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Dive into the research topics where A. H. R. W. Simpson is active.

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Featured researches published by A. H. R. W. Simpson.


BMJ Open | 2013

What determines patient satisfaction with surgery? A prospective cohort study of 4709 patients following total joint replacement

David F. Hamilton; Judith Lane; Paul Gaston; J. T. Patton; Deborah MacDonald; A. H. R. W. Simpson; Colin R. Howie

Objectives To investigate the factors which influence patient satisfaction with surgical services and to explore the relationship between overall satisfaction, satisfaction with specific facets of outcome and measured clinical outcomes (patient reported outcome measures (PROMs)). Design Prospective cohort study. Setting Single National Health Service (NHS) teaching hospital. Participants 4709 individuals undergoing primary lower limb joint replacement over a 4-year period (January 2006–December 2010). Main outcome measures Overall patient satisfaction, clinical outcomes as measured by PROMs (Oxford Hip or Knee Score, SF-12), satisfaction with five specific aspects of surgical outcome, attitudes towards further surgery, length of hospital stay. Results Overall patient satisfaction was predicted by: (1) meeting preoperative expectations (OR 2.62 (95% CI 2.24 to 3.07)), (2) satisfaction with pain relief (2.40 (2.00 to 2.87)), (3) satisfaction with the hospital experience (1.7 (1.45 to 1.91)), (4) 12 months (1.08 (1.05 to 1.10)) and (5) preoperative (0.95 (0.93 to 0.97)) Oxford scores. These five factors contributed to a model able to correctly predict 97% of the variation in overall patient satisfaction response. The factors having greatest effect were the degree to which patient expectations were met and satisfaction with pain relief; the Oxford scores carried little weight in the algorithm. Various factors previously reported to influence clinical outcomes such as age, gender, comorbidities and length of postoperative hospital stay did not help explain variation in overall patient satisfaction. Conclusions Three factors broadly determine the patients overall satisfaction following lower limb joint arthroplasty; meeting preoperative expectations, achieving satisfactory pain relief, and a satisfactory hospital experience. Pain relief and expectations are managed by clinical teams; however, a fractured access to surgical services impacts on the patients hospital experience which may reduce overall satisfaction. In the absence of complications, how we deliver healthcare may be of key importance along with the specifics of what we deliver, which has clear implications for units providing surgical services.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2004

Severity of disease and risk of malignant change in hereditary multiple exostoses: A GENOTYPE-PHENOTYPE STUDY

Daniel Porter; Lorne Lonie; Maria Fraser; Carol Dobson-Stone; Porter J; Anthony P. Monaco; A. H. R. W. Simpson

We performed a prospective genotype-phenotype study using molecular screening and clinical assessment to compare the severity of disease and the risk of sarcoma in 172 individuals (78 families) with hereditary multiple exostoses. We calculated the severity of disease including stature, number of exostoses, number of surgical procedures that were necessary, deformity and functional parameters and used molecular techniques to identify the genetic mutations in affected individuals. Each arm of the genotype-phenotype study was blind to the outcome of the other. Mutations EXT1 and EXT2 were almost equally common, and were identified in 83% of individuals. Non-parametric statistical tests were used. There was a wide variation in the severity of disease. Children under ten years of age had fewer exostoses, consistent with the known age-related penetrance of this condition. The severity of the disease did not differ significantly with gender and was very variable within any given family. The sites of mutation affected the severity of disease with patients with EXT1 mutations having a significantly worse condition than those with EXT2 mutations in three of five parameters of severity (stature, deformity and functional parameters). A single sarcoma developed in an EXT2 mutation carrier, compared with seven in EXT1 mutation carriers. There was no evidence that sarcomas arose more commonly in families in whom the disease was more severe. The sarcoma risk in EXT1 carriers is similar to the risk of breast cancer in an older population subjected to breast-screening, suggesting that a role for regular screening in patients with hereditary multiple exostoses is justifiable.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 1994

Proprioception enhancement for anterior cruciate ligament deficiency. A prospective randomised trial of two physiotherapy regimes

D. J. Beard; C. A. F. Dodd; H. R. Trundle; A. H. R. W. Simpson

We performed a prospective, double-blind, randomised, clinical trial to investigate the efficacy of two regimes of rehabilitation for knees with anterior cruciate ligament deficiency (ACLD). Fifty ACLD patients were randomly allocated to one of two treatment groups: a programme of muscle strengthening (T) or a programme designed to enhance proprioception and improve hamstring contraction reflexes (P). An indirect measure of proprioception, the reflex hamstring contraction latency (RHCL), and a functional scoring system were used to record the status of the knee before and after the 12-week course of physiotherapy. Sagittal knee laxity was also measured. There was improvement in mean RHCL and in the mean functional score in both groups after treatment. The improvement in group P was significantly greater than that in group T. There was no significant change in joint laxity after treatment in either group. In both groups there was a positive correlation between improvement in RHCL and functional gain.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2001

Chronic osteomyelitis: THE EFFECT OF THE EXTENT OF SURGICAL RESECTION ON INFECTION-FREE SURVIVAL

A. H. R. W. Simpson; M. Deakin; J. M. Latham

We studied prospectively a consecutive series of 50 patients with chronic osteomyelitis. Patients were allocated to the following treatment groups: 1) wide resection, with a clearance margin of 5 mm or more; 2) marginal resection, with a clearance margin of less than 5 mm; and 3) intralesional biopsy, with debulking of the infected area. All patients had a course of antibiotics, intravenously for six weeks followed by orally for a further six weeks. No patients in group 1 had recurrence. In patients treated by marginal resection (group 2), 8 of 29 (28%) had recurrence. All patients who had debulking had a recurrence within one year of surgery. We performed a survival analysis to determine the time of the recurrence of infection. In group 2 there was a higher rate of recurrence in type-B hosts (p < 0.05); no type-A hosts had recurrence. This information is of use in planning surgery for chronic osteomyelitis.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 1995

The response of muscle to leg lengthening

A. H. R. W. Simpson; Pamela Williams; Peter J. Kyberd; Geoffrey Goldspink; John Kenwright

We used an experimental rabbit model of leg lengthening to study the morphology and function of muscle after different distraction rates. Lengthening was in twice-daily increments from 0.4 to 4 mm per day. New contractile tissue formed during lengthening, but some damage to the muscle fibres was seen even at rates of less than 1 mm per day; abnormalities increased with larger rates of lengthening. There was proliferation of fibrous tissue between the muscle fibres at distraction rates of over 1 mm per day. Active muscle function showed adaptation when the rate was 1.0 mm per day or less, but muscle compliance was normal only after rates of 0.4 mm per day. Muscle responded more favourably at rates of distraction slower than those shown to lead to the most prolific bone formation. At present the rate of distraction in clinical practice is determined mainly by factors which enhance osteogenesis. Our study suggests that it may be advisable to use a slower rate of elongation in patients with poor muscle compliance associated with the underlying pathology; this will allow better accommodation by the contractile and connective tissues of the muscles.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2005

The management of fractures with bone loss

John F. Keating; A. H. R. W. Simpson; C. M. Robinson

Historically, because of the problems involved in initial limb salvage and the subsequent difficulty of reconstructing large skeletal defects many fractures with significant bone loss were treated by primary amputation. Modern techniques of fracture stabilisation and soft-tissue reconstruction mean


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2006

The role of growth factors and related agents in accelerating fracture healing

A. H. R. W. Simpson; L. Mills; Brendon Noble

In vivo studies have shown that bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), transforming growth factor (TGF) beta, insulin-like growth factor (IGF), fibroblast growth factor (FGF), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) are all present during normal healing of


Spine | 1993

Quantifying the cosmetic defect of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis

T. N. Theologis; R. J. Jefferson; A. H. R. W. Simpson; Alan R. Turner-Smith; Jeremy Fairbank

Cosmesis is important in the treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients. The aim of this study was to quantify the cosmetic defect using parameters of the ISIS (Oxford Metrics Ltd., Oxford, England) scan. Ten nonmedical judges scored photographs of 100 adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients based on cosmetic criteria. This Cosmetic Spinal Score proved to be a reliable figure. The Cosmetic Spinal Score was then compared with ISIS parameters and the Cobb angle. An equation based on ISIS parameters was developed, which could predict Cosmetic Spinal Score with sufficient reproducibility to have a useful clinical application. Bracing reduced the rib hump but not enough to improve the cosmetic appearance. Spinal fusion and Harrington instrumentation improved all measured parameters influencing physical appearance.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 1994

Driver reaction times after total knee replacement

T. J. W. Spalding; J. Kiss; P. Kyberd; A. Turner-Smith; A. H. R. W. Simpson

We measured the driver reaction times of 40 patients before total knee replacement (TKR) and 4, 6, 8 and 10 weeks after operation. The ability to perform an emergency stop was assessed as the time taken to achieve a brake pressure of 100 N after a visual stimulus. There were 18 drivers and 11 non-drivers; the latter had longer reaction times. In drivers, the ability to transfer the right foot from accelerator to brake pedal did not recover to preoperative levels for eight weeks after right TKR and was unchanged after left TKR. Patients should be advised that they should not drive for at least eight weeks after right TKR.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 1995

How to minimize failures of fixation of unstable intertrochanteric fractures

R. Gundle; M.F. Gargan; A. H. R. W. Simpson

Sliding hip screws have improved the treatment of unstable intertrochanteric hip fractures and their success, compared with fixed devices, is in large part due to the sharing of load between the implant and the fracture fragments. In a prospective study of 100 patients with such fractures, five factors concerned with the fracture and its fixation were studied and odds ratios calculated of their relative importance in prediction of failure. The most important factor affecting the load borne by the fracture fragments was the amount of slide available within the device, and that affecting the load carried by the device was the position of the screw in the femoral head. For fractures fixed with a device allowing less than 10 mm of slide, and those with superior screw position, the risk of failure was increased by factors of 3.2 and 5.9, respectively. Anatomical reduction alone, rather than osteotomy, together with sliding hip screw fixation, has been recommended for these fractures in three prospective randomized trials. It is calculated here that to allow sufficient slide when employing this technique, it is essential to use a short barrel device when using dynamic screws of 85 mm or less. This has not been demonstrated before.

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Paul Gaston

University of Edinburgh

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J. T. Patton

University of Edinburgh

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