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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Donaldson is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Donaldson.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2001

Morselized bone grafting of defects in revision total knee arthroplasty

James B. Benjamin; Gerard A. Engh; Brian S. Parsley; Thomas Donaldson; Thomas M. Coon

In a prospective, multicenter study evaluating one revision knee system, 33 of 409 patients underwent morselized bone grafting for tibial and femoral defects. Fifty-four percent of defects were bicondylar and the defect volumes averaged 36 cc 3 . There was no difference in preoperative or postoperative knee scores between patients undergoing morselized grafting and the entire group. Radiographic evaluation showed remodeling of the grafted areas consistent with viable incorporation of the graft. The incidence of radiolucent lines, at 2 years followup, was not different between the patients who received grafting and the patients who did not receive grafting. There have been no clinical failures or reoperations in the patients who received morselized bone grafting. Morselized bone grafting seems to offer a viable alternative in the reconstruction of osseous defects in patients undergoing revision total knee arthroplasty.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1996

Dynamic test to diagnose loose uncemented femoral total hip components.

Richard A. Berger; Fred Fletcher; Thomas Donaldson; Ray C. Wasielewski; Mark Peterson; Harry E. Rubash

A new computed tomographic rotation study was developed to determine the stability of uncemented femoral components after total hip arthroplasty. The computed tomographic rotation study measures femoral component version with the leg in maximum external and internal rotation. The component is considered rotationally unstable, and thus loose, if these angles differ by more than 2 °. The results of the computed tomographic rotation study were confirmed with intraoperative inspection in 50 patients: 13 patients (Group A) with definite radiographic loosening, 22 patients (Group B) with equivocal radiographic loosening, and 15 patients (Group C) with documented stability. The results of the computed tomographic rotation study agreed with intraoperative findings for all patients in Groups A and C, and 20 of 22 patients in Group B (1 false negative and 1 false positive). Statistical analysis of Group B showed that the computed tomographic rotation study had a sensitivity of 91.6% and a specificity of 90.0%. The positive predictive value was 91.6%. These results indicate that the computed tomographic rotation study can supplement equivocal radiographic findings in assessing loosening of an uncemented femoral component.


Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine | 2014

Profiling the third-body wear damage produced in CoCr surfaces by bone cement, CoCr, and Ti6Al4V debris: A 10-cycle metal-on-metal simulator test

Thomas Halim; Michelle Burgett; Thomas Donaldson; Christina Savisaar; John G. Bowsher; Ian C. Clarke

Particles of bone cement (polymethyl methacrylate), CoCr and Ti6Al4V were compared for their abrasion potential against CoCr substrates. This appears to be the first study utilizing CoCr and Ti6Al4V particulates to abrade CoCr bearings and the first study profiling the morphology of third-body abrasive wear scratches in a hip simulator. The 5 mg debris allotments (median size range 140–300 µm) were added to cups mounted both inverted and anatomically with metal-on-metal (MOM) bearings in a 10-cycle, hip simulator test. Surface abrasion was characterized by roughness indices and scratch profiles. Compared to third-body abrasion with metal debris, polymethyl methacrylate debris had minimal effect on the CoCr surfaces. In all, 10 cycles of abrasion with metal debris demonstrated that roughness indices (Ra, PV) increased approximately 20-fold from the unworn condition. The scratch profiles ranged 20–108 µm wide and 0.5–2.8 µm deep. The scratch aspect ratio (W/PV) averaged 0.03, and this very low ratio indicated that the 140 µm CoCr beads had plastically deformed to create wide but shallow scratches. There was no evidence of transfer of CoCr beads to CoCr bearings. The Ti64 particles produced similar scratch morphology with the same aspect ratio as the CoCr particulates. However, the titanium particulates also showed a unique ability to flatten and adhere to the CoCr, forming smears and islands of contaminating metal on the CoCr bearings. The morphology of scratches and metal transfer produced by these large metal particulates in the simulator appeared identical to those reported on retrieved metal-on-metal bearings.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2014

Risk of Impingement and Third-body Abrasion With 28-mm Metal-on-metal Bearings

Ian C. Clarke; Jean-Yves Lazennec; Adrien Brusson; Christina Savisaar; John G. Bowsher; Michelle Burgett; Thomas Donaldson

BackgroundConcerns have been raised about the sequelae of metal-on-metal (MoM) bearings in total hip arthroplasty (THA). However, retrieval studies, which offer the best insight into the clinically relevant mechanisms of MoM wear, have followed predictable trends to date such as indicting cobalt-chromium (CoCr) metallurgy, cup design, high conformity between the head and cup, “steep cups,” “microseparation,” and “edge wear.”Questions/purposesWe wished to evaluate a set of retrieved 28-mm MoM THA for signs of (1) cup-to-stem impingement; (2) normal wear pattern and concomitant stripe damage on femoral heads that would signify adverse wear mechanics; and (3) well-defined evidence of third-body scratches on bearings that would indicate large abrasive particles had circulated the joint space.MethodsTen 28-mm MOM retrievals were selected on the basis that femoral stems were included. Revision surgeries at 3 to 8 years were for pain, osteolysis, and cup loosening. CoCr stems and the MoM bearings were produced by one vendor and Ti6Al4V stems by a second vendor. All but two cases had been fixed with bone cement. We looked for patterns of normal wear and impingement signs on femoral necks and cup rims. We looked for adverse wear defined as stripe damage that was visually apparent on each bearing. Wear patterns were examined microscopically to determine the nature of abrasions and signs of metal transfer. Graphical models recreated femoral neck and cup designs to precisely correlate impingement sites on femoral necks to cup positions and head stripe patterns.ResultsThe evidence revealed that all CoCr cup liners had impinged on either anterior or posterior facets of femoral necks. Liner impingement at the most proximal neck notch occurred with the head well located and impingement at the distal notch occurred with the head rotated 5 mm out of the cup. The hip gained 20° motion by such a subluxation maneuver with this THA design. All heads had stripe wear, the basal and polar stripes coinciding with cup impingement sites. Analysis of stripe damage revealed 40 to 100-μm wide scratches created by large particles ploughing across bearing surfaces. The association of stripe wear with evidence of neck notching implicated impingement as the root cause, the outcome being the aggressive third-body wear.ConclusionsWe found consistent evidence of impingement, abnormal stripe damage, and evidence of third-body abrasive wear in a small sample of one type of 28-mm MoM design. Impingement models demonstrated that 28-mm heads could lever 20° out of the liners. Although other studies continue to show good success with 28-mm MoM bearings, their use has been discontinued at La Pitie Hospital.Level of EvidenceLevel IV, therapeutic study. See Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


Reconstructive Review | 2017

Simulator Study of MOM using Steep-cup Flexion - A Clinically Relevant Incorporation of Intermittent Edge-loading

Ian C. Clarke; Julia C. Shelton; John G. Bowsher; Christina Savisaar; Thomas Donaldson


Reconstructive Review | 2017

Successes and Failures of a Freedom™ Constrained Cup Used in a Major Salvage Procedure

Thomas Donaldson; Ian C. Clarke


Lubricants | 2017

Acetabular Cups in 60 mm Metal-on-Metal Bearings Subjected to Dynamic Edge-Loading with 70° Peak-Inclination in 10-Million Cycle Simulator Study

Ian C. Clarke; Thomas Halim; Evert J. Smith; Thomas Donaldson


Reconstructive Review | 2015

Biomechanical Alignment of Main Wear-Pattern on MOM Total Hip Replacement

Paul Burton; Erla Medina; Michelle Burgett-Moreno; Thomas Donaldson; Ian C. Clarke


Reconstructive Review | 2015

Third-body Wear Damage Produced in CoCr Surfaces by Hydroxyapatite and Alumina Ceramic Debris: A 10-cycle Metal-on-Metal Simulator Study

Thomas Halim; Michelle Burgett-Moreno; Thomas Donaldson; Ian C. Clarke


Reconstructive Review | 2015

Excessive Anteversion Leads to Failure at 3 Years Due to Impingement as Evidenced by Twin Notches in Ti6A4V Stem

Thomas Donaldson; Michelle Burgett-Moreno; Ian C. Clarke

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Christina Savisaar

Food and Drug Administration

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John G. Bowsher

Food and Drug Administration

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Brian S. Parsley

Baylor College of Medicine

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