J. Twiggs
University of Sydney
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Featured researches published by J. Twiggs.
Knee | 2017
Willy Theodore; J. Twiggs; Elizabeth Kolos; Justin Roe; Brett Fritsch; David M. Dickison; David Liu; Lucy Salmon; B. Miles; Stephen M. Howell
BACKGROUND Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) significantly improves pain and restores a considerable degree of function. However, improvements are needed to increase patient satisfaction and restore kinematics to allow more physically demanding activities that active patients consider important. The aim of our study was to compare the alignment and motion of kinematically and mechanically aligned TKAs. METHODS A patient specific musculoskeletal computer simulation was used to compare the tibio-femoral and patello-femoral kinematics between mechanically aligned and kinematically aligned TKA in 20 patients. RESULTS When kinematically aligned, femoral components on average resulted in more valgus alignment to the mechanical axis and internally rotated to surgical transepicondylar axis whereas tibia component on average resulted in more varus alignment to the mechanical axis and internally rotated to tibial AP rotational axis. With kinematic alignment, tibio-femoral motion displayed greater tibial external rotation and lateral femoral flexion facet centre (FFC) translation with knee flexion than mechanical aligned TKA. At the patellofemoral joint, patella lateral shift of kinematically aligned TKA plateaued after 20 to 30° flexion while in mechanically aligned TKA it decreased continuously through the whole range of motion. CONCLUSIONS Kinematic alignment resulted in greater variation than mechanical alignment for all tibio-femoral and patello-femoral motion. Kinematic alignment places TKA components patient specific alignment which depends on the preoperative state of the knee resulting in greater variation in kinematics. The use of computational models has the potential to predict which alignment based on native alignment, kinematic or mechanical, could improve knee function for patients undergoing TKA.
Medical Engineering & Physics | 2018
J. Twiggs; Lucy Salmon; Elizabeth Kolos; Emily Bogue; B. Miles; Justin Roe
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a standard treatment for patients with end stage knee Osteoarthritis (OA) to reduce pain and restore function. The aim of this study was to assess pre- and early post-operative physical activity (PA) with Fitbit Flex devices for patients with OA undergoing TKA and determine any benchmarks for expected post-operative activity. Significant correlations of pre-operative step count, post-operative step count, Body Mass Index (BMI) and Short Form 12 Physical Component Summaries (SF-12 PCS) were found. Mean step counts varied by 3,203 steps per day between obese and healthy weight patients, and 3,786 steps per day between those with higher and lower SF-12 PCS scores, suggesting the need for benchmarks for recovery that vary by patient pre-operative factors. A backwards stepwise regression model developed to provide patient specific step count predictions at 6 weeks had an R2 of 0.754, providing a robust patient specific benchmark for post-operative recovery, while population means from BMI and SF-12 subgroups provide a clinically practical alternative.
Journal of Arthroplasty | 2018
J. Twiggs; David M. Dickison; Elizabeth Kolos; Caitlin E. Wilcox; Justin Roe; Brett Fritsch; Stephen J. McMahon; B. Miles; Andrew J. Ruys
BACKGROUND Optimal rotational alignment of the femoral component is a common goal during total knee arthroplasty. The posterior condylar axis (PCA) is thought to be the most reproducible reference in surgery, while the transepicondylar axis (TEA) seems to better approximate the native kinematic flexion axis. This study sought to determine if rules based on patient gender or coronal alignment could allow reliable reproduction of the TEA from the PCA. METHODS Three-dimensional models based on preoperative computed tomography were made representing a patients arthritic knee joint. The landmarks were defined and angular relationships determined. RESULTS The population group of 726 patients contained large anatomic variation. When applying the standard reference rule of 3° external rotation from the PCA, 36.9% of patients would have a rotational target greater than ±2° from their TEA. When applying the mean external rotation of the TEA from the PCA (1.85°) from this population, this proportion dropped to 26.0% of patients. The use of statistically significant gender and coronal alignment relationships to define the femoral rotation did not reduce the proportion of patients in ±2° error. CONCLUSION This study shows that gender and coronal alignment relationships to the TEA to PCA angle are not clinically significant as a quarter of patients would still have a target for rotation greater than ±2° from the TEA using these relationships. Superior tools for orienting rotational cuts directly to the TEA in surgery or preoperative identification of relevant patient-specific angles might capture the proportion of patients for whom standard reference angles are not appropriate.
Journal of Arthroplasty | 2018
J. Twiggs; Edgar A. Wakelin; Justin Roe; David M. Dickison; Brett Fritsch; B. Miles; Andrew J. Ruys
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2017
J. Twiggs; Justin Roe; Lucy J. Salmon; B. Miles; W. Theodore
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2017
E. Bogue; J. Twiggs; D. Liu
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2017
J. Twiggs; B. Miles; B. Fritsch; D. Dickison; Justin Roe; Willy Theodore
Archive | 2016
Emily Bogue; J. Twiggs; Willy Theodore; B. Miles; Bede O'connor
Archive | 2016
Willy Theodore; J. Twiggs; B. Miles; Bede O'connor
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2016
J. Twiggs; B. Fritsch; Justin Roe; D. Liu; D. Dickison; W. Theodore; B. Miles