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Dive into the research topics where Chandra Pradhan is active.

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Featured researches published by Chandra Pradhan.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2007

Blood and urine metal ion levels in young and active patients after Birmingham hip resurfacing arthroplasty FOUR-YEAR RESULTS OF A PROSPECTIVE LONGITUDINAL STUDY

J. Daniel; Hena Ziaee; Chandra Pradhan; P. B. Pynsent; D. J. W. McMinn

This is a longitudinal study of the daily urinary output and the concentrations in whole blood of cobalt and chromium in patients with metal-on-metal resurfacings over a period of four years. Twelve-hour urine collections and whole blood specimens were collected before and periodically after a Birmingham hip resurfacing in 26 patients. All ion analyses were carried out using a high-resolution inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometer. Clinical and radiological assessment, hip function scoring and activity level assessment revealed excellent hip function. There was a significant early increase in urinary metal output, reaching a peak at six months for cobalt and one year for chromium post-operatively. There was thereafter a steady decrease in the median urinary output of cobalt over the following three years, although the differences are not statistically significant. The mean whole blood levels of cobalt and chromium also showed a significant increase between the pre-operative and one-year post-operative periods. The blood levels then decreased to a lower level at four years, compared with the one-year levels. This late reduction was statistically significant for chromium but not for cobalt. The effects of systemic metal ion exposure in patients with metal-on-metal resurfacing arthroplasties continue to be a matter of concern. The levels in this study provide a baseline against which the in vivo wear performance of newer bearings can be compared.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2009

Six-year results of a prospective study of metal ion levels in young patients with metal-on-metal hip resurfacings

J. Daniel; Hena Ziaee; Chandra Pradhan; D. J. W. McMinn

We describe the findings at six years in an ongoing prospective clinicoradiological and metal ion study in a cohort of 26 consecutive male patients with unilateral Birmingham Hip Resurfacing arthroplasties with one of two femoral head sizes (50 mm and 54 mm). Their mean age was 52.9 years (29 to 67). We have previously shown an early increase in the 24-hour urinary excretion of metal ions, reaching a peak at six months (cobalt) and one year (chromium) after operation. Subsequently there is a decreasing trend in excretion of both cobalt and chromium. The levels of cobalt and chromium in whole blood also show a significant increase at one year, followed by a decreasing trend until the sixth year.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2010

Ten-year results of a double-heat-treated metal-on-metal hip resurfacing

J. Daniel; Hena Ziaee; Amir Kamali; Chandra Pradhan; T. Band; D. J. W. McMinn

Second-generation metal-on-metal bearings were introduced as a response to the considerable incidence of wear-induced failures associated with conventional replacements, especially in young patients. We present the results at ten years of a consecutive series of patients treated using a metal-on-metal hip resurfacing. A distinct feature of the bearings used in our series was that they had been subjected to double-heat treatments during the post-casting phase of their manufacture. In the past these bearings had not been subjected to thermal treatments, making this a unique metal-on-metal bearing which had not been used before in clinical practice. We report the outcome of 184 consecutive hips (160 patients) treated using a hybrid-fixed metal-on-metal hip resurfacing during 1996. Patients were invited for a clinicoradiological follow-up at a minimum of ten years. The Oxford hip score and anteroposterior and lateral radiographs were obtained. The mean age at operation was 54 years (21 to 75). A series of 107 consecutive hips (99 patients) who received the same prosthesis, but subjected to a single thermal treatment after being cast, between March 1994 and December 1995, were used as a control group for comparison. In the 1994 to 1995 group seven patients (seven hips) died from unrelated causes and there were four revisions (4%) for osteolysis and aseptic loosening. In the 1996 group nine patients died at a mean of 6.9 years after operation because of unrelated causes. There were 30 revisions (16%) at a mean of 7.3 years (1.2 to 10.9), one for infection at 1.2 years and 29 for osteolysis and aseptic loosening. Furthermore, in the latter group there were radiological signs of failure in 27 (24%) of the 111 surviving hips. The magnitude of the problem of osteolysis and aseptic loosening in the 1996 cohort did not become obvious until five years after the operation. Our results indicate that double-heat treatments of metal-on-metal bearings can lead to an increased incidence of wear-induced osteolysis.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2006

The effect of the diameter of metal-on-metal bearings on systemic exposure to cobalt and chromium.

J. Daniel; Hena Ziaee; A. Salama; Chandra Pradhan; D. J. W. McMinn

The recent resurgence in the use of metal-on-metal bearings has led to fresh concerns over metal wear and elevated systemic levels of metal ions. In order to establish if bearing diameter influences the release of metal ions, we compared the whole blood levels of cobalt and chromium (at one year) and the urinary cobalt and chromium output (at one to three and four to six years) following either a 50 mm or 54 mm Birmingham hip resurfacing or a 28 mm Metasul total hip replacement. The whole blood concentrations and daily output of cobalt and chromium in these time periods for both bearings were in the same range and without significant difference.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2005

Mini-incision resurfacing arthroplasty of hip through the posterior approach.

D. J. W. McMinn; Joseph Daniel; P. B. Pynsent; Chandra Pradhan

The success of metal-on-metal hip resurfacing in the medium term in young and active patients is becoming evident. The procedure now can be done using a minimal approach developed by the senior author using a single posterior incision. This mini-incision resurfacing arthroplasty of the hip has made resurfacing more attractive to surgeons and patients. But does a mini incision approach allow reliable component placement? The results of 232 consecutive Birmingham Hip Resurfacings done using this approach between January and December 2004 are presented. Mean incision length was 11.8 cm. Seventy-seven percent of the incisions were between 9 and 12 cm long. Body mass index of the patients studied ranged from 17.6 to 46.7. Comparing the traditional approach with the mini-incision resurfacing arthroplasty of hip did not show a difference between the two groups in terms of operating time. The mean hospital stay was reduced by a day in the mini-incision group. The mean inclination of the acetabular components was within the target range in the two groups. Patient feedback shows that reduced postoperative pain, faster recovery rate, and better cosmesis make the mini-incision approach very popular. Although the mini incision is indeed appealing, it has a steep learning curve. In the early phase of the learning curve, care should be taken to avoid suboptimal component placement, which has the potential to affect long-term outcome adversely. Level of Evidence: Therapeutic study, Level III (retrospective comparative study). See the Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2008

Results of the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing dysplasia component in severe acetabular insufficiency: A SIX- TO 9.6-YEAR FOLLOW-UP

D. J. W. McMinn; J. Daniel; Hena Ziaee; Chandra Pradhan

The dysplasia cup, which was devised as an adjunct to the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing system, has a hydroxyapatite-coated porous surface and two supplementary neutralisation screws to provide stable primary fixation, permit early weight-bearing, and allow incorporation of morcellised autograft without the need for structural bone grafting. A total of 110 consecutive dysplasia resurfacing arthroplasties in 103 patients (55 men and 48 women) performed between 1997 and 2000 was reviewed with a minimum follow-up of six years. The mean age at operation was 47.2 years (21 to 62) and 104 hips (94%) were Crowe grade II or III. During the mean follow-up of 7.8 years (6 to 9.6), three hips (2.7%) were converted to a total hip replacement at a mean of 3.9 years (2 months to 8.1 years), giving a cumulative survival of 95.2% at nine years (95% confidence interval 89 to 100). The revisions were due to a fracture of the femoral neck, a collapse of the femoral head and a deep infection. There was no aseptic loosening or osteolysis of the acetabular component associated with either of the revisions performed for failure of the femoral component. No patient is awaiting a revision. The median Oxford hip score in 98 patients with surviving hips at the final review was 13 and the 10th and the 90th percentiles were 12 and 23, respectively.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2010

Renal Clearance of Cobalt in Relation to the Use of Metal-on-metal Bearings in Hip Arthroplasty

Joseph Daniel; Hena Ziaee; Chandra Pradhan; P. B. Pynsent; D. J. W. McMinn

BACKGROUND A concern regarding the use of metal-on-metal bearings in hip arthroplasty has been that the high levels of metal ions that are released overwhelm the renal threshold for metal excretion, leading to systemic buildup of metals. The purpose of this investigation was to determine if the physiological renal capacity for cobalt clearance and cobalt concentrating efficiency is overwhelmed by the elevation in metal ion levels seen in patients with metal-on-metal-bearing hip devices. METHODS Concurrent specimens of urine and plasma were obtained from a group of 461 patients (346 men and 115 women) at various intervals after either a unilateral (296) or a bilateral (130) metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty or preoperatively (thirty-five patients; the control specimens). Metal ion analyses were performed with high-resolution inductively coupled mass spectrometry. Renal efficiency was measured as the ratio of urine cobalt concentration to plasma cobalt concentration. Cobalt clearance was calculated by dividing the urine cobalt output in twenty-four hours by the plasma cobalt concentration. Dividing the quotient by 1440 adjusts it to clearance per minute. RESULTS The median renal efficiency was found to be 0.9 in the analysis of the preoperative specimens, indicating that there was renal conservation of cobalt. In patients with metal-on-metal bearings, the median renal efficiency was 3.2, indicating that, as a result of cobalt excretion, the cobalt concentration in urine was threefold higher than the concentration in plasma. Linear regression analysis showed that renal efficiency progressively increased at a rate of 9% for every microg/24 hr increase in cobalt release. Cobalt clearance showed a similar trend, increasing from 1.3 mL/min in the preoperative group to 3.7 mL/min in the follow-up group. In the follow-up group, renal cobalt clearance progressively increased from 1.9 to 7.1 mL/min with increasing daily cobalt output, which indicates that with increasing in vivo metal ion release there was a progressive increase in the rate at which the kidneys cleared the plasma of cobalt. CONCLUSIONS In subjects with no prosthetic device, the kidneys tend to conserve cobalt in the body. We found that, in patients with a metal-on-metal hip prosthesis, there is a progressive increase in cobalt clearance with increasing in vivo wear at the levels of cobalt release expected in patients with an array of metal-on-metal-bearing total joint arthroplasties. We found no threshold beyond which renal capacity to excrete these ions is overwhelmed.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2008

Multimodal thromboprophylaxis following primary hip arthroplasty: THE ROLE OF ADJUVANT INTERMITTENT PNEUMATIC CALF COMPRESSION

J. Daniel; A. Pradhan; Chandra Pradhan; Hena Ziaee; M. Moss; J. Freeman; D. J. W. McMinn

We report a retrospective review of the incidence of venous thromboembolism in 463 consecutive patients who underwent primary total hip arthroplasty (487 procedures). Treatment included both total hip replacement and hip resurfacing, and the patients were managed without anticoagulants. The thromboprophylaxis regimen included an antiplatelet agent, generally aspirin, hypotensive epidural anaesthesia, elastic compression stockings and early mobilisation. In 258 of these procedures (244 patients) performed in 2005 (cohort A) mechanical compression devices were not used, whereas in 229 (219 patients) performed during 2006 (cohort B) bilateral intermittent pneumatic calf compression was used. All operations were performed through a posterior mini-incision approach. Patients who required anticoagulation for pre-existing medical problems and those undergoing revision arthroplasty were excluded. Doppler ultrasonographic screening for deep-vein thrombosis was performed in all patients between the fourth and sixth post-operative days. All patients were reviewed at a follow-up clinic six to ten weeks after the operation. In addition, response to a questionnaire was obtained at the end of 12 weeks post-operatively. No symptomatic calf or above-knee deep-vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism occurred. In 25 patients in cohort A (10.2%) and in ten patients in cohort B (4.6%) asymptomatic calf deep-vein thromboses were detected ultrasonographically. This difference was statistically significant (p = 0.03). The regimen followed by cohort B offers the prospect of a low incidence of venous thromboembolism without subjecting patients to the higher risk of bleeding associated with anticoagulant use.


Archive | 2009

Patient Selection and Timing of Operation

Joseph Daniel; Chandra Pradhan; Hena Ziaee

Hip resurfacing arthroplasty is an option for people with advanced hip disease who would otherwise receive and are likely to outlive a conventional primary total hip replacement (THR), particularly for younger patients who wish to be reasonably active [1]. That guideline from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE), a statutory body in the United Kingdom, broadly sums up the indications in which a hip resurfacing device should be used.


Archive | 2009

Management of Complex Anatomy

Joseph Daniel; Chandra Pradhan; Hena Ziaee; D. J. W. McMinn

Traditionally, there have been attempts to classify hip instability into two distinct entities (i.e., congenital and developmental). This distinction is rather poorly defined, and instability of the hip due to acetabular insufficiency presents as a broad spectrum of conditions with varying severity. Crowe et al. [1] classify dysplastic hips into four grades on the basis of proximal displacement of the femoral head. In grade I, the femoral head is displaced by a distance that is equivalent to 50% of its diameter. In grades II, III, and I V, the displacement is 50% to 75%, 75% to 100%, and greater than 100% of the femoral head, respectively. Hartofilakidis et al. [2] classify dysplasia into three types: (a) dysplasia, in which the socket is shallow but the femoral head is contained within the original true acetabulum, (b) low dislocation, in which the femoral head articulates with a false acetabulum, which is distinct from the true acetabulum but overlaps it, and (c) high dislocation, in which there is no contact between the true and the false acetabulum.

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P. B. Pynsent

Royal Orthopaedic Hospital

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J. Daniel

University of Cambridge

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C. W. McBryde

Royal Orthopaedic Hospital

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