It appears the suture-button behaves similarly to the syndesmotic screw in the syndesmotic rupture injury model tested. Clinical trials are needed to determine how the device performs in vivo.
Background:Several procedures have been proposed to address irreparable rotator cuff (RC) tears with pseudoparalysis. One recently proposed procedure is superior capsular reconstruction (SCR) using a tensor fasciae latae (TFL) autograft.Hypothesis:SCR with a locally available long head of the biceps tendon (LHB) autograft is biomechanically equivalent to SCR using TFL autograft for preventing superior humeral migration and the development of RC arthropathy in patients with irreparable RC tears.Study Design:Controlled laboratory study.Methods:Ten cadaveric shoulders (5 matched pairs) were tested. One shoulder from each pair was randomly assigned to the LHB reconstruction group using our novel technique, while the contralateral side was assigned to the TFL reconstruction group. SCR with a TFL autograft was performed based on previously described techniques. Massive RC tears were created by detachment of the supraspinatus and infraspinatus footprints from the greater tuberosity. The force required to superiorly translate the humerus 1.5 cm was then tested and recorded using a servohydraulic testing machine under 2 conditions: (1) after a massive RC tear and (2) after SCR with either a TFL autograft or an LHB autograft.Results:SCR with an LHB autograft required 393.2% ± 87.9% (P = .029) of the force needed for superior humeral migration in the massive RC tear condition, while SCR with a TFL autograft required 194.0% ± 21.8% (P = .0125). The LHB reconstruction group trended toward a stronger reconstruction when normalized to the torn condition (P = .059).Conclusion:SCR with an LHB autograft is a feasible procedure that is shown to be biomechanically equivalent and potentially even stronger than SCR with a TFL autograft in the prevention of superior humeral migration.Clinical Relevance:This new technique may help to prevent superior humeral migration and the development of RC arthropathy in patients with irreparable RC tears.
There seems to be no advantage in using a cancellous screw over a cortical screw in bicortical fixation in osteoporotic bone. Although the rescue screw provided greater pullout strength than the stripped screw, it is unknown if the purchase it provides is clinically sufficient.
» Periprosthetic distal femoral fracture after total knee arthroplasty carries substantial morbidity and mortality regardless of fixation technique.» Surgical treatment is favored in most patients compared with conservative therapy because of high rates of nonunion, malunion, and reoperation after casting or bracing.» Internal fixation techniques including retrograde intramedullary nailing and locked plating are favored for surgical treatment in most fractures when bone stock in the distal fragment allows for appropriate fixation.» In the setting of deficient distal femoral bone stock or femoral component loosening, revision arthroplasty with distal femoral replacement is the favored technique.» Further studies with regard to the use of intramedullary nailing, locked plating, and distal femoral replacement are necessary to refine the indications for each technique and to define the use of combinations of these fixation techniques.
Noninvasive diagnostics for Staphylococcus aureus musculoskeletal infections (MSKI) remain challenging. Abs from newly activated, pathogen-specific plasmablasts in human blood, which emerge during an ongoing infection, can be used for diagnosing and tracking treatment response in diabetic foot infections. Using multianalyte immunoassays on medium enriched for newly synthesized Abs (MENSA) from Ab-secreting cells, we assessed anti-S. aureus IgG responses in 101 MSKI patients (63 culture-confirmed S. aureus, 38 S. aureus-negative) and 52 healthy controls. MENSA IgG levels were assessed for their ability to identify the presence and type of S. aureus MSKI using machine learning and multivariate receiver operating characteristic curves. Eleven S. aureus-infected patients were presented with prosthetic joint infections, 15 with fracture-related infections, 5 with native joint septic arthritis, 15 with diabetic foot infections, and 17 with suspected orthopedic infections in the soft tissue. Anti-S. aureus MENSA IgG levels in patients with non-S. aureus infections and healthy controls were 4-fold (***p = 0.0002) and 8-fold (****p , 0.0001) lower, respectively, compared with those with culture-confirmed S. aureus infections. Comparison of MENSA IgG responses among S. aureus culture-positive patients revealed Ags predictive of active MSKI (IsdB, SCIN, Gmd) and Ags predictive of MSKI type (IsdB, IsdH, Amd, Hla). When combined, IsdB, IsdH, Gmd, Amd, SCIN, and Hla were highly discriminatory of S. aureus MSKI (area under the ROC curve = 0.89 [95% confidence interval 0.82-0.93, p , 0.01]). Collectively, these results demonstrate the feasibility of a bioinformatic approach to use a patient's active immune proteome against S. aureus to diagnose challenging MSKI. ImmunoHorizons, 2020, 4: 339-351.
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