Background Postoperative migration of a joint prosthesis is related to the risk of late loosening. We have previously reported that oral treatment with clodronate reduced migration of the cemented NexGen total knee prosthesis during the first postoperative year, as measured by radiostereometry (RSA). Oral bisphosphonate treatment is sometimes unpleasant, and local treatment will enable higher local concentrations. We now report the results of local peroperative treatment with another bisphosphonate, ibandronate, with the same prosthesis.Methods This is a double-blind, randomized study of 50 patients using RSA with maximal total point motion (MTPM) as primary effect variable. 1 mg ibandronate (1 mL) or 1 mL saline was applied to the tibial bone surface 1 min before cementation. RSA examination was done on the first postoperative day, and at 6, 12, and 24 months.Results One ibandronate-treated patient died of unrelated causes, and 1 control patient refused to come for follow-up, leaving 24 patients in each group for analysis. There were no cases of aseptic loosening. By repeated measures ANOVA, migration (MTPM) was reduced by local application of ibandronate (p = 0.006). Interpretation This is the first study to show improvement of prosthesis fixation by local pharmacological
Because migration was clearly reduced by clodronate during the first postoperative year, and there was still a difference at 4 years when analyzed per protocol, it appears likely that this treatment can diminish the risk of loosening. The difference in the number of outliers also points in this direction, and may be more relevant than mean migration values.
We report a prospective study of gait and tibial component migration in 45 patients with osteoarthritis treated by total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Migration was measured over two years using roentgen stereophotogrammetry. We used the previously established threshold of 200 m migration in the second postoperative year to distinguish two groups: a risk group of 15 patients and a stable group of 28 patients.We performed gait analysis before operation and at six months and at two years after TKA. On all three occasions we found significant differences between the two groups in the mean sagittal plane moments of the knee joint. The risk group walked with higher peak flexion moments than the stable group. The two groups were not discriminated by any clinical or radiological criteria or other gait characteristics.The relationship which we have found between gait with increased flexion moments and risk of tibial component loosening warrants further study as regards the aetiology of prosthetic loosening and possible methods of influencing its incidence.
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