Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears in the pediatric and young adult ACL-deficient knee are often associated with meniscal or chondral injury with delayed time to surgery. The incidence of ACL reconstruction performed in patients aged ≥40 years is rising, and it is unclear if delayed surgery in this cohort similarly affects the health of the meniscus and cartilage. Purpose: To evaluate whether delayed reconstruction in a cohort of patients aged ≥40 years is associated with an increased risk of meniscal or chondral injury. Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: Records of patients aged ≥40 years who underwent primary arthroscopic ACL reconstruction between 2012 and 2016 at an academic hospital were retrospectively reviewed. Patient characteristic data and time to surgery were recorded. Operative reports were analyzed for meniscal and chondral injuries as well as treatment. Patients were grouped according to time to surgery, defined as early (<90 days) or delayed (≥90 days). Logistic regression modeling was used to form associations between elapsed time to surgery and patient characteristics to meniscal and chondral damage. Additionally, risks for meniscal and chondral injury were analyzed at time points of 180 days and 1 year from injury to surgery. Results: A total of 227 patients met the study criteria: 106 patients underwent early surgery, and 121 underwent delayed surgery. The authors identified 127 medial meniscal tears and 106 lateral meniscal tears. Medial, lateral, and patellofemoral compartment chondral injury was reported in 127, 82, and 130 patients, respectively. Delayed surgery (≥90 days) was not associated with increased risk of medial or lateral meniscal tears or any chondral injury at 90 days. Each year of increased age was associated with an increased odds ratio: 1.09 ( P = .001) for medial meniscal tears, 1.06 ( P = .014) for lateral meniscal tears, 1.10 ( P = .001) for medial compartment chondral injuries, and 1.07 ( P = .007) for patellofemoral compartment chondral injuries. Additionally, each unit of increased body mass index was associated with an increased odds ratio: 1.09 ( P = .039) for medial meniscal tears and 1.14 ( P = .003) for medial compartment cartilage injury. Analysis of 180-day and 1-year time points revealed an increased risk (odds ratio, 3.47; 95% CI, 1.55-7.77; P = .002) for medial meniscal injury when surgery was delayed for >1 year. Conclusion: Delayed ACL reconstruction (≥90 days) among patients aged ≥40 years was not associated with an increased risk of meniscal or chondral injury. Increasing age and body mass index were associated with higher risks of meniscal and chondral injuries in this cohort. Delay in surgery for >1 year was associated with increased risk of medial meniscal tear.
Background: There is growing interest in identifying predictors of large scoliosis curves at initial presentation, but few data to guide such preventive efforts. The association of neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation with curve magnitude in this context has not been previously evaluated. The purpose of our study was to determine the correlation of socioeconomic deprivation with scoliosis curve magnitude at initial presentation. Secondarily, we assessed the correlation of body mass index (BMI) with curve severity. Methods: We retrospectively identified 202 patients presenting with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis to a single tertiary care center in Massachusetts from January 2015 to August 2018. The Area Deprivation Index (ADI), a validated composite measure of neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation, was calculated for each patient. Curve magnitude, age, sex, BMI, race, and insurance status were recorded. Pearson correlation was used to determine the association of the ADI and BMI with scoliosis severity.Results: There was no correlation between the ADI and the magnitude of scoliosis at presentation (r = 0.055; P = 0.43). Greater BMI was moderately correlated with increased scoliosis curve magnitude (r = 0.28; P < 0.001). There was no association between curve magnitude and patient age, sex, race, or insurance status. Conclusions: The finding that neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation did not correlate with greater scoliosis severity at presentation may be suggestive of equitable access to specialized scoliosis care. Future research should determine whether this reassuring finding is unique to Massachusetts--a state with high rates of health insurance coverage--or generalizable to other US states. In addition, our study further corroborates the notion that greater BMI is associated with larger scoliosis curves, and calls for targeted interventions to facilitate early scoliosis detection in the growing childhood obese population. Level of Evidence: Level II-prognostic study and retrospective study.
Introduction:Administrative databases and clinical registries provide large sample sizes that characterize specific outcomes and trends over time in orthopaedic surgery.Methods:A literature review of all English-language orthopaedic surgery journals was conducted. All publications from 1996 to 2016 were reviewed for the utilization of an administrative database or clinical registry. We performed a linear regression with logarithmic transformation to identify trends in database utilization.Results:Eight hundred forty-nine publications used a database from 1996 to 2016. Each year, 35.3% more database publications are reported than the previous year (95% confidence interval, 30.0 to 40.7), from zero articles in 1996 to 286 in 2016. The ratio of database research publications to overall orthopaedic publications increased from zero in 1996 to 2% in 2016. The most commonly used databases included the National Inpatient Sample and the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program.Conclusion:Database research in orthopaedics has grown at a faster rate than orthopaedic literature as a whole.
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