose Positive spinal sagittal alignment is known to correlate with pain and disability. The association between lumbar spinal stenosis and spinal sagittal alignment is less known, as is the effect of lumbar decompressive surgery on the change in that alignment. The objective was to study the evidence on the effect of lumbar decompressive surgery on sagittal spinopelvic alignment. Methods The Cochrane Controlled Trials Register (CENTRAL), Medline, Embase, Scopus and Web of Science databases were searched in October 2019, unrestricted by date of publication. The study selection was performed by two independent reviewers. The risk of systematic bias was assessed according to the NIH Quality Assessment Tool. The data were extracted using a pre-defined standardized form. Results The search resulted in 807 records. Of these, 18 were considered relevant for the qualitative analysis and 15 for the meta-synthesis. The sample size varied from 21 to 89 and the average age was around 70 years. Decompression was mostly performed on one or two levels and the surgical techniques varied widely. The pooled effect sizes were most statistically significant but small. For lumbar lordosis, the effect size was 3.0 (95% CI 2.2 to 3.7) degrees. Respectively, for pelvic tilt and sagittal vertical axis, the effect sizes were − 1.6 (95% CI .2.6 to − 0.5) degrees and − 9.6 (95% CI − 16.0 to − 3.3) mm. Conclusions It appears that decompression may have a small, statistically significant but probably clinically insignificant effect on lumbar lordosis, sagittal vertical axis and pelvic tilt.
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