Rebecca Wooten
University of South Florida
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Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2011
Eric R. Henderson; John S. Groundland; Elisa Pala; Jeremy A. Dennis; Rebecca Wooten; David Cheong; Reinhard Windhager; R. Kotz; Mario Mercuri; Philipp T. Funovics; Francis J. Hornicek; H. Thomas Temple; Pietro Ruggieri; G. Douglas Letson
BACKGROUND Massive endoprostheses provide orthopaedic oncologists with many reconstructive options after tumor resection, although failure rates are high. Because the number of these procedures is limited, failure of these devices has not been studied or classified adequately. This investigation is a multicenter review of the use of segmental endoprostheses with a focus on the modes, frequency, and timing of failure. METHODS Retrospective reviews of the operative databases of five institutions identified 2174 skeletally mature patients who received a large endoprosthesis for tumor resection. Patients who had failure of the endoprosthesis were identified, and the etiology and timing of failure were noted. Similar failures were tabulated and classified on the basis of the risk of amputation and urgency of treatment. Statistical analysis was performed to identify dependent relationships among mode of failure, anatomic location, and failure timing. A literature review was performed, and similar analyses were done for these data. RESULTS Five hundred and thirty-four failures were identified. Five modes of failure were identified and classified: soft-tissue failures (Type 1), aseptic loosening (Type 2), structural failures (Type 3), infection (Type 4), and tumor progression (Type 5). The most common mode of failure in this series was infection; in the literature, it was aseptic loosening. Statistical dependence was found between anatomic location and mode of failure and between mode of failure and time to failure. Significant differences were found in the incidence of failure mode Types 1, 2, 3, and 4 when polyaxial and uniaxial joints were compared. Significant dependence was also found between failure mode and anatomic location in the literature data. CONCLUSIONS There are five primary modes of endoprosthetic failure, and their relative incidences are significantly different and dependent on anatomic location. Mode of failure and time to failure also show a significant dependence. Because of these relationships, cumulative reporting of segmental failures should be avoided because anatomy-specific trends will be missed. Endoprosthetic design improvements should address failure modes specific to the anatomic location.
The Joy of Finite Mathematics#R##N#The Language and Art of Math | 2016
Chris P. Tsokos; Rebecca Wooten
The tenth chapter on Arithmetic and Basic Algebra covers the real number system, basic arithmetic: addition, subtraction, multiplication and division; pattern recognition: sequences and series; algebraic expressions and relationships; equations: equalities & systems of equations; and functions: linear and quadratic equation.
Journal of Applied Sciences | 2010
Rebecca Wooten; Chris P. Tsokos
Nonlinear Analysis-theory Methods & Applications | 2009
Rebecca Wooten; Chris P. Tsokos
Neural, Parallel & Scientific Computations archive | 2008
Rebecca Wooten; Chris P. Tsokos
Archive | 2006
Rebecca Wooten
The Joy of Finite Mathematics#R##N#The Language and Art of Math | 2016
Chris P. Tsokos; Rebecca Wooten
Research & Reviews: Journal of Statistics and Mathematical Sciences | 2016
Rebecca Wooten
Nonlinear Studies | 2011
Rebecca Wooten; Chris P. Tsokos
Archive | 2011
Pietro Ruggieri; Douglas Letson; R. Windhager; Rainer Kotz; Mario Mercuri; Philipp T. Funovics; Francis J. Hornicek; H. Thomas; Eric R. Henderson; John S. Groundland; Elisa Pala; Jeremy A. Dennis; Rebecca Wooten; David Cheong