Purpose Reverse shoulder prostheses have been gaining popularity in recent years. A short metaphyseal stem design will allow bone stock preservation and minimize stem related complications. We examined the clinical and radiographic short-term outcome of a short metaphyseal stem reverse shoulder arthroplasty. Methods Thirty-one patients, with a mean follow-up of 36 months (24-52), were evaluated clinically with the Constant-Murley score, patient satisfaction and pain relief scores. The fixation of the glenoid and humeral components, subsidence and notching were evaluated on radiographs. The indications were cuff tear arthropathy (22), fracture sequelae (five) and rheumatoid arthritis (four). Results The average Constant score improved from 12.7 (range two to 31) pre-operatively to 56.2 (range 17-86) postoperatively. It rose from 13.5 to 58.3 in patients with Cuff arthropathy, from 15.8 to 62.0 in revision arthroplasty, from 10.2 to 47.4 in those with fracture sequelae, and from 11.5 to 55.3 in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. The overall mean patient satisfaction score improved from 2.4/10 to 8.5/10 and mean pain score improved from 0.8/15 to 12.5/15. We found an overall improvement in active forward flexion from 46.8 to 128.5°and from 41.6 to 116.5°in abduction. No humeral loosening or subsidence was observed. Two cases of grade 1-2 glenoid notching were reported. Overall there were three intra-operative fractures that did not affect the operation and healed without affecting the good results. There were five late traumatic periprosthetic fractures, only one of them required a revision surgery to a stemmed implant and the rest healed without surgery. There were two early dislocations that had to be revised. Conclusions The clinical and radiographic evaluation of a bone preserving metaphyseal humeral component in reverse shoulder arthroplasty is promising, with good clinical results, no signs of loosening or subsidence.
Introduction:
An accurate selection of tibial nail and screws measurements is paramount in purpose to achieve proper tibial fracture reduction and fixation, avoid irritation of the soft-tissue envelope, and enable extraction of the nail in the future, if needed. To this date, many methods were suggested to determine the length and diameter of an intramedullary tibial nail, preoperatively and intraoperatively. Each method has its disadvantages, and most are lacking in accuracy. Digital aids are currently available for preoperative planning for many types of surgeries.
Methods:
Retrospectively, 27 patients operated for diaphysial tibial fracture intramedullary nailing were selected. The contralateral leg was imaged using AP and lateral radiograph views. Six orthopaedic trauma surgeons used the TraumaCad program (Voyant Health) to plan the appropriate nail and distal locking screws measurements, while blinded from the actual hardware used in the operation. Later, they also conducted quality review regarding the operation carried out and suggested correction in measurements of the hardware. Intra-observer and inter-observer reliability was calculated.
Results:
The inter-correlation coefficient for the planned nails was 0.97 and 0.84 (
P
< 0.001) in AP view for length and diameter, respectively, and similarly 0.98 and 0.86 (
P
< 0.001) in lateral view. The interclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for the locking screws length was 0.7 (
P
< 0.02) and 0.82 (
P
< 0.01) for the proximal and distal medio-lateral screws, respectively, and 0.9 (
P
< 0.001). The ICC between AP and lateral views was 0.98 for length and 0.96 for diameter (
P
< 0.001). The scores and corrections given by the examiners to the actual selected nail were ICC of 0.98 and 0.96 (
P
< 0.001) for length and diameter, respectively. The examiners suggested they would correct, post-factum, the length of the nail in average 28% and the diameter in average 30%. The average observer resulted in ICC of 0.94 and 0.91 (
P
< 0.001) in length and only 0.77 and 0.67 (
P
< 0.001) in diameter (AP and lateral views, respectively) when comparing the actual nail used and the post-factum plan.
Conclusion:
Preoperative planning of tibial fractures' nailing using imaging of the contralateral leg and a digital graphic planning program is an accurate and reliable method. It may serve to reduce errors, surgical time, and radiation dose in the operating room. This method could also be applied for surgical debriefing.
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