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Featured researches published by Leif Ryd.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 1995

Roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis as a predictor of mechanical loosening of knee prostheses

Leif Ryd; B. E. J. Albrektsson; Lars Carlsson; F. Dansgard; P. Herberts; Anders Lindstrand; L. Regner; S. Toksvig-Larsen

The tibial components in 143 patients with total knee replacements performed before 1988 were assessed for micromotion using roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis (RSA) over a period of 13 years. The fixation of the prostheses remained clinically sound in all cases, although revision had been required for other reasons in seven. In a second group taken from all cases with RSA available on our full database to 1990, 15 tibial components had been followed by RSA from the insertion until, 1 to 11 years after the initial arthroplasty, they were revised for mechanical loosening of the tibial component; 12 of these comprised all the loosenings in the base group, thus making a total of 155 consecutive cases, while an additional three were inserted after the base material had been compiled. The mean migration in the first group was about 1 mm at one year, but subsequent migration was slower, reaching a mean of about 1.5 mm after ten years. About one-third migrated continuously throughout follow-up, while two-thirds ceased to migrate after one to two years. In the revision group, 14 components had migrated continuously and at one year significantly more than those in the first group. One revision case lacked the crucial one-year follow-up and could not be classified. These findings suggest that mechanical loosening begins early in the postoperative period. Clinical symptoms which necessitate revision, seen at this stage in 20% of abnormally migrating tibial components, may not appear until up to ten years after the operation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Acta Orthopaedica | 2005

Guidelines for standardization of radiostereometry (RSA) of implants.

Edward R. Valstar; Richie Gill; Leif Ryd; Gunnar Flivik; Niclas Börlin; Johan Kärrholm

There is a need for standardization of radiostereometric (RSA) investigations to facilitate comparison of outcome reported from different research groups. In this document, 6 research centers have agreed upon standards for terminology, description and use of RSA arrangement including radiographic set-up and techniques. Consensus regarding minimum requirements for marker stability and scatter, choice of coordinate systems, and preferred way of describing prosthetic micromotion is of special interest. Some notes on data interpretation are also presented. Validation of RSA should be standardized by preparation of protocols for assessment of accuracy and precision. Practical issues related to loading of the joint by weight bearing or other conditions, follow-up intervals, length of follow-up, radiation dose, and the exclusion of patients due to technical errors are considered. Finally, we present a checklist of standardized output that should be included in any clinical RSA paper. This document will form the basis of a detailed standardization protocol under supervision of ISO and the European Standards Working Group on Joint Replacement Implants (CEN/TC 285/WG4). This protocol will facilitate inclusion of RSA in a standard protocol for implant testing before it is released for general use. Such a protocol—also including other recognized clinical outcome parameters—will reduce the risk of implanting potentially inferior prostheses on a large scale.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2001

Appropriate questionnaires for knee arthroplasty. Results of a survey of 3600 patients from The Swedish Knee Arthroplasty Registry.

Michael Dunbar; Otto Robertsson; Leif Ryd; Lars Lidgren

The Swedish Knee Arthroplasty Registry (SKAR) has recorded knee arthroplasties prospectively in Sweden since 1975. The only outcome measure available to date has been revision status. While questionnaires on health outcome may function as more comprehensive endpoints, it is unclear which are the most appropriate. We tested various outcome questionnaires in order to determine which is the best for patients who have had knee arthroplasty as applied in a cross-sectional, discriminative, postal survey. Four general health questionnaires (NHP, SF-12, SF-36 and SIP) and three disease/site-specific questionnaires (Lequesne, Oxford-12, and WOMAC) were tested on 3600 patients randomly selected from the SKAR. Differences were found between questionnaires in response rate, time required for completion, the need for assistance, the efficiency of completion, the validity of the content and the reliability. The mean overall ranks for each questionnaire were generated. The SF-12 ranked the best for the general health, and the Oxford-12 for the disease/site-specific questionnaires. These two questionnaires could therefore be recommended as the most appropriate for use with a large knee arthroplasty database in a cross-sectional population.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1997

Wear in retrieved condylar knee arthroplasties

Gordon W. Blunn; Atul B. Joshi; R.J. Minns; Lars Lidgren; P. Lilley; Leif Ryd; E. Engelbrecht; Peter S. Walker

The plastic components of 280 retrieved unicondylar and total knee arthroplasties were studied. Wear was visually scored using a relative ranked data method. Although wear on the components was highly variable, several conclusions could be drawn regarding the nature and causes. Wear was associated more with the medial than the lateral condyle. Delamination was the most severe type of wear and occurred in short (< 5 year)-, medium (5-10 years)-, and long (> 10 years)-term retrievals. In the short term, delamination wear was associated with hot pressing of the tibial plastic or with fracture of the tibial baseplate. For a single design, a significant difference in the amount of delamination on hot-pressed and non-hot-pressed tibial components was observed. In medium- and long-term retrieved specimens of the designs with moderately high conformity, delamination wear was associated with restriction of rotational movement of the femoral component or with abrupt changes in the radius of the tibial component. In flatter, less conforming designs, wear was associated with laxity, such that the polyethylene delaminated toward the edges of the tibial component. Wear attributed to cement abrasion or entrapment occurred on the more conforming designs. Delamination was associated with the presence of fusion defects in the polyethylene but could also occur in the absence of such defects. That delamination was the principal were type and that this is caused by a fatigue mechanism mean that the incidence of failure could accelerate considerably over follow-up periods beyond 10 years. Designs of moderate conformity without abrupt changes in radii may prolong the duration of plastic tibial components before serious delamination occurs.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 1992

The natural history of recurrent dislocation of the patella. Long-term results of conservative and operative treatment

Arnbjörn H. Arnbjörnsson; Niels Egund; Olof Rydling; Ronald Stockerup; Leif Ryd

From 1970 to 1978, 29 patients had a unilateral operation for bilateral recurrent dislocation of the patella. We examined 21 of them at a mean of 14 years postoperatively. Eighteen of these patients had evidence of generalised joint laxity. Six of the operated knees and four of the unoperated knees still had recurrent dislocations. The operated knees were clinically worse, with a significantly higher incidence of osteoarthritis. We concluded that the operations used to treat recurrent dislocation of the patella may have had short-term benefits, but did not cure the patients in the long term.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1992

Roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis of prosthetic fixation in the hip and knee joint

Leif Ryd

Using highly accurate roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis (RSA), migration and cyclic displacement of prosthetic components can be assessed. In arthroplasty of the knee, all tibial components migrate during the first year but stabilize thereafter in a majority of cases. They also display inducible displacement in response to external forces. The effects of alterations in design or different modes of fixation may be readily detected using this noninvasive method. Three patients, who later developed mechanical loosening, migrated continuously and were identified by RSA already during the first year, indicating a clinical significance of continuous migration in terms of future mechanical loosening. Also in the hip, abnormally migrating femoral and acetabular components may be identified at an early stage. Using conventional clinical assessment, ten years and a large number of patients are often needed, while with RSA, new prosthetic devices may be assessed at a much earlier stage.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 2000

Clodronate prevents prosthetic migration: A randomized radiostereometric study of 50 total knee patients

Maria Hilding; Leif Ryd; Sören Toksvig-Larsen; Per Aspenberg

In a double-blind study, we randomized 50 patients to receive peroral clodronate medication or placebo from 3 weeks before until 6 months after a total knee replacement with a cemented NexGen implant. Migration of the tibial components was measured by radiostereometry at 1 year. Clodronate reduced prosthetic migration, as measured by maximum total point motion, from 0.40 mm to 0.29 mm (p = 0.01). This confirms that the early postoperative migration is related to bone resorption and thus the biology of the bone bed. Since early migration is related to late loosening, 6 months of clodronate medication might reduce the risk of loosening.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1991

Cement interface temperature in hip arthroplasty

Sören Toksvig-Larsen; Herbert Franzén; Leif Ryd

The temperature was measured using thermocouples in the bone-cement interface during cement curing in 30 total hip replacement operations. A modern technique was used, including lavage and precooled vacuum-mixed cement. The mean maximum temperature in the acetabulum was 43 (38-52) degrees C and in the femur 40 (29-56) degrees C. The use of a precooled femoral prosthesis did not affect the peak temperature.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1992

Proteoglycan fragments in joint fluid Influence of arthrosis and inflammation

Leif Dahlberg; Leif Ryd; Dick Heinegård; L. Stefan Lohmander

We determined the concentration of proteoglycan fragments in knee joint fluid collected from knee-ligament injured patients more than 6 months after the trauma and from patients with acute pyrophosphate arthritis and arthrosis or with arthrosis only. Injured patients with normal or only mildly altered cartilage at arthroscopy and with normal radiographs, had twice the average concentration of healthy volunteers. Other injured patients with advanced, radiographic signs of arthrosis, had synovial fluid proteoglycan fragment concentrations within the range of healthy volunteers. Patients with pyrophosphate arthritis had the highest concentrations, substantially increased compared with both arthrosis patients, with or without knee injury and healthy volunteers. Likewise, there was an inverse relation between the degree of arthrosis and the concentration of proteoglycan fragments in the joint fluid in patients with pyrophosphate arthritis and arthrosis or with arthrosis only. We conclude that synovial fluid levels of proteoglycan fragments are influenced by the mass of cartilage matrix remaining in the joint, the inflammatory activity in the joint, and the metabolic activity of the cartilage cells.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2000

Digital automated RSA compared to manually operated RSA

Edward R. Valstar; Henri A. Vrooman; Sören Toksvig-Larsen; Leif Ryd; Rob G. H. H. Nelissen

The accuracy of digital Roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis (RSA) was compared to the accuracy of a manually operated RSA system. For this purpose, we used radiographs of a phantom and radiographs of patients. The radiographs of the patients consisted of double examinations of 12 patients that had a tibial osteotomy and of double examinations of 12 patients that received a total hip prosthesis. First, the radiographs were measured manually with an accurate measurement table. Subsequently, the images were digitized by a film scanner at 150 DPI and 300 DPI resolutions and analyzed with the RSA-CMS software. In the phantom experiment, the manually operated system produced significantly better results than the digital system, although the maximum difference between the median values of the manually operated system and the digital system was as low as 0.013mm for translations and 0.033 degrees for rotations. In the radiographs of the patients, the manually operated system and the digital system produced equally accurate results: no significant differences in translations and rotations were found. We conclude that digital RSA is an accurate, fast, and user friendly alternative for manually operated RSA. Currently, digital RSA systems are being used in a growing number of clinical RSA-studies.

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Lars Carlsson

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

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