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Featured researches published by Sten Odenbring.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1992

Cartilage regeneration after proximal tibial osteotomy for medial gonarthrosis : An arthroscopic, roentgenographic, and histologic study

Sten Odenbring; Niels Egund; Anders Lindstrand; L. S. Lohmander; H. Willen

High tibial osteotomy for medial gonarthrosis was performed in 28 patients (28 knees). At the time of surgery, arthroscopy was also performed and a cartilage-bone biopsy was obtained. Postoperatively, 15 patients were randomized to a cylinder plaster cast, whereas 13 patients had a hinged cast brace for early knee mobilization. At follow-up examination, two years after surgery, 16 patients accepted an arthroscopic examination with a cartilage-bone biopsy. In overcorrected knees, cartilage regeneration was found in eight of 14 patients on the medial tibial condyle and in nine of 14 on the medial femoral condyle. The main repair feature was proliferation of fibrocartilage, which covered bone and areas of fibrillated cartilage and filled vertical clefts in hyaline cartilage. The hyaline cartilage showed an increased cellularity with numerous nests of proliferating chondrocytes. No correlation was found between clinical outcome and the degree of cartilage regeneration as observed by arthroscopy, biopsy, or roentgenography. Knees with a brace postoperatively had better knee flexion two years after surgery. No difference in cartilage regeneration was recorded between knees with a plaster cast or a cast brace postoperatively.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1989

Function after tibial osteotomy for medial gonarthrosis below aged 50 years.

Sten Odenbring; Björn Tjörnstrand; Niels Egund; Bengt Hagstedt; Lennart Hovelius; Anders Lindstrand; Torben Luxhoj; Anders Svanström

Twenty-seven patients (28 knees), with a median age of 42 (27-50) years treated with a high tibial osteotomy for early medial gonarthrosis (Ahlbäcks Stage I) were examined after 11 (7-18) years. Twenty-four were men; 18 knees had had previous meniscus and ligament lesions. At follow-up, 22 knees were satisfactory and 9 patients managed high-activity sports or heavy work. In 25/28 knees, the arthrotic process had not progressed radiographically.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1990

Revision after osteotomy for gonarthrosis: A 10–19-year follow-up of 314 cases

Sten Odenbring; Nils Egund; Kaj Knutson; Anders Lindstrand; Soren Toksvig Larsen

During a 10-year period, 314 tibial osteotomies were performed for medial gonarthrosis. At follow-up after 10-19 years, 62 knees had been revised by arthroplasty (52 cases) or reosteotomy (10 cases). The revision rate was 54/170 in undercorrected knees and 8/144 in knees with normalization or overcorrection of the hip-knee-ankle angle. Our results confirm that tibial osteotomy for gonarthrosis requires proper indications and precise surgery. Perhaps, given another 10 years, our osteotomies will have outlived contemporary arthroplasties.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1993

Roentgenographic Assessment of the Hip???Knee???Ankle Axis in Medial Gonarthrosis: A Study of Reproducibility

Sten Odenbring; Ann-Marie Berggren; Lars Peil

A preoperative reliable recording of the knee alignment is necessary to calculate the correct wedge at high tibial osteotomy for medial gonarthrosis. To determine the reproducibility of the hip-knee-ankle angle (HKA), a preoperative, whole lower limb roentgenogram was obtained twice in eight patients, and each roentgenogram was judged by two radiologists. Assessment of the HKA had a variability of at most 2 degrees, which is highly significant for a reliable calculation of the wedge at tibial osteotomy.


Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery | 1991

Ten-year results of tibial osteotomy for medial gonarthrosis

Sten Odenbring; Nils Egund; Bengt Hagstedt; Jan Larsson; Anders Lindstrand; Sören Toksvig-Larsen

SummaryThe results in relation to the correction achieved 1 year after surgery of a series of tibial osteotomies in 50 patients (52 knees) are presented with a total observation time of 10 years. Mean age at the time of osteotomy was 56 years. Overcorrected knees had a significantly better result after 10 years. Progress of gonarthrosis occured in 6/34 overcorrected knees compared with 3/4 in the normo- and undercorrected group. One out of 34 overcorrected knees recurred in varus. Five knees were revised by knee arthroplasty or reosteotomy, one of which was overcorrected.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1989

Early knee mobilization after osteotomy for gonarthrosis

Sten Odenbring; Anders Lindstrand; Niels Egund

In a prospective study, 32 knees in 32 patients were randomized to either a cylinder plaster cast (17 knees) or hinged cast-brace (15 knees) after high tibial osteotomy for medial gonarthrosis. At 6 weeks, 3 months, and still 1 year after surgery, the range of motion was better in the cast-brace group. There was no difference in the other clinical results at 3 months and at 1 year after surgery, nor in changes of osseous correction or in the final knee alignment. All the patients in the cast-brace group were satisfied with early motion.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1991

Prognosis for patients with medial gonarthrosis : a 16-year follow-up study of 189 knees

Sten Odenbring; Anders Lindstrand; Niels Egund; Jan Larsson; Boel Heddson

All 189 knees (157 patients) that had had primary medial compartment arthrosis in 1972 were followed until 1988. After 14 years, tibial osteotomy had been performed in 85 knees and arthroplasty in 33 knees. No major surgery had been performed in 71 knees; of these 71 knees, 31 patients (40 knees) had died. Of the remaining 23 patients (31 knees), the majority had an unsatisfactory knee and managed only on a low activity level. In 20 of 24 knees, progress of the arthrosis was recorded roentgenographically. Because natural course of medial gonarthrosis has a poor prognosis, the majority of patients suffering from this condition will eventually have major knee surgery.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1989

A guide instrument for high tibial osteotomy

Sten Odenbring; Niels Egund; Anders Lindstrand; Björn Tjörnstrand

Fifty-two patients (52 knees) with medial gonarthrosis were subjected to high tibial osteotomy using the Tjörnstrand guide instrument. The intended wedge was calculated from a whole lower limb radiograph. The correction aimed at was an overcorrection of 4 degrees in valgus of the hip-knee-ankle angle. All but 1 case were corrected to +/- 3 degrees of the intended angle. All but two cases healed within +/- 3 degrees of the achieved surgical correction, i.e., a substantial improvement compared with our previous freehand technique where one fifth were outside this interval. We conclude that in knee surgery a guide is as important for osteotomies as for arthroplasties.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1991

PROTEOGLYCAN EPITOPE IN SYNOVIAL FLUID IN GONARTHROSIS : 28 CASES OF TIBIAL OSTEOTOMY STUDIED PROSPECTIVELY FOR 2 YEARS

Sten Odenbring; Niels Egund; Anders Lindstrand; L. Stefan Lohmander

High tibial osteotomy was performed for medial gonarthrosis in 28 patients. Preoperatively, and at 3, 12, and 24 months after surgery, clinical and radiographic examinations were made, and joint-fluid samples were aspirated. Arthroscopy was performed preoperatively and at 24 months. Immunoassay of proteoglycan epitope in joint fluid showed an increase in concentration at all times as compared with a reference population with normal knee joints. An increase in both the concentration and the total amount of proteoglycan epitope in joint fluid was noted at 3 months postoperatively with a return to preoperative values at later times. Regrowth of fibrocartilage did not correlate with proteoglycan epitope data.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1989

Lateral meniscal lesions in patients with clinically suspected medial lesions

Peter Abdon; Arnbjörn H. Arnbjörnsson; Niels Egund; Anders Lindstrand; Sten Odenbring; Holger Pettersson

Double-contrast arthrography and arthroscopy were performed in a prospective study on 46 consecutive patients clinically suspected of having a medial meniscal tear only. At arthrography, 38 torn medial menisci were found; four of them were, however, false-positive and another false-negative as compared with arthroscopic examination. Moreover, seven unsuspected lateral meniscal tears were diagnosed at both arthrography and arthroscopy. The diagnostic accuracy of the double-contrast arthrography was well above the clinical accuracy, and we conclude that arthrography is a reliable method for diagnosing both medial and lateral tears.

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