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Dive into the research topics where Jorge O. Galante is active.

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Featured researches published by Jorge O. Galante.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1980

A study of lower-limb mechanics during stair-climbing

Thomas P. Andriacchi; Gunnar B. J. Andersson; R W Fermier; D Stern; Jorge O. Galante

The motions, forces, and moments at the major joints of the lower limbs of ten men ascending and descending stairs were analyzed using an optoelectronic system, a force-plate, and electromyography. The mean values for the maximum sagittalplane motions of the hip, knee, and ankle were 42, 88, and 27 degrees, respectively. The mean maximum net flexion-extension moments were: at the hip, 123.9 newton-meters going up and 112.5 newton-meters going down stairs; at the knee, 57.1 newton-meters going up and 146.6 newton-meters going down stairs; and at the ankle, 137.2 newton-meters going up and 107.5 newton-meters going down stairs. When going up and down stairs large moments are present about weight-bearing joints, but descending movements produce the largest moments. The magnitudes of these moments are considerably higher than those produced during level walking.


Journal of Biomechanics | 1977

Walking speed as a basis for normal and abnormal gait measurements

Thomas P. Andriacchi; J.A. Ogle; Jorge O. Galante

Abstract Gait observations of normal subjects and patients with knee disabilities are presented. Time-distance measurements and ground reaction force parameters are reported in relation to walking speed. Regression analysis is used to establish simple functional relations between ground reaction force amplitudes and walking speed. It is shown that basic time distance measurements observed over a range of walking speeds can be useful indicators of gait abnormalities associated with knee disabilities. For example, clinical improvement after treatment is found to be consistent with changes in these gait parameters. These results indicate the usefulness and importance of considering gait measurements in relation to walking speed when attempting to classify gait abnormalities.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1998

Metal release in patients who have had a primary total hip arthroplasty a prospective, controlled, longitudinal study

Joshua J. Jacobs; Anastasia K. Skipor; Leslie M. Patterson; Nadim J. Hallab; Wayne G. Paprosky; Jonathan Black; Jorge O. Galante

There is an increasing recognition that, in the long term, total joint replacement may be associated with adverse local and remote tissue responses that are mediated by the degradation products of prosthetic materials. Particular interest has centered on the metal-degradation products of total joint replacements because of the known toxicities of the metal elements that make up the alloys used in the implants. We measured the concentrations of titanium, aluminum, cobalt, and chromium in the serum and the concentration of chromium in the urine of seventy-five patients during a three-year prospective, longitudinal study. Twenty patients had had a so-called hybrid total hip replacement (insertion of a modular cobalt-alloy femoral stem and head with cement and a titanium acetabular cup without cement), fifteen had had insertion of an extensively porous-coated cobalt-alloy stem with a cobalt-alloy head and a titanium-alloy socket without cement, and twenty had had insertion of a proximally porous-coated titanium-alloy stem with a cobalt-alloy head and a titanium socket without cement. The remaining twenty patients did not have an implant and served as controls. The results of our study showed that, thirty-six months postoperatively, patients who have a well functioning prosthesis with components containing titanium have as much as a threefold increase in the concentration of titanium in the serum and those who have a well functioning prosthesis with cobalt-alloy components have as much as a fivefold and an eightfold increase in the concentrations of chromium in the serum and urine, respectively. The predominant source of the disseminated chromium-degradation products is probably the modular head-neck junction and may be a function of the geometry of the coupling. Passive dissolution of extensively porous-coated cobalt-alloy stems was not found to be a dominant mode of metal release. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Increased concentrations of circulating metal-degradation products derived from orthopaedic implants may have deleterious biological effects over the long term that warrant investigation. This is a particularly timely concern because of recent clinical trends, including the reintroduction of metal-on-metal bearing surfaces and the increasing popularity of extensively porous-coated devices with large surface areas of exposed metal. Accurate monitoring of the concentrations of metal in the serum and urine after total hip replacement also can provide insights into the mechanisms of metal release. Our findings suggest that fretting corrosion at the head-neck coupling is an important source of metal release that can lead to increased concentrations of chromium in the serum. Determinations of the concentrations of metal in the serum and urine may be useful in the diagnosis of patients who are symptomatic after a total joint replacement as increased levels are indicative of at least one mode of mechanical dysfunction (for example, fretting corrosion) of the device.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1990

Endosteal erosion in association with stable uncemented femoral components.

William J. Maloney; Murali Jasty; William H. Harris; Jorge O. Galante; J J Callaghan

Sixteen cases of patients who had focal femoral osteolysis after total hip replacement without cement were identified. Fourteen of them were included in a retrospective review of 474 consecutive total hip replacements without cement in 441 patients who had been followed for at least two years. The criteria for inclusion in the study were focal osteolysis with a femoral component that appeared stable radiographically, and no subsidence or change of position of the implant. All but two patients were men and were quite active. The average age was forty-seven years (range, twenty to sixty-five years). Fourteen of the sixteen patients had an excellent clinical result (a Harris hip score of 90 points or more). In two patients, the hip replacement was revised and, in a third, a biopsy was done. In all three patients, the implant was found to be firmly fixed to the femur. In the two hips that were revised, extensive ingrowth of bone was demonstrated histologically, there was no evidence of infection, and a well defined fibrous membrane was found around the smooth portion of the stem. The histological specimens from these two hips contained focal aggregates of macrophages with particulate polyethylene and metallic debris. In the biopsy material from the hip that was not revised, a fine fibrous membrane lined a cystic cavity. Although the membrane contained an occasional macrophage, no foreign material was identified. Trabecular microfracture and osteoclastic resorption of bone were seen next to the fibrous lining. With one exception, osteolysis was not identified less than two years postoperatively. In most patients, osteolysis appeared after three years. This study showed that femoral osteolysis can occur around uncemented components.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2005

Results of Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty at a Minimum of Ten Years of Follow-up

Richard A. Berger; R. Michael Meneghini; Joshua J. Jacobs; Mitchell B. Sheinkop; Craig J. Della Valle; Aaron G. Rosenberg; Jorge O. Galante

BACKGROUND There is a renewed interest in unicompartmental knee arthroplasty. The present report describes the minimum ten-year results associated with a unicompartmental knee arthroplasty design that is in current use. METHODS Sixty-two consecutive unicompartmental knee arthroplasties that were performed with cemented modular Miller-Galante implants in fifty-one patients were studied prospectively both clinically and radiographically. All patients had isolated unicompartmental disease without patellofemoral symptoms. No patient was lost to follow-up. Thirteen patients (thirteen knees) died after less than ten years of follow-up, leaving thirty-eight patients (forty-nine knees) with a minimum of ten years of follow-up. The average duration of follow-up was twelve years. RESULTS The mean Hospital for Special Surgery knee score improved from 55 points preoperatively to 92 points at the time of the final follow-up. Thirty-nine knees (80%) had an excellent result, six (12%) had a good result, and four (8%) had a fair result. At the time of the final follow-up, thirty-nine knees (80%) had flexion to at least 120 degrees . Two patients (two knees) with well-fixed components underwent revision to total knee arthroplasty, at seven and eleven years, because of progression of patellofemoral arthritis. At the time of the final follow-up, no component was loose radiographically and there was no evidence of periprosthetic osteolysis. Radiographic evidence of progressive loss of joint space was observed in the opposite compartment of nine knees (18%) and in the patellofemoral space of seven knees (14%). Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a survival rate of 98.0% +/- 2.0% at ten years and of 95.7% +/- 4.3% at thirteen years, with revision or radiographic loosening as the end point. The survival rate was 100% at thirteen years with aseptic loosening as the end point. CONCLUSIONS After a minimum duration of follow-up of ten years, this cemented modular unicompartmental knee design was associated with excellent clinical and radiographic results. Although the ten-year survival rate was excellent, radiographic signs of progression of osteoarthritis in the other compartments continued at a slow rate. With appropriate indications and technique, this unicompartmental knee design can yield excellent results into the beginning of the second decade of use.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1993

Primary total hip reconstruction with a titanium fiber-coated prosthesis inserted without cement

John M. Martell; R H Pierson; Joshua J. Jacobs; Aaron G. Rosenberg; M Maley; Jorge O. Galante

A prospective study was done of the intermediate-term clinical and radiographic results of 121 total hip arthroplasties in which a Harris-Galante porous titanium-fiber-coated prosthesis was inserted without cement in 110 patients. The average age at the time of the operation was forty-nine years (range, twenty to seventy years). The average duration of follow-up was sixty-seven months (range, fifty-five to seventy-nine months). The average preoperative Harris hip score was 55 points, and the average postoperative score was 93 points. One acetabular component was revised due to recurrent dislocation. Eleven femoral implants were unstable, and of these, four were revised. Cortical erosion was present around the distal part of the femoral stem in nine patients (8 per cent) who had stable implants, and one of these femoral implants was revised because the erosion was extensive. Survivorship analysis at five years revealed a 97 per cent chance of survival (95 per cent confidence limit, 0.937 to 1.0) of the Harris-Galante femoral-stem implant inserted without cement.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 1994

Composition and morphology of wear debris in failed uncemented total hip replacement

Arun S. Shanbhag; Joshua J. Jacobs; Tibor T. Glant; Jeremy L. Gilbert; Jonathan Black; Jorge O. Galante

Interfacial membranes collected at revision from 11 failed uncemented Ti-alloy total hip replacements were examined. Particles in the membranes were characterised by electron microscopy, microchemical spectroscopy and particle size analysis. Most were polyethylene and had a mean size of 0.53 micron +/- 0.3. They were similar to the particles seen in the base resin used in the manufacture of the acetabular implants. Relatively few titanium particles were seen. Fragments of bone, stainless steel and silicate were found in small amounts. Most of the polyethylene particles were too small to be seen by light microscopy. Electron microscopy and spectroscopic techniques are required to provide an accurate description of this debris.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1994

Migration of corrosion products from modular hip prostheses. Particle microanalysis and histopathological findings.

Robert M. Urban; Joshua J. Jacobs; Jeremy L. Gilbert; Jorge O. Galante

Migration of solid corrosion products from the modular head-neck junction of fifteen total hip replacements to the periprosthetic tissues was studied. The devices and tissues were recovered at the time of a revision procedure or at autopsy after a mean of sixty-four months (range, eight to ninety-seven months). The prostheses had a cobalt-chromium-alloy head coupled with a cobalt-chromium-alloy or a titanium-alloy stem. The solid corrosion product was identified by electron microprobe analysis and Fourier transform infrared microprobe spectroscopy as a chromium orthophosphate hydrate-rich material. The product was present at the junction of the modular head and neck and as particles within the periprosthetic tissues as early as eight months postoperatively. In several hips, it was also present on the polyethylene bearing surface. The particles in the tissues ranged in size from less than one to 500 micrometers. They were present within histiocytes or were surrounded by foreign-body giant cells in the pseudocapsule of the hip joint; in the membranes of the femoral bone-implant interface; and at sites of femoral endosteal erosions, with and without loosening of the femoral component.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1991

Release and excretion of metal in patients who have a total hip-replacement component made of titanium-base alloy.

Joshua J. Jacobs; Anastasia K. Skipor; Jonathan Black; Robert M. Urban; Jorge O. Galante

Serum concentration and urinary excretion of titanium, aluminum, and vanadium were measured for patients who had a well functioning cementless primary total hip replacement of one of two different designs, for patients who had a loose total hip replacement that was to be revised, and for control subjects who had no implant. Serum concentrations of titanium were elevated approximately twofold in the patients who had a loose implant, compared with the values for the control subjects. No major differences in terms of urine concentration of titanium, serum concentration of aluminum, or urine concentration of aluminum were observed among any of the groups that were studied. Concentrations of vanadium were uniformly low in all groups.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1999

Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty. Clinical experience at 6- to 10-year followup.

Richard A. Berger; David D. Nedeff; Regina M. Barden; Mitchell M. Sheinkop; Joshua J. Jacobs; Aaron G. Rosenberg; Jorge O. Galante

Sixty-two consecutive cemented modular unicompartmental knee arthroplasties in 51 patients were studied prospectively. At surgery, the other compartments had at most Grade 2 chondromalacia. The average age of the patients at arthroplasty was 68 years (range, 51-84 years). One patient was lost to followup and 10 died with less than 6 years followup. The average followup of the remaining 51 knees was 7.5 years (range, 6-10 years). The preoperative Hospital for Special Surgery knee score of 55 points (range, 30-79 points) improved to 92 points (range, 60-100 points) at followup; 78% (40 knees) had excellent and 20% (10 knees) had good results. The mean range of motion at followup was 120 degrees with 26 knees (51%) having range of motion greater than 120 degrees. One patient underwent revision surgery for retained cement, one patient underwent knee manipulation, and one patient underwent revision surgery at 7 years for opposite compartment degeneration and pain. Radiographically, 26 knees (51%) had at least one partial radiolucency. There were no complete femoral radiolucencies, but there were three complete tibial radiolucencies, all less than 2 mm. No component was loose as seen on radiographs. At final followup, five of the opposite compartments (10%) and three of the patellofemoral joints (6%) had some progressive radiographic joint space loss; this was less than a 25% loss in all but one knee component that was revised. At 6- to 10-years followup, cemented unicompartmental knee arthroplasty yielded excellent clinical and radiographic results. The 10-year survival using radiographic loosening or revision as the end point was 98%. Using stringent selection criteria, unicompartmental knee replacement can yield excellent results and represents a superb alternative to total knee replacement.

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Joshua J. Jacobs

Rush University Medical Center

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Aaron G. Rosenberg

Rush University Medical Center

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Richard A. Berger

Rush University Medical Center

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Dale R. Sumner

Rush University Medical Center

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Robert M. Urban

Rush University Medical Center

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Craig J. Della Valle

Rush University Medical Center

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Mitchell B. Sheinkop

Rush University Medical Center

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Thomas M. Turner

Rush University Medical Center

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Laura R. Quigley

Rush University Medical Center

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