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Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2004

The Chetranjan Ranawat Award: Tibial Component Failure Mechanisms in Total Knee Arthroplasty

Michael E. Berend; Merrill A. Ritter; John B. Meding; Philip M. Faris; E. Michael Keating; Ryan Redelman; Gregory W. Faris; Kenneth E. Davis

The purpose of this study was to examine the failure mechanisms and factors associated with failure of a nonmodular metal backed cemented tibial component. Out of 3152 total knee replacements done for osteoarthritis, 41 tibial components had been revised (1.3%). Four distinct failure mechanisms were identified: 20 knees were revised for medial bone collapse, 13 for ligamentous imbalance, 6 for progressive radiolucencies, and 2 for pain. Factors associated with medial bone collapse were varus tibial component alignment more than 3.0°, Body Mass Index higher than 33.7, and overall postoperative varus limb alignment. Ligamentous imbalance was more prevalent in knees with preoperative valgus deformity. There were no knees revised for tibial component polyethylene wear or osteolysis. We conclude that the dominant failure mechanisms for this component design are related to preoperative deformity, technical factors of component alignment, overall limb alignment, and ligamentous imbalance.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2001

Long-term followup of anatomic graduated components posterior cruciate-retaining total knee replacement.

Merrill A. Ritter; Michael E. Berend; John B. Meding; E. Michael Keating; Philip M. Faris; Brian M. Crites

The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the authors’ 15-year experience with the Anatomic Graduated Components total knee replacement. This is a report of the survivorship of 4583 Anatomic Graduated Component total knee arthroplasties. Kaplan-Meier survival analyses were performed with the end point defined as radiographic loosening, revision, or both. This end point was subdivided into the best case scenario in which it was assumed that all the patients lost to followup were doing well throughout the study and a worst case scenario in which it was assumed that all patients lost to followup had failed results at their last clinic visit. There were six (0.18%) femoral, 21 (0.46%) tibial, and 180 (4.2%) all-polyethylene patellar component failures secondary to aseptic loosening. All femoral components and 90% of the tibial components were revised; however, only 15 patellar components were revised. The clinical survival rate with revision of one or more of the components was 98.86% at 15 years. Despite having nearly flat-on-flat geometry and retaining the posterior cruciate ligament, which should increase the stresses in the polyethylene and at the bone-cement interface, this total knee replacement has proved to have minimal wear and excellent longevity with time. The authors think this is a result of the direct compression molded polyethylene articulation and the nonmodular configuration that incorporates metal backing on the tibial component and eliminates back-sided tibial component polyethylene wear.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1997

Impaction Bone-Grafting before Insertion of a Femoral Stem with Cement in Revision Total Hip Arthroplasty. A Minimum Two-Year Follow-up Study*

John B. Meding; Merrill A. Ritter; E. Michael Keating; Philip M. Faris

Impaction bone-grafting was performed before insertion of a collarless, polished, tapered femoral stem with cement in thirty-four revision total hip arthroplasties (thirty-four patients) that were done because of aseptic loosening. The average duration of follow-up was thirty months (range, twenty-four to forty-two months). The operation was the initial revision in twenty-eight patients (82 per cent). Twenty-two patients (65 per cent) also had revision of the acetabular component. Complications included four intraoperative and two postoperative fractures of the femur as well as one dislocation (at one month). Two patients (6 per cent) needed a repeat revision of the femoral stem because of aseptic loosening at twenty-six and thirty-six months postoperatively. Both of these patients had an associated fracture of the femur (one was intraoperative, and the other was postoperative). Subsidence was common (thirteen patients; 38 per cent) and averaged 10.1 millimeters (range, four to thirty-one millimeters). Although the study group was relatively small, with the numbers available subsidence was not found to be associated with the preoperative or postoperative hip score, segmental or cavitary femoral defects, femoral ectasia, intraoperative fracture of the femur, strut-grafting, trochanteric osteotomy, or varus position of the femoral component. Incorporation of the allograft into the trabecular bone and secondary remodeling were noted radiographically in thirty-two (94 per cent) and fourteen (41 per cent) of the patients, respectively, often within one year. Although the duration of follow-up was relatively short, no localized resorption of the allograft occurred and cortical repair was noted in one patient at three years. At the most recent follow-up evaluation, the Harris hip scores had improved from a preoperative average of 51 points (range, 32 to 90 points) to an average of 87 points (range, 65 to 100 points) and twenty-eight patients (82 per cent) had no or only slight pain. Despite the satisfactory early clinical results, we remain concerned about the high rate of fracture of the femur and the rate and extent of subsidence of the femoral component. On the basis of the worrisome findings after this two-year period, we recommend that impaction bone-grafting be used only when proximal femoral osteopenia is so severe that stability cannot be obtained with insertion of a long-stemmed femoral component without cement. In that setting, impaction bone-grafting may be considered instead of implantation of a massive proximal femoral allograft in combination with insertion of a femoral component with cement.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1995

Comparative Outcomes of Total Joint Arthroplasty

Merrill A. Ritter; Marjorie J. Albohm; E. Michael Keating; Philip M. Faris; John B. Meding

A prospective pre- and postoperative general health/quality-of-life factor comparison, using the Rand SF-36 Health Status Questionnaire (TyPE Specification, Quality Quest [Health Outcomes Institute, Minneapolis, MN]), was carried out on a consecutive series of patients with diagnosed osteoarthritis undergoing total hip and knee arthroplasty between March 1991 and March 1994. Study groups consisted of 85 total hip arthroplasty patients, 93 total knee arthroplasty patients, and 65 single-stage bilateral total knee arthroplasty patients, all treated at the same specialty hospital, under the care of three senior orthopaedic surgeons. The average patient age was 69 years. Significant improvements in quality-of-life measures including physical functioning, social functioning, role functioning/physical problem, role functioning/emotional problem, mental health, energy/fatigue, pain, and change in health were noted in all hip and knee arthroplasty patients 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years after surgery (P < .05). There appeared to be no significant differences in quality-of-life measures between hip and knee arthroplasty patients. Results therefore indicate that total hip and knee arthroplasty significantly improve the functional status and quality of life among patients suffering from osteoarthritis.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2002

Long-term followup of nonmodular total knee replacements.

E. Michael Keating; John B. Meding; Philip M. Faris; Merrill A. Ritter

The purpose of the current study was to evaluate and determine the mechanism and etiology of failure of components that failed in long-term followup of Anatomic Graduated Component total knee replacements. The authors previously reported the survivorship of 4583 Anatomic Graduated Component total knee arthroplasties done during a 17-year period. The current study was done to evaluate the etiology and cause of failure of the components that failed. There were six (0.18%) failures of the femoral component. There were 21 tibia components that failed (0.46%). Twelve tibial components failed because of an osteonecrotic lesion in the medial tibia plateau. The clinical survival rate with revision or loosening of one or more components was 98.9% at 15 years. No component was revised for polyethylene wear or osteolysis. This total knee replacement has proved to have minimal wear and excellent longevity with time with no revisions between 10 and 15 years despite having nearly flat-on-flat geometry and retaining the posterior cruciate ligament. The most common cause for revision (12 tibial components) was because of an osteonecrotic lesion in the medial tibia plateau, which developed after surgery and led to loosening.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1988

Anterior femoral notching and ipsilateral supracondylar femur fracture in total knee arthroplasty

Merrill A. Ritter; Philip M. Faris; E. Michael Keating

The authors reviewed 670 total knee arthroplasties with a 2-10-year follow-up period. Of these, 180 knees had anterior femoral notching, which was deeper than 3 mm in 138. Two of the 670 knees suffered ipsilateral supracondylar fractures; one of these had a notched femur and one did not. Both fractures occurred at the anterior patellar flange-bone junction. No correlation was found between anterior femoral notching and ipsilateral supracondylar femur fracture.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1989

Long-term survival analysis of the posterior cruciate condylar total knee arthroplasty. A 10-year evaluation.

Merrill A. Ritter; Elaine D. Campbell; Philip M. Faris; E. Michael Keating

Abstract Long-term survivorship analysis was applied to 394 cruciate condylar type total knee arthroplasties. Clinical and radiographic parameters were evaluated. Failure was defined in three separate survival curves as revision, radiographic loosening, and a pain rating of 20 or less on the HSS knee score scale. Survival at 10 years, using only revision or recommended revision as the criterion for failure, was 94.7% With the addition of the other two criteria, survival fell to 81% at 10 years. The posterior cruciate condylar knee survival is comparable to that of the total condylar knee when using comparable definitions of failure.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1995

Prosthetic component failures in hip arthroplasty surgery

David A. Heck; Cynthia M. Partridge; Jeffrey D. Reuben; William L. Lanzer; Courtland G. Lewis; E. Michael Keating

A survey was conducted of the entire membership of the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons to determine their experience with total hip arthroplasty (THA) device-related failures. Forty-seven percent of the membership reviewed their preceding 5-year clinical experience and returned the survey instrument. The aggregate 5-year volume encompassed experience with more than 60,000 hip arthroplasties. The median 5-year experience per respondent was 200 metal-based sockets and 214 metal stems. The frequency distribution of the number of hip arthroplasties per respondent was skewed to the right, with fewer surgeons reporting the higher volumes of arthroplasties. In aggregate, 60,115 of the acetabular components used were metal backed. Nonmetal acetabular component usage totaled 3,219. Complete polyethylene failure was defined as fracture or complete wear through of the polyethylene portion of the component. Complete polyethylene failure was seen in 172 metal-backed sockets (29/10,000). Seventy-seven all-polyethylene sockets had complete polyethylene failure (239/10,100). A total of 87 THAs were revised for modular acetabular dissociations for a dissociation rate of 15/10,000. In aggregate, 64,483 metal-stemmed components were used. Femoral stem fractures occurred in 172 for a rate of 27/10,000. A total of 56,965 metallic femoral components were reported as being modular. Dissociation between the femoral head and neck was uncommonly seen (3/10,000). Use of ceramic femoral heads was low (5,023); however, a total of 11 ceramic head fractures were revised in the 5-year period for a failure rate of 22/10,000. The risks of catastrophic prosthetic THA failure are low but vary according to hip component and the manufacturer of the part.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2000

Total knee arthroplasty after high tibial osteotomy. A comparison study in patients who had bilateral total knee replacement.

John B. Meding; E. Michael Keating; Merrill A. Ritter; Philip M. Faris

BACKGROUND The outcome of total knee replacement after high tibial osteotomy remains uncertain. We hypothesized that the results of total knee replacement with or without a previous high tibial osteotomy are similar. METHODS The results of a consecutive series of thirty-nine bilateral total knee arthroplasties performed with cement at an average of 8.7 years after unilateral high tibial osteotomy were reviewed. There were twenty-seven men and twelve women. Preoperatively, the knee scores according to the system of the Knee Society were similar for all of the knees; however, valgus alignment and patella infera were more common in the knees with a previous high tibial osteotomy. Bilateral total knee replacement was staged in seven patients and was simultaneous in thirty-two patients. The results of the total knee arthroplasties were retrospectively reviewed with respect to the knee and function scores according to the system of the Knee Society, the radiographic findings, and the complications. RESULTS Intraoperatively, no notable differences were identified in the number of medial, lateral, or lateral patellar releases required. However, less lateral tibial bone was resected in the group with a previous high tibial osteotomy (average, 3.3 millimeters) than in the group without a high tibial osteotomy (average, 7.5 millimeters). The average duration of follow-up was 7.5 years (range, three to sixteen years) in the group with a previous high tibial osteotomy and 6.8 years (range, two to ten years) in the group without a high tibial osteotomy. At the time of the final follow-up, the knee and function scores were similar for the two groups (89.0 and 81.0 points, respectively, for the group with a previous high tibial osteotomy, and 89.6 and 83.9 points, respectively, for the group without a high tibial osteotomy). Although more knees were free of pain in the group without a previous high tibial osteotomy (thirty-six) than in the group with a previous osteotomy (thirty-three), this difference was not found to be significant with the numbers available (p = 0.4810). Knee alignment and stability, femoral and tibial component alignment, and range of motion also were similar in both groups postoperatively. One allpolyethylene tibial component was revised in the high tibial osteotomy group. Two knees in each group required manipulation. There were no deep infections. CONCLUSIONS While patients with a previous high tibial osteotomy may have important differences preoperatively, including valgus alignment, patella infera, and decreased bone stock in the proximal part of the tibia, the present study suggests that the clinical and radiographic results of primary total knee arthroplasty in knees with and without a previous high tibial osteotomy are not substantially different. In our relatively small group of patients, the previous high tibial osteotomy had no adverse effect on the outcome of the subsequent total knee replacement.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1988

Posterior cruciate ligament balancing during total knee arthroplasty

Merrill A. Ritter; Philip M. Faris; E. Michael Keating

This study was undertaken to describe and evaluate the use of a posterior cruciate ligament balancing technique in total knee arthroplasty. Two hundred sixty total knee arthroplasties in 156 patients were performed between January 1984 and December 1985 using the described technique of posterior cruciate ligament balancing when necessary. Seventy-eight arthroplasties (30%) required ligament balancing to obtain a smooth flexion arc. At 1-year minimum follow-up evaluation, no knee was found to be unstable in the anterior-posterior plane. Average flexion arc for the posterior cruciate ligament balanced knees was 2 degrees - 114 degrees and for the standard arthroplasty was 2 degrees - 107 degrees. Posterior cruciate ligament balancing is a useful adjunct in total knee arthroplasty surgery when flexion gap tightness occurs.

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