Julien Beldame
University of Rouen
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Featured researches published by Julien Beldame.
Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy | 2008
Julien Beldame; Eric Havet; Isabelle Auquit-Auckbur; Benjamin Lefebvre; Jean-Philippe Mure; Fabrice Duparc
Several flaps have been described to treat severe soft tissue defects of the finger dorsal side. Many authors studied vascular organization of the hand on its dorsal side; most of them insisted on deep vascularization into the intermetacarpal spaces, which is formed by the dorsal metacarpal arteries. Those dorsal metacarpal arteries are the anatomical support of many flaps, which do not preserve the dorsal interosseous muscles fascias. Only few authors described dorsal vascular organization at the level of the proximal phalanx; however, using a rotation point of a flap distally to the metacarpal head with a donor site on the dorsal aspect of the hand could cover all distal soft tissue defect of long finger. In order to determine the technical limitations of dorsal digito-metacarpal flap procedures, we studied number and location of arterial anastomoses between the reticular subcutaneous dorsal network and the rest of the vascularization at this level, which was formed by the deeper dorsal metacarpal arteries, common palmar digital arteries and proper palmar digital arteries, and between the dorsal digital arteries. Twenty-four long fingers from embalmed cadavers were studied after a reverse flow injection of colored latex and dissected layer-by-layer preserving the digital-metacarpal arterial network. At the level of the hand, the dorsal metacarpal arteries of the third and fourth intermetacarpal spaces were inconstant. When present, two or three arteries anastomosed in star shape with the reticular network. No such arterial anastomosis was observed proximally to the level of the intertendinous connections (junctura tendinorum) that bridge the extensor digitorum communis tendons. When no dorsal metacarpal artery was present, some communicant arteries arose from the common palmar digital arteries. Moreover, all the nutrient branches were more numerous distally to the intertendinous connections (junctura tendinorum). At the level of the metacarpophalangeal joints, the hand cutaneous network was always anastomosed with the dorsal cutaneous network. At the level of fingers, the dorsal cutaneous network was always supplied by four branches arising from the proper digital artery. Our study supported the reliability of dorsal digitometacarpal flaps, supplied by numerous palmodorsal digital anastomoses and by a rich plexiforme network joining the hand skin supply and that of the dorsal finger skin. During the procedure, we recommend limiting the surgical dissection of the flap at the level of the middle phalanx.
Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2017
Jules Bernard; Julien Beldame; S. Van Driessche; Helena Brunel; T. Poirier; Patrice Guiffault; Jean Matsoukis; Fabien Billuart
BACKGROUND Minimally invasive total hip arthroplasty (THA) is presumed to provide functional and clinical benefits, whereas in fact the literature reveals that gait and posturographic parameters following THA do not recover values found in the general population. There is a significant disturbance of postural sway in THA patients, regardless of the surgical approach, although with some differences between approaches compared to controls: the anterior and anterolateral minimally invasive approaches seem to be more disruptive of postural parameters than the posterior approach. Electromyographic (EMG) study of the hip muscles involved in surgery [gluteus maximus (GMax), gluteus medius (GMed), tensor fasciae latae (TFL), and sartorius (S)] could shed light, the relevant literature involves discordant methodologies. We developed a methodology to assess EMG activity during maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) of the GMax, GMed, TFL and sartorius muscles as a reference for normalization. A prospective study aimed to assess whether hip joint positioning and the learning curve on an MVC test affect the EMG signal during a maximal voluntary contraction. HYPOTHESIS Hip positioning and the learning curve on an MVC test affect EMG signal during MVC of GMax, GMed, TFL and S. METHODS Thirty young asymptomatic subjects participated in the study. Each performed 8 hip muscle MVCs in various joint positions recorded with surface EMG sensors. Each MVC was performed 3 times in 1 week, with the same schedule every day, controlling for activity levels in the preceding 24h. EMG activity during MVC was expressed as a ratio of EMG activity during unipedal stance. Non-parametric tests were applied. RESULTS Statistical analysis showed no difference according to hip position for abductors or flexors in assessing EMG signal during MVC over the 3 sessions. Hip abductors showed no difference between abduction in lateral decubitus with hip straight versus hip flexed: GMax (19.8±13.7 vs. 14.5±7.8, P=0.78), GMed (13.4±9.0 vs. 9.9±6.6, P=0.21) and TFL (69.5±61.7 vs. 65.9±51.3, P=0.50). Flexors showed no difference between hip flexion/abduction/lateral rotation performed in supine or sitting position: TFL (70.6±45.9 vs. 61.6±45.8, P=0.22) and S (101.1±67.9 vs. 72.6±44.6, P=0.21). The most effective tests to assess EMG signal during MVC were for the hip abductors: hip abduction performed in lateral decubitus (36.7% for GMax, 76.7% for GMed), and for hip flexors: hip flexion/abduction/lateral rotation performed in supine decubitus (50% for TFL, 76.7% for S). DISCUSSION The study hypothesis was not confirmed, since hip joint positioning and the learning curve on an MVC test did not affect EMG signal during MVC of GMax, GMed, TFL and S muscles. Therefore, a single session and one specific test is enough to assess MVC in hip abductors (abduction in lateral decubitus) and flexors (hip flexion/abduction/lateral rotation in supine position). This method could be applied to assess muscle function after THA, and particularly to compare different approaches. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE III, case-matched study.
Journal of Arthroplasty | 2015
Michel Bercovy; Jean Langlois; Julien Beldame; Benjamin Lefebvre
UNLABELLED We report midterm results of a prospective continuous cohort of ROCC® Total Knee Arthroplasties (TKA). Between 2001 and 2008, all primary TKA patients (n=500) received 602 ROCC saddle-shaped rotating platform TKAs. Mean follow-up was 7.5 years (5-13) (>10 years in 123 knees). 82 patients (93 knees) died; 20 patients (21 knees) were lost to follow-up. Active flexion improved from 119° (10°-150°) to 127° (90°-155°) and Knee Society knee score from 39±11 to 94±9. Two knees were reoperated for aseptic loosening: Kaplan-Meier 14-year survivorship with aseptic loosening as end-point was 99.4% (95% CI, 99.8-100). UCLA mean score increased from 3.8/10 at baseline to 7.3/10 at last FU, 91% recovering pre-disease activity, and 27% with UCLA score ≥8/10. ROCC TKA demonstrated solid midterm survivorship without activity-related complications. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Therapeutic, Level IV.
Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2011
B. Lefebvre; Julien Beldame; S. Bertiaux; N. Biga
UNLABELLED We report on seven traumatic lesions of the tibialis anterior tendon (one subcutaneous rupture and six open tears) in seven injured patients of mean age 45 years [17-79] all managed by direct suture and immobilization either using a cast boot (four cases) or a lower leg external fixator (three cases). After a mean follow-up of 31 months (6-50), external fixation achieved favourable clinical results with no specific complication. External fixation improves the conditions for suture efficiency, provides full immobilization and facilitates wound care in patients at a high risk of developing cutaneous complications. In accordance with data published in the literature, immobilization by means of a windowed cast boot achieved satisfactory results in patients with no risk factors. This method compatible with early mobilization avoids placement of a posterior splint which could induce slackening and weakening of tendon repair. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Retrospective study (Level IV).
Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2018
Jules Bernard; Fredson Razanabola; Julien Beldame; Stéphane Van Driessche; Helena Brunel; Thomas Poirier; Jean Matsoukis; Fabien Billuart
BACKGROUND The functional and clinical benefit of minimally invasive total hip arthroplasty (THA) is well-known, but the literature reports impaired gait and posture parameters as compared to the general population, especially following use of the anterior minimally invasive approach, which has more severe impact on posture than the posterior approach. The reasons for this impairment, however, remain unexplained. We therefore conducted a surface electromyography (sEMG) study of the hip muscles liable to be affected by arthroplasty surgery: gluteus maximus (GMax), gluteus medius (GMed), tensor fasciae latae (TFL), and sartorius (S). The study addressed the following questions: (1) Is bipodal and unipodal GMed activity greater following anterior THA than in asymptomatic subjects? (2) Is a single manual test sufficient to assess maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) in hip abductors (GMax, GMed, TFL) and flexors (TFL, S)? HYPOTHESIS Bipodal and unipodal GMed activity is greater following anterior THA than in asymptomatic subjects. METHOD Eleven patients with anterior THA and 11 asymptomatic subjects, matched for age, gender and body-mass index, were included. Subjects underwent 3 postural tests: bipodal, eyes closed (BEC), unipodal on the operated side (UOP), and unipodal on the non-operated side (UnOP), with unipodal results averaged between both sides in the asymptomatic subjects. Data were recorded from 4-channel EMG and a force plate. EMG test activity was normalized as a ratio of MVC activity. RESULTS Postural parameters (mean center of pressure displacement speed) were poorer and sEMG activity higher in anterior THA than asymptomatic subjects (p<0.005). On the BEC test, GMax and GMed activity was higher on both operated and non-operated sides than in asymptomatic controls (respectively, 0.15±0.12 and 0.12±0.6 versus 0.07±0.06 for GMax, and 0.13±0.08 and 0.13±0.08 versus 0.08±0.05 for GMed; p<0.05). On unipodal tests, both UOP and UnOP GMed activities were higher than in controls (respectively, 0.51±0.3 and 0.48±0.27 versus 0.28±0.13; p<0.04); GMax and TFL activities were higher than in controls only on the UOP tests (respectively, 0.49±0.43 versus 0.24±0.18, and 0.23±0.17 versus 0.12±0.16; p<0.05). DISCUSSION sEMG activity in the hip abductors, which are the main stabilizing muscles for the pelvis, is increased following anterior THA, in parallel with impaired postural parameters. This finding may be due to intraoperative TFL and S neuromuscular spindle lesion. The present preliminary study is to be followed up by a comparison of all 3 common minimally invasive approaches (anterior, anterolateral and posterior) using the same study protocol. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE III, prospective case-control study.
Annals of Translational Medicine | 2016
Jean-Edern Ollivier; Stéphane Van Driessche; Fabien Billuart; Julien Beldame; Jean Matsoukis
Total hip arthroplasty (THA) is associated with significant peri-operative bleeding that can cause hematomas and sometimes acute anemia requiring blood transfusion with potential risks and costs. Theses complications will delay a patient’s functional recovery and discharge. Blood-sparing strategies are one element of the rapid recovery protocols used for joint replacement surgery. Tranexamic acid (TXA) has its rightful place in this context.
Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy | 2006
Eric Olivier; Julien Beldame; Mourad Ould Slimane; Thomas Defives; Fabrice Duparc
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy | 2015
Jean Langlois; Anaïs Charles-Nelson; Sandrine Katsahian; Julien Beldame; Benjamin Lefebvre; Michel Bercovy
Orthopaedics & Traumatology-surgery & Research | 2016
S. Van Driessche; Fabien Billuart; L. Martinez; Helena Brunel; Patrice Guiffault; Julien Beldame; Jean Matsoukis
Chirurgie De La Main | 2010
Julien Beldame; Pierre Desmoineaux; Y.-P. Le Moulec; F. Lintz; Fabrice Duparc