228 results on '"Odgaard, Anders"'
Search Results
2. Hair removal with a clipper and microbial colonisation prior to knee arthroplasty: a randomised controlled trial
- Author
-
Hasløv, Trine Herskind, Fuglsbjerg, Cecilie, Nielsen, Anne Kirstine, Hesselvig, Anne Brun, Fritz, Blaine Gabriel, Bay, Lene, Møller, Tom, Bjarnsholt, Thomas, and Odgaard, Anders
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Are Outcomes From an Exercise Therapy and Patient Education Program for Osteoarthritis Associated With Hip and Knee Replacement Within Two Years? A Register‐Based Study of 9,339 Patients With Osteoarthritis
- Author
-
Ackerman, Ilana N., Johansson, Melker S., Grønne, Dorte T., Clausen, Stine, Ernst, Martin Thomsen, Overgaard, Søren, Odgaard, Anders, Roos, Ewa M., and Skou, Søren T.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Bacterial micro-aggregates as inoculum in animal models of implant-associated infections
- Author
-
Top Hartmann, Katrine, Lund Nielsen, Regitze, Mikkelsen, Freja Cecilie, Aalbæk, Bent, Lichtenberg, Mads, Holm Jakobsen, Tim, Bjarnsholt, Thomas, Kvich, Lasse, Ingmer, Hanne, Odgaard, Anders, Elvang Jensen, Henrik, and Kruse Jensen, Louise
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Adductor Canal Block With Continuous Infusion Versus Intermittent Boluses and Morphine Consumption
- Author
-
Jaeger, Pia, Baggesgaard, Jonas, Sørensen, Johan K, Ilfeld, Brian M, Gottschau, Bo, Graungaard, Ben, Dahl, Jørgen B, Odgaard, Anders, and Grevstad, Ulrik
- Subjects
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Anesthesia ,Spinal ,Arthroplasty ,Replacement ,Knee ,Autonomic Nerve Block ,Female ,Humans ,Infusions ,Intravenous ,Injections ,Intravenous ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Morphine ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Prospective Studies ,Quadriceps Muscle ,Single-Blind Method ,Neurosciences ,Anesthesiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Based on the assumption that relatively large volumes of local anesthetic optimize an adductor canal block (ACB), we theorized that an ACB administered as repeated boluses would improve analgesia without compromising mobility, compared with a continuous infusion. METHODS:We performed a randomized, blinded, controlled study, including patients scheduled for total knee arthroplasty with spinal anesthesia. Patients received 0.2% ropivacaine via a catheter in the adductor canal administered as either repeated intermittent boluses (21 mL/3 h) or continuous infusion (7 mL/h). The primary outcome was total (postoperative day [POD], 0-2) opioid consumption (mg), administered as patient-controlled analgesia. Pain, ambulation, and quadriceps muscle strength were secondary outcomes. RESULTS:We randomized 110 patients, of whom 107 were analyzed. Total opioid consumption (POD, 0-2) was a median (range) of 23 mg (0-139) in the bolus group and 26 mg (3-120) in the infusion group (estimated median difference, 4 mg; 95% confidence interval [CI], -13 to 5; P = .29). Linear mixed-model analyses revealed no difference in pain during knee flexion (mean difference, 2.6 mm; 95% CI, -2.9 to 8.0) or at rest (mean difference, 1.7 mm; 95% CI, -1.5 to 4.9). Patients in the bolus group had improved quadriceps sparing on POD 2 (median difference, 7.4%; 95% CI, 0.5%-15.5%). However, this difference was not present on POD 1 or reflected in the ambulation tests (P > .05). CONCLUSIONS:Changing the mode of administration for an ACB from continuous infusion to repeated intermittent boluses did not decrease opioid consumption, pain, nor mobility.
- Published
- 2018
6. Microvascular free flap coverage of complex soft tissue defects after revision total knee arthroplasty: a cross-sectional observation study
- Author
-
Hamrouni, Nizar, primary, Højvig, Jens H, additional, Knudsen, Ulrik K, additional, Skovgaard, Kurt K, additional, Jensen, Lisa T, additional, Bonde, Christian T, additional, and Odgaard, Anders, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. MRi of the knee compared to specialized radiography for measurements of articular cartilage height in knees with osteoarthritis
- Author
-
Mortensen, Jacob Fyhring, Mongelard, Kristian Breds Geoffroy, Radev, Dimitar Ivanov, Kappel, Andreas, Rasmussen, Lasse Enkebølle, Østgaard, Svend Erik, and Odgaard, Anders
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Microvascular free flap coverage of complex soft tissue defects after revision total knee arthroplasty:a cross-sectional observation study
- Author
-
Hamrouni, Nizar, Højvig, Jens H., Knudsen, Ulrik K., Skovgaard, Kurt K., Jensen, Lisa T., Bonde, Christian T., Odgaard, Anders, Hamrouni, Nizar, Højvig, Jens H., Knudsen, Ulrik K., Skovgaard, Kurt K., Jensen, Lisa T., Bonde, Christian T., and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Soft tissue defects after total knee arthroplasties (TKA) represent a major orthopedic challenge with amputation as a feared outcome. Microvascular free flap coverage (FFC) can increase limb salvage rates, but complications related to the procedure are yet to be explored further. We aimed to review a single-center experience with FFC for soft tissue defects related to revision total knee arthroplasty.METHODS: Through a retrospective chart review from 2006 to 2021, we identified all patients who had FFC of a knee with an existing TKA. Typically, patients underwent 2-stage revision arthroplasty. To identify areas of intervention, we divided the entire regimen into 2 phases divided by the free flap surgery (pre- and post-free flap).RESULTS: We identified 18 patients with a median age at free flap surgery of 69 years (range 39-85), who were followed for a median of 5.1 years (range 2 months to 10.6 years). The median duration from primary TKA to their final operation was 17.5 months (range 19 days to 7 years). Patients underwent a mean of 7.6 surgical procedures on their knee with 3.6 orthopedic revisions prior to the FFC and 0.6 after. Soft tissue coverage was achieved in all patients and no patients underwent amputation. One-third of patients experienced early complications at recipient site after free flap surgery. There were no donor site complications.CONCLUSION: Microvascular FFC of complex soft tissue defects after revision total knee arthroplasty proved achievable in all patients with successful limb salvage in all patients.
- Published
- 2024
9. Preoperative proximal tibial bone density, bone microarchitecture, and bone turnover are not associated with postoperative tibial component migration in cemented and cementless medial unicompartmental knee replacements:secondary analyses from a randomized controlled trial
- Author
-
Bendtsen, Mathias Alrø Fichtner, Odgaard, Anders, Madsen, Frank, Mosegaard, Sebastian Breddam, Thomsen, Jesper Skovhus, Hauge, Ellen Margrethe, Søballe, Kjeld, Stilling, Maiken, Bendtsen, Mathias Alrø Fichtner, Odgaard, Anders, Madsen, Frank, Mosegaard, Sebastian Breddam, Thomsen, Jesper Skovhus, Hauge, Ellen Margrethe, Søballe, Kjeld, and Stilling, Maiken
- Abstract
Background and purpose: Cementless arthroplasty fixation relies on early bone ingrowth and may be poor in patients with low proximal tibial bone density or abnormal bone turnover. We aimed first to describe the baseline bone properties in patients undergoing medial unicompartmental knee replacement (UKR), and second to investigate its association with cemented and cementless tibial component migration until 2 years.Methods: A subset investigation of 2 patient groups from a 3-armed randomized controlled trial was conducted. There were 26 cemented and 25 cementless medial UKRs with twin-pegged femoral components. Volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD) and microstructure of the excised medial tibial plateau were ascertained with µCT. Bone turnover was estimated using dynamic histomorphometry (eroded surface/bone surface = ES/BS, osteoid surface/bone surface = OS/BS, mineralizing surface/bone surface = MS/BS). Tibial component migration in 4 feature points was followed for 2 years with radiostereometry.Results: At the 2-year follow-up, the cementless tibial components migrated 0.38 mm (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.14–0.62) total translation more than the cemented components at the posterior feature point. The greatest migration in the cementless group was subsidence at the posterior feature point of 0.66 mm (CI 0.48–0.84) until 6 weeks, and from 3 months the components were stable. Cemented tibial components subsided very little. Between 1- and 2-year follow-ups, no cementless but 4 cemented tibial components revealed continuous migration. OS/BS was half of the ES/BS. No µCT or histomorphometric parameters showed any clinically relevant correlation with tibial component migration at the posterior feature point for either cemented or cementless UKR at 6 weeks’ or 2 years’ follow-up after adjustment for age, BMI, and sex.Conclusion: Preoperative vBMD, bone turnover, and microstructure were not associated with postoperative tibial component migration of cemented and ceme, Background and purpose — Cementless arthroplasty fixation relies on early bone ingrowth and may be poor in patients with low proximal tibial bone density or abnormal bone turnover. We aimed first to describe the baseline bone properties in patients undergoing medial unicompartmen-tal knee replacement (UKR), and second to investigate its association with cemented and cementless tibial component migration until 2 years. Methods — A subset investigation of 2 patient groups from a 3-armed randomized controlled trial was conducted. There were 26 cemented and 25 cementless medial UKRs with twin-pegged femoral components. Volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD) and microstructure of the excised medial tibial plateau were ascertained with µCT. Bone turnover was estimated using dynamic histomorphometry (eroded surface/bone surface = ES/BS, osteoid surface/bone surface = OS/BS, mineralizing surface/bone surface = MS/ BS). Tibial component migration in 4 feature points was followed for 2 years with radiostereometry. Results — At the 2-year follow-up, the cementless tibial components migrated 0.38 mm (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.14–0.62) total translation more than the cemented components at the posterior feature point. The greatest migration in the cementless group was subsidence at the posterior feature point of 0.66 mm (CI 0.48–0.84) until 6 weeks, and from 3 months the components were stable. Cemented tibial components subsided very little. Between 1-and 2-year follow-ups, no cementless but 4 cemented tibial components revealed continuous migration. OS/BS was half of the ES/BS. No µCT or histomorpho-metric parameters showed any clinically relevant correlation with tibial component migration at the posterior feature point for either cemented or cementless UKR at 6 weeks’ or 2 years’ follow-up after adjustment for age, BMI, and sex. Conclusion — Preoperative vBMD, bone turnover, and microstructure were not associated with postoperative tibial component migration of cemen
- Published
- 2024
10. Blodtomhed ved knæalloplastik og dens betydning for postoperativ infektion
- Author
-
Odgaard, Anders, Gautier, Philippa Francisca, Odgaard, Anders, and Gautier, Philippa Francisca
- Abstract
Introduction: Surgical technique using a tourniquet during insertions of total knee alloplastics, to create a bloodless surgical field commonly used. It is used to optimize cementation, reduce perioperative blodloss and increase exposure of the surgical field. Some complications have been observed, such as nerve damage and hemodynamic impact, but other have yet to be fully researched. Among these is the influence of the use of a tourniquet on surgical site infection. This paper will explore the current evidence of the use of a tourniquet during insertions of total knee alloplastics, and the influence on infection rates. Methods: A systematic review was conducted with a literature search done on Pubmed, Embase and Cochrane Library, from inception till February 2024. Studies included both RCT’s and meta- analysis. Included studies was analyzed in accordance with the Danish health authority’s method handbook for clinical guidelines. Results: All, but one study, had a low to moderate quality rating, thus having low evidence rating. One RCT study was of sufficient good quality and had a low risk of bias rating. All of the studies showed that the use of a tourniquet had either a negative impact on the rate of surgical site infection or no significant impact. Conclusion: Even though most of the studies pointed towards an increase in surgical site infections in patients operated using a tourniquet, compared to patients operated without, the studies were of such low quality, that no conclusions on the effects of using a tourniquet can be made.
- Published
- 2024
11. No Clinically Important Differences Between Patellofemoral Arthroplasty and TKA in Range of Motion or Patient-reported Outcomes After 6 Years: A Randomized Trial
- Author
-
Odgaard, Anders, Kappel, Andreas, Madsen, Frank, Kristensen, Per Wagner, Stephensen, Snorre, and Attarzadeh, Amir Pasha
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Prevalence and Regional Differences in Migrated Hips in Danish Children with Cerebral Palsy from 2008 to 2021—A Comparison of Ambulant vs. Non-Ambulant Children.
- Author
-
Bakhtiyar, Muhammed, Iljazi, Afrim, Petersen, Michael Mørk, Odgaard, Anders, and Wong, Christian
- Subjects
HIP joint dislocation ,RISK assessment ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis ,CEREBRAL palsy ,POPULATION geography ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE prevalence ,FUNCTIONAL status ,LONGITUDINAL method ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,LOG-rank test ,STATISTICS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,DISEASE risk factors ,DISEASE complications ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to assess the incidence of hip displacement and dislocation (denominated as hip migration) among ambulant and non-ambulant Danish children with cerebral palsy (CP) by estimating their cumulative incidence of migrated hips. A secondary objective is to compare the prevalence across different Danish regions. Methods: Data were obtained from the Danish Cerebral Palsy Follow-Up Program (CPOP) from the years 2008 to 2021. This population-based cohort study included 1388 children with CP (58% male; 42% female) as subjects; aged 0–15 years; with an average age of 5.4 years at their last follow-up. The children were categorized according to their Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) level into ambulators (GMFCS I–III) and non-ambulators (GMFCS IV–V). The Kaplan–Meier estimator was employed to calculate the cumulative incidence of migrated hips from birth until the date of their last radiographic follow-up. Differences between ambulatory and non-ambulatory children and regional differences were assessed with the Log-rank test. Results: Median radiological follow-up for ambulators was 51 months and 94 months for non-ambulators. The cumulative incidence of hip dislocation was 0.3% (95% CI: 0–0.8%) and 22.0% (95% CI: 9.2–34.8%) for ambulators and non-ambulators, respectively (p < 0.0001), whereas the incidence of hip displacement was 21.1% (95% CI: 16.3–25.9%) and 76.7% (95% CI: 68.6–84.7%) for ambulators and non-ambulators, respectively (p < 0.0001). There were no significant regional differences in the incidence of hip dislocation among ambulators, but there were significant differences for non-ambulators. Moreover, significant regional differences were detected in hip displacement for both ambulators and non-ambulators. Conclusions: The prevalence of hip migration in Danish children with CP is significantly higher among non-ambulators, who are at an increased risk of hip migration compared to their ambulant counterparts. However, the low frequency of radiographic follow-up for ambulators might cause the incidence of hip migration to be underestimated. This study highlights the necessity of continued targeted surveillance and interventions in Danish non-ambulators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Preoperative proximal tibial bone density, bone microarchitecture, and bone turnover are not associated with postoperative tibial component migration in cemented and cementless medial unicompartmental knee replacements: secondary analyses from a randomized controlled trial
- Author
-
Bendtsen, Mathias Alrø Fichtner, primary, Odgaard, Anders, additional, Madsen, Frank, additional, Mosegaard, Sebastian Breddam, additional, Thomsen, Jesper Skovhus, additional, Hauge, Ellen Margrethe, additional, Søballe, Kjeld, additional, and Stilling, Maiken, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Bone remodeling and implant migration of uncemented femoral and cemented asymmetrical tibial components in total knee arthroplasty - DXA and RSA evaluation with 2-year follow up
- Author
-
Yilmaz, Müjgan, Holm, Christina Enciso, Lind, Thomas, Flivik, Gunnar, Odgaard, Anders, and Petersen, Michael Mørk
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Are Outcomes From an Exercise Therapy and Patient Education Program for Osteoarthritis Associated With Hip and Knee Replacement Within Two Years? A Register‐BasedStudy of 9,339 Patients With Osteoarthritis
- Author
-
Ackerman, Ilana N., Johansson, Melker S., Grønne, Dorte T., Clausen, Stine, Ernst, Martin Thomsen, Overgaard, Søren, Odgaard, Anders, Roos, Ewa M., and Skou, Søren T.
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine whether short‐term outcomes from exercise therapy and patient education for osteoarthritis (OA) are associated with hip or knee replacement within two years. Individual‐level data from the Good Life with osteoArthritis in Denmark (GLA:D) Registry were linked to the Danish National Patient Registry and other national registries. Cox proportional hazards models were used to investigate associations between program outcomes (baseline to three‐month changes) and time to primary hip or knee replacement. Patients who did not receive joint replacement were censored at two years, time of death, or emigration. A total of 2,304 and 7,035 patients with clinically diagnosed hip and knee OA, respectively, were included. Of these, 30% with hip OA and 10% with knee OA had joint replacement within two years. Postprogram improvements in hip‐related quality of life and arthritis self‐efficacy (pain subscale) were associated with a reduced hazard of hip replacement (adjusted hazard ratios [HRs] for a 10‐unit improvement: 0.74 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.69–0.80] and 0.90 [95% CI 0.85–0.96], respectively). Improvements in knee pain, knee‐related quality of life, and arthritis self‐efficacy (pain subscale) were associated with a lower hazard of knee replacement (adjusted HRs for 10‐unit improvement: 0.81 [95% CI 0.76–0.86] to 0.90 [95% CI 0.86–0.95], 0.70 [95% CI 0.63–0.78] to 0.79 [95% CI 0.72–0.86], and 0.89 [95% CI 0.83–0.94], respectively). The magnitude of improvement in key measures after exercise therapy and education was significantly associated with the likelihood of surgery. Progression to hip replacement was three times higher than progression to knee replacement. This information can guide patient–clinician conversations around anticipated program outcomes.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Does an Antimicrobial Incision Drape Prevent Intraoperative Contamination? A Randomized Controlled Trial of 1187 Patients
- Author
-
Hesselvig, Anne Brun, Arpi, Magnus, Madsen, Frank, Bjarnsholt, Thomas, and Odgaard, Anders
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Effect of single versus multiple prophylactic antibiotic doses on prosthetic joint infections following primary total hip arthroplasty in patients with osteoarthritis at public and private hospitals in Denmark: protocol for a nationwide cross-over, cluster randomised, non-inferiority trial [The Pro-Hip-Quality Trial]
- Author
-
Abedi, Armita Armina, primary, Varnum, Claus, additional, Pedersen, Alma Becic, additional, Gromov, Kirill, additional, Hallas, Jesper, additional, Iversen, Pernille, additional, Jakobsen, Thomas, additional, Jimenez-Solem, Espen, additional, Kidholm, Kristian, additional, Kjerulf, Anne, additional, Lange, Jeppe, additional, Odgaard, Anders, additional, Rosenvinge, Flemming S, additional, Solgaard, Søren, additional, Sperling, Kim, additional, Stegger, Marc, additional, Christensen, Robin, additional, and Overgaard, Søren, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Erratum to: Patellofemoral Arthroplasty Results in Better Time-weighted Patient-reported Outcomes After 6 Years than TKA: A Randomized Controlled Trial
- Author
-
Odgaard, Anders, primary, Kappel, Andreas, additional, Madsen, Frank, additional, Kristensen, Per Wagner, additional, Stephensen, Snorre, additional, and Attarzadeh, Amir Pasha, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Comparison of cementless twin-peg, cemented twin-peg and cemented single-peg femoral component migration after medial unicompartmental knee replacement:a 5-year randomized RSA study
- Author
-
Mosegaard, Sebastian Breddam, Odgaard, Anders, Madsen, Frank, Rømer, Lone, Kristensen, Per Wagner, Vind, Tobias Dahl, Søballe, Kjeld, Stilling, Maiken, Mosegaard, Sebastian Breddam, Odgaard, Anders, Madsen, Frank, Rømer, Lone, Kristensen, Per Wagner, Vind, Tobias Dahl, Søballe, Kjeld, and Stilling, Maiken
- Abstract
Background The component design and fixation method of joint arthroplasty may affect component migration and survival. The aim of this study was to compare fixation of cementless twin-peg (CLTP), cemented twin-peg (CTP) and cemented single-peg (CSP) femoral components of medial unicompartmental knee replacement (UKR). Methods Eighty patients (mean age = 63 years, 48 males) with medial knee osteoarthritis were randomized in three ways to CLTP (n = 25), CTP (n = 26) or CSP (n = 29) femoral UKR components. The patients were followed 5 years postoperatively with RSA, bone mineral density (BMD), PROMs and radiological evaluation of radiolucent lines (RLL), femoral component flexion angle and complications. Results At the 5-year follow-up, femoral component total translation was comparable between the three groups (p = 0.60). Femoral component internal rotation was 0.50° (95% CI 0.3; 0.69) for the CLTP group, 0.58° (95% CI 0.38; 0.77) for the CTP group and 0.25° (95% CI 0.07; 0.43) for the CSP group (p = 0.01). BMD decreased peri-prosthetically (range − 11.5%; − 14.0%) until 6-month follow-up and increased toward the 5-year follow-up (range − 3.6%; − 5.8%). BMD change did not correlate with component migration. Lower flexion angle was correlated with higher 5-year subsidence, total translation, varus rotation and maximum total point motion (p = 0.01). Two patients (1 CLTP, 1 CTP) had RLL in the posterior zone. There were two revisions. Conclusion At 5-year follow-up, fixation of UKA femoral components with twin-peg was not superior to the single-peg design. Cementless and cemented twin-peg femoral components had similar fixation. A lower flexion angle was correlated with higher component migration., Background: The component design and fixation method of joint arthroplasty may affect component migration and survival. The aim of this study was to compare fixation of cementless twin-peg (CLTP), cemented twin-peg (CTP) and cemented single-peg (CSP) femoral components of medial unicompartmental knee replacement (UKR). Methods: Eighty patients (mean age = 63 years, 48 males) with medial knee osteoarthritis were randomized in three ways to CLTP (n = 25), CTP (n = 26) or CSP (n = 29) femoral UKR components. The patients were followed 5 years postoperatively with RSA, bone mineral density (BMD), PROMs and radiological evaluation of radiolucent lines (RLL), femoral component flexion angle and complications. Results: At the 5-year follow-up, femoral component total translation was comparable between the three groups (p = 0.60). Femoral component internal rotation was 0.50° (95% CI 0.3; 0.69) for the CLTP group, 0.58° (95% CI 0.38; 0.77) for the CTP group and 0.25° (95% CI 0.07; 0.43) for the CSP group (p = 0.01). BMD decreased peri-prosthetically (range − 11.5%; − 14.0%) until 6-month follow-up and increased toward the 5-year follow-up (range − 3.6%; − 5.8%). BMD change did not correlate with component migration. Lower flexion angle was correlated with higher 5-year subsidence, total translation, varus rotation and maximum total point motion (p = 0.01). Two patients (1 CLTP, 1 CTP) had RLL in the posterior zone. There were two revisions. Conclusion: At 5-year follow-up, fixation of UKA femoral components with twin-peg was not superior to the single-peg design. Cementless and cemented twin-peg femoral components had similar fixation. A lower flexion angle was correlated with higher component migration.
- Published
- 2023
20. Rethinking the Inoculum Used in Animal Models of Implant-Associated Osteomyelitis – The Formation and Application of Bacterial Aggregates
- Author
-
Hartmann, Katrine Top, Nielsen, Regitze Lund, Mikkelsen, Freja Cecilie, Ingmer, Hanne, Kvich, Lasse Andersson, Aalbæk, Bent, Odgaard, Anders, Jensen, Henrik Elvang, Lichtenberg, Mads, Bjarnsholt, Thomas, Jensen, Louise Kruse, Hartmann, Katrine Top, Nielsen, Regitze Lund, Mikkelsen, Freja Cecilie, Ingmer, Hanne, Kvich, Lasse Andersson, Aalbæk, Bent, Odgaard, Anders, Jensen, Henrik Elvang, Lichtenberg, Mads, Bjarnsholt, Thomas, and Jensen, Louise Kruse
- Abstract
Aim: To make an inoculum for induction of Implant-Associated Osteomyelitis (IAO) in pigs based on bacterial aggregates resembling those found on the human skin, i.e. aggregates of 5-15 µm with low metabolic activity. The aggregates were evaluated and compared to a standard planktonic bacterial inoculum. Method: The porcine Staphylococcus aureus strain S54F9 was cultured in Tryptone Soya Broth for seven days. Subsequently, the culture was filtered through cell strainers with pore sizes of 15 µm and 5 µm, respectively. The fraction of 5-15 µm aggregates in the top of the 5 µm filter was collected as the aggregate-inoculum. The separation of aggregates into different size fractions was evaluated by light microscopy. The metabolism of the aggregate-inoculum and a standard overnight planktonic inoculum was evaluated with isothermal microcalorimetry.In total, six female minipigs were allocated into three groups (n=2), receiving different inoculums. Group A: overnight planktonic inoculum; 104 CFU S. aureus (S54F9), Group B: seven days old 5-15 µm aggregate-inoculum; 104 CFU S. aureus (S54F9), Group C: saline. All inoculums were placed in a pre-drilled implant cavity in the right tibia of the pig and a sterile stainless-steel implant was inserted. The pigs were euthanized seven days after surgery. Postmortem macroscopic pathology, microbiology, computed tomography and histopathology were performed. Results: The separation of aggregates into different size fractions was done successfully by the filtering method. Isothermal microcalorimetry showed, a delayed Time-to-peak metabolic activity of the aggregate-inoculum compared to the planktonic inoculum. S. aureus was isolated from subcutis, bone and implants from all animals in groups A and B. Both group A animals showed osteomyelitis at gross inspection with suppuration and sequestration, while groups B and C animals had no macroscopic lesions. From CT scans, both group A animals also showed positive signs of osteomy
- Published
- 2023
21. Patients in high- and low-revision hospitals have similar outcomes after primary knee arthroplasty:1-year postoperative results from the Danish prospective multicenter cohort study, SPARK
- Author
-
Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Krogsgaard, Michael Rindom, Laursen, Mogens, Madsen, Frank, Winther-Jensen, Matilde, Odgaard, Anders, Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Krogsgaard, Michael Rindom, Laursen, Mogens, Madsen, Frank, Winther-Jensen, Matilde, and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
Purpose: It is well-known that revision rates after primary knee arthroplasty vary widely. However, it is uncertain whether hospital revision rates are reliable indicators of general surgical quality as defined by patients. The SPARK study compared primary knee arthroplasty surgery at three high-volume hospitals whose revision rates differed for unknown reasons. Methods: This prospective observational study included primary knee arthroplasty patients (total, medial/lateral unicompartmental and patellofemoral) in two low-revision hospitals (Aarhus University Hospital and Aalborg University Hospital Farsø) and one high-revision hospital (Copenhagen University Hospital Herlev-Gentofte). Patients were followed from preoperatively (2016–17) to 1-year postoperatively with patient-reported outcome measures including Oxford Knee Score (OKS), EQ-5D-5L and Copenhagen Knee ROM (range of motion) Scale. The surgical outcomes were compared across hospitals for patients with comparable grades of radiographic knee osteoarthritis and preoperative OKS. Statistical comparisons (parametric and non-parametric) included all three hospitals. Results: 97% of the 1452 patients who provided baseline data (89% of those included and 56% of those operated) responded postoperatively (90% at 1 year). Hospitals’ utilization of unicompartmental knee arthroplasties differed (Aarhus 49%, Aalborg 14%, and Copenhagen 22%, p < 0.001). 28 patients had revision surgery during the first year (hospital independent, p = 0.1) and were subsequently excluded. 1-year OKS (39 ± 7) was independent of hospital (p = 0.1), even when adjusted for age, sex, Body Mass Index, baseline OKS and osteoarthritis grading. 15% of patients improved less than Minimal Important Change (8 OKS) (Aarhus 19%, Aalborg 13% and Copenhagen 14%, p = 0.051 unadjusted). Patients with comparable preoperative OKS or osteoarthritis grading had similar 1-year results across hospitals (OKS and willingness to repeat surgery, p ≥
- Published
- 2023
22. Hospital variation in revision rates after primary knee arthroplasty was not explained by patient selection:baseline data from 1452 patients in the Danish prospective multicenter cohort study, SPARK
- Author
-
Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Krogsgaard, Michael Rindom, Laursen, Mogens, Madsen, Frank, Mongelard, Kristian Breds Geoffroy, Rømer, Lone, Winther-Jensen, Matilde, Odgaard, Anders, Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Krogsgaard, Michael Rindom, Laursen, Mogens, Madsen, Frank, Mongelard, Kristian Breds Geoffroy, Rømer, Lone, Winther-Jensen, Matilde, and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
Purpose: Revision rates following primary knee arthroplasty vary by country, region and hospital. The SPARK study was initiated to compare primary surgery across three Danish regions with consistently different revision rates. The present study investigated whether the variations were associated with differences in the primary patient selection. Methods: A prospective observational cohort study included patients scheduled Sep 2016 Dec 2017 for primary knee arthroplasty (total, medial/lateral unicompartmental or patellofemoral) at three high-volume hospitals, representing regions with 2-year cumulative revision rates of 1, 2 and 5%, respectively. Hospitals were compared with respects to patient demographics, preoperative patient-reported outcome measures, motivations for surgery, implant selection, radiological osteoarthritis and the regional incidence of primary surgery. Statistical tests (parametric and non-parametric) comprised all three hospitals. Results: Baseline data was provided by 1452 patients (89% of included patients, 56% of available patients). Patients in Copenhagen (Herlev-Gentofte Hospital, high-revision) were older (68.6 ± 9 years) than those in low-revision hospitals (Aarhus 66.6 ± 10 y. and Aalborg (Farsø) 67.3 ± 9 y., p = 0.002). In Aalborg, patients who had higher Body Mass Index (mean 30.2 kg/m2 versus 28.2 (Aarhus) and 28.7 kg/m2 (Copenhagen), p < 0.001), were more likely to be male (56% versus 45 and 43%, respectively, p = 0.002), and exhibited fewer anxiety and depression symptoms (EQ-5D-5L) (24% versus 34 and 38%, p = 0.01). The preoperative Oxford Knee Score (23.3 ± 7), UCLA Activity Scale (4.7 ± 2), range of motion (Copenhagen Knee ROM Scale) and patient motivations were comparable across hospitals but varied with implant type. Radiological classification ≥ 2 was observed in 94% (Kellgren-Lawrence) and 67% (Ahlbäck) and was more frequent in Aarhus (low-revision) (p ≤ 0.02), where unicompartmental implants were u
- Published
- 2023
23. Effect of single versus multiple prophylactic antibiotic doses on prosthetic joint infections following primary total hip arthroplasty in patients with osteoarthritis at public and private hospitals in Denmark:protocol for a nationwide cross-over, cluster randomised, non-inferiority trial [The Pro-Hip-Quality Trial]
- Author
-
Abedi, Armita Armina, Varnum, Claus, Pedersen, Alma Becic, Gromov, Kirill, Hallas, Jesper, Iversen, Pernille, Jakobsen, Thomas, Jimenez-Solem, Espen, Kidholm, Kristian, Kjerulf, Anne, Lange, Jeppe, Odgaard, Anders, Rosenvinge, Flemming S, Solgaard, Søren, Sperling, Kim, Stegger, Marc, Christensen, Robin, Overgaard, Søren, Abedi, Armita Armina, Varnum, Claus, Pedersen, Alma Becic, Gromov, Kirill, Hallas, Jesper, Iversen, Pernille, Jakobsen, Thomas, Jimenez-Solem, Espen, Kidholm, Kristian, Kjerulf, Anne, Lange, Jeppe, Odgaard, Anders, Rosenvinge, Flemming S, Solgaard, Søren, Sperling, Kim, Stegger, Marc, Christensen, Robin, and Overgaard, Søren
- Abstract
Introduction A feared complication after total hip arthroplasty (THA) is prosthetic joint infection (PJI), associated with high morbidity and mortality. Prophylactic antibiotics can reduce the risk of PJI. However, there is no consensus on the dosages and current recommendations are based on a low evidence level. The objective is to compare the effect of a single versus multiple doses of prophylactic antibiotics administered within 24 hours on PJI. Methods and analysis The study is designed as a cross-over, cluster randomised, non-inferiority trial. All clinical centres use both antibiotic practices (1 year of each intervention). All Danish orthopaedic surgery departments will be involved: Based on quality databases, 2-year cohorts of approximately 20 000 primary THAs conducted at 39 public and private hospitals, will be included. Inclusion criteria: age ≥18 years, all indications for THA except patients operated due to acute or sequelae from proximal femoral or pelvic fractures or bone tumour or metastasis. The primary outcome is PJI within 90 days after primary THA. Secondary outcomes include (1) serious adverse events, (2) potential PJI, (3) length of hospitalisation stay, (4) cardiovascular events, (5) hospital-treated infections, (6) community-based antibiotic use, (7) opioid use and (8) use of acetaminophen and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. All outcome measures will be extracted from national databases. Analyses will be based on the intention-to-treat population. Non-inferiority will be shown if the upper limit of the two-sided 95% CI for the OR is less than 1.32 for the single dose as compared with multiple doses. The results will establish best practice on antibiotic prophylaxis dosages in the future. Ethics and dissemination This study has been approved by Committees on Health Research Ethics for The Capital Region of Denmark (21069108) and The Danish Medicines Agency (2021091723). All results will be presented in peer-reviewed me, INTRODUCTION: A feared complication after total hip arthroplasty (THA) is prosthetic joint infection (PJI), associated with high morbidity and mortality. Prophylactic antibiotics can reduce the risk of PJI. However, there is no consensus on the dosages and current recommendations are based on a low evidence level. The objective is to compare the effect of a single versus multiple doses of prophylactic antibiotics administered within 24 hours on PJI.METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The study is designed as a cross-over, cluster randomised, non-inferiority trial. All clinical centres use both antibiotic practices (1 year of each intervention). All Danish orthopaedic surgery departments will be involved: Based on quality databases, 2-year cohorts of approximately 20 000 primary THAs conducted at 39 public and private hospitals, will be included.INCLUSION CRITERIA: age ≥18 years, all indications for THA except patients operated due to acute or sequelae from proximal femoral or pelvic fractures or bone tumour or metastasis. The primary outcome is PJI within 90 days after primary THA. Secondary outcomes include (1) serious adverse events, (2) potential PJI, (3) length of hospitalisation stay, (4) cardiovascular events, (5) hospital-treated infections, (6) community-based antibiotic use, (7) opioid use and (8) use of acetaminophen and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. All outcome measures will be extracted from national databases. Analyses will be based on the intention-to-treat population. Non-inferiority will be shown if the upper limit of the two-sided 95% CI for the OR is less than 1.32 for the single dose as compared with multiple doses. The results will establish best practice on antibiotic prophylaxis dosages in the future.ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study has been approved by Committees on Health Research Ethics for The Capital Region of Denmark (21069108) and The Danish Medicines Agency (2021091723). All results will be presented in peer-revie
- Published
- 2023
24. Erratum to: Patellofemoral Arthroplasty Results in Better Time-weighted Patient-reported Outcomes After 6 Years than TKA: A Randomized Controlled Trial
- Author
-
Odgaard, Anders, Kappel, Andreas, Madsen, Frank, Kristensen, Per Wagner, Stephensen, Snorre, and Attarzadeh, Amir Pasha
- Subjects
Other Features - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Patellofemoral Arthroplasty
- Author
-
Odgaard, Anders, Eldridge, Jonathan, and Madsen, Frank
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Randomized clinical trial of medial unicompartmentel versus total knee arthroplasty for anteromedial tibio-femoral osteoarthritis. The study-protocol
- Author
-
Mortensen, Jacob Fyhring, Rasmussen, Lasse Enkebølle, Østgaard, Svend Erik, Kappel, Andreas, Madsen, Frank, Schrøder, Henrik Morville, and Odgaard, Anders
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Pyrocardan Implant Arthroplasty for Carpometacarpal Osteoarthritis of the Thumb: A Comparative Study with a Historical Control Group
- Author
-
Jørgensen, Rasmus Wejnold, additional, Anderson, Kiran Annette, additional, Odgaard, Anders, additional, and Jensen, Claus Hjorth, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The Rosenberg view and coronal stress radiographs give similar measurements of articular cartilage height in knees with osteoarthritis
- Author
-
Mortensen, Jacob F., Kappel, Andreas, Rasmussen, Lasse E., Østgaard, Svend E., Odgaard, Anders, Mortensen, Jacob F., Kappel, Andreas, Rasmussen, Lasse E., Østgaard, Svend E., and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
Purpose: Choosing the optimal radiographic methods to diagnose the cartilage height and degree of knee osteoarthritis is crucial to determine suitability for unicompartmental knee replacement. This study aims to evaluate and compare articular cartilage thickness measured using the Rosenberg view and coronal stress radiography. Intra- and interrater agreement and test–retest reliability of each method were determined. The hypothesis of the study was that the Rosenberg view and coronal stress radiographs provide similar assessments of articular cartilage height in the medial and lateral knee compartments of osteoarthritic knees. Methods: A prospective diagnostic study, including 73 patients was performed. Inclusion criteria were enrollment for either a medial unicompartmental or a total knee replacement. Radiographs were taken as the Rosenberg view, and coronal stress radiography using the Telos stress device. Repeated measurements were performed. Experienced knee surgeons performed measurements of cartilage height at a standardized location of joint space width (JSW), and a rater-perceived location of minimal joint space width (mJSW), thus allowing for reliability and agreement analysesusing weighted kappa. Coronal stress measurements were ultimately compared to the Rosenberg view using Spearman’s rank correlation. Results: A total of 12,264 measurements were performed. The radiographic methods proved substantial reliability. Intra- and interrater agreement showed substantial to almost perfect agreement. A very strong correlation was observed in the medial knee compartment (r = 0.91; CI = 0.84–0.95; p < 0.001), with a mean difference of 0.1 mm and limits of agreement of − 1.5 to 1.7 mm, when comparing JSW between the Rosenberg view and varus stress. Only a strong correlation was observed medially when using mJSW, and when using this measurementmore incidences of bone-on-bone were observed than when measuring with JSW. A Strong correlation was observed in the la
- Published
- 2022
29. An Investigation of Medial Tibial Component Overhang in Unicompartmental and Total Knee Replacements Using Ultrasound in the Outpatient Department
- Author
-
Mortensen, Jacob F., Hald, Julius T., Rasmussen, Lasse E., Østgaard, Svend E., Odgaard, Anders, Mortensen, Jacob F., Hald, Julius T., Rasmussen, Lasse E., Østgaard, Svend E., and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
Tibial component overhang is known to be a contributor to worse outcomes in knee arthroplasty. The aim of this study is to investigate the presence of tibial component overhang, and whether overhang correlates to a higher local tenderness in both medial unicompartmental and total knee replacements. Also, to determine if a rotational projection phenomenon is presented with radiographs when investigating tibial component overhang. A prospective study, including 64 participants, was performed, where ultrasound measurements were compared with postoperative radiographs. Local tenderness was measured as a pressure pain threshold, determined at 3 months postoperatively using algometry. Sixty-two of sixty-four patients had an underdiagnosed medial overhang on radiographs, with a mean difference of 2.4 mm between radiographs and ultrasound (p < 0.001), presenting a rotational projection phenomenon. When comparing sites with ultrasound measured overhang to sites without overhang measured by ultrasound, a higher local tenderness was observed (p < 0.001). A positive linear correlation was found between patients' overhang and local tenderness (r = 0.2; p = 0.045). Subgroup analysis of medial overhang showed significantly higher tenderness than all other locations. No significant differences were seen for lateral overhang. An apparent rotational projection phenomenon of overhang on radiographs was seen, and a linear association between overhang and local tenderness was demonstrated. This study warrants the use of ultrasound when a surgeon is presented with a patient with postoperative medial tenderness, but no overhang can be seen on radiographs. It should also raise awareness of implant selection and positioning during surgery, especially avoiding the overhang to be localized directly medially.
- Published
- 2022
30. Patellofemoral Arthroplasty Results in Better Time-weighted Patient-reported Outcomes after 6 Years than TKA:A Randomized Controlled Trial [Inkl. Correction]
- Author
-
Odgaard, Anders, Kappel, Andreas, Madsen, Frank, Kristensen, Per Wagner, Stephensen, Snorre, Attarzadeh, Amir Pasha, Odgaard, Anders, Kappel, Andreas, Madsen, Frank, Kristensen, Per Wagner, Stephensen, Snorre, and Attarzadeh, Amir Pasha
- Abstract
BackgroundIn a previous study, we reported the 2-year outcomes of a parallel-group, equivalence, randomized controlled trial (RCT; blinded for the first year) comparing patellofemoral arthroplasty (PFA) and TKA for isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis (PF-OA). We found advantages of PFA over TKA for ROM and various aspects of knee-related quality of life (QOL) as assessed by patient-reported outcomes (PROs). Register data show increases in PFA revision rates from 2 to 6 years after surgery at a time when annual TKA revision rates are decreasing, which suggests rapidly deteriorating knee function in patients who have undergone PFA. We intended to examine whether the early advantages of PFA over TKA have deteriorated in our RCT and whether revision rates differ between the implant types in our study after 6 years of follow-up. Questions/purposes(1) Does PRO improvement during the first 6 postoperative years differ between patients who have undergone PFA and TKA? (2) Does the PRO improvement at 3, 4, 5, and 6 years differ between patients who have undergone PFA and TKA? (3) Do patients who have undergone PFA have a better ROM after 5 years than patients who have had TKA? (4) Does PFA result in more revisions or reoperations than TKA during the first 6 postoperative years? MethodsWe considered patients who had debilitating symptoms and PF-OA as eligible for this randomized trial. Screening initially identified 204 patients as potentially eligible; 7% (15) were found not to have sufficient symptoms, 21% (43) did not have isolated PF-OA, 21% (43) declined participation, and 1% (3) were not included after the target number of 100 patients had been reached. The included 100 patients were randomized 1:1 to PFA or TKA between 2007 and 2014. Of these, 9% (9 of 100) were lost before the 6-year follow-up; there were 12% (6 of 50) and 0% (0 of 50) deaths (p = 0.02) in the PFA and TKA groups, respectively, but no deaths could be attributed to the knee condition. There were no
- Published
- 2022
31. Poor Patient-Reported Outcomes following Surgical Treatment of Eaton Grade 1 Osteoarthritis of the Thumb Carpometacarpal Joint
- Author
-
Jorgensen, Rasmus Wejnold, Odgaard, Anders, Anderson, Kiran Annette, Jensen, Claus Hjorth, Jorgensen, Rasmus Wejnold, Odgaard, Anders, Anderson, Kiran Annette, and Jensen, Claus Hjorth
- Abstract
Background Osteoarthritis of the thumb carpometacarpal joint (CMC-1 OA) is increasingly common with age. Conservative treatment with anti-inflammatory medication, thumb spica splinting, and steroid injection is recommended for early-stage OA, but some patients will continue to have refractory symptoms and surgery may be considered. We found it interesting to study outcomes of surgical treatment of cases with mild radiographic changes and yet symptoms severe enough to indicate surgery. The specific research question is, if there is a limit of radiographic changes, below which a poor patient-reported outcome (PRO) can be expected.Purpose In a retrospective cohort of patients with prospectively collected PROs, we intend to study the effect of the radiographic CMC-1 OA severity on the PRO improvement and satisfaction after interposition arthroplasty.Patients and Methods Radiographs of 347 patients, who had CMC-1 surgery, were retrospectively analyzed. Each rater independently assessed all radiographs classifying each according to the Eaton classification. All patients had surgery with CMC-1 interposition arthroplasty using three well-known techniques that all include a complete trapeziectomy. Comparison between stage 1 and stage 2-4 was done using Chi-square test and t-test.Results Patients with Eaton stage 1 had a mean improvement in Quick-DASH (QuickDisability of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand questionnaire) scores of 14.6 points. Patients with Eaton stage 2 to 4 had a mean improvement of 25.3 points. The difference between these two groups was 10.6 points (p = 0 .009) . Only 52% of patients with Eaton stage 1 OA were satisfied. However, 76% of patients with Eaton stage 2 to 4 were satisfied (p = 0.008, chi-square between stage 1 and stage 2-4).Conclusion Patients with Eaton stage 1 CMC-1 OA had poorer PROs, as compared with more advanced stages of OA, 6 months following surgical treatment with interposition arthroplasty. Based on our resul
- Published
- 2022
32. Outcomes after ORIF of Bicondylar Schatzker VI (AO type C) Tibial Plateau Fractures in an Elderly Population
- Author
-
Dekhne, Mihir S., Stenquist, Derek, Suneja, Nishant, Weaver, Michael J., Petersen, Michael Moerk, Odgaard, Anders, von Keudell, Arvind, Dekhne, Mihir S., Stenquist, Derek, Suneja, Nishant, Weaver, Michael J., Petersen, Michael Moerk, Odgaard, Anders, and von Keudell, Arvind
- Abstract
Background: The surgical management of bicondylar tibial plateau (BTP) fractures in elderly patients aims to restore knee stability while minimizing soft tissue complications. The purpose of this study was to compare injury characteristics and surgical outcomes after ORIF of BTP fractures (AO/OTA 41-C (Schatzker VI)) in young (< 50 years) versus elderly (> 65 years) patients. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted using data from two American College of Surgeons (ACS) level I trauma centers. Inclusion criteria were: (1) age 18 years or older, (2) bicondylar tibial plateau fracture (AO/OTA 41-C or Schatzker VI), (3) treatment with ORIF, and (4) minimum of 6 months follow-up. Patients between 50 and 65 years of age were excluded. Data collection was performed by reviewing electronic medical records, operative reports, and radiology reports. Results: We identified 323 patients (61% male) with 327 BTP fractures and a median follow-up of 685 days. There were 230 young patients (71%) < 50 years and 93 elderly patients (29%) >6 5 years at time of presentation. Elderly patients were significantly more likely to have a low energy mechanism of injury (44.6 vs. 16.2%, p < 0.001), and present with diabetes (19.4 vs. 4.4%, p < 0.001) or coronary artery disease (12.9 vs. 1.3%, p < 0.001). Elderly patients were also significantly less likely to undergo staged management with initial knee-spanning external fixation followed by delayed ORIF (19.2 vs. 33.9%, p = 0.008). Elderly patients had a lower arc of motion at final follow-up (105 vs. 113°, p < 0.001) and reduced PROMIS-10 function scores (43.8 vs. 49.8, p = 0.013). No differences were observed in rates of superficial infection, deep infection, reoperation, or EQ-5D scores between age groups. Conclusions: This is the largest study to compare injury characteristics and outcomes after ORIF of BTP fractures according to age. Elderly patients (age > 65 years) sustained BTP fractures by lowe
- Published
- 2022
33. Four of five frequently used orthopedic PROMs possess inadequate content validity:a COSMIN evaluation of the mHHS, HAGOS, IKDC-SKF, KOOS and KNEES-ACL
- Author
-
Hansen, Christian Fugl, Jensen, Jonas, Odgaard, Anders, Siersma, Volkert, Comins, Jonathan David, Brodersen, John, Krogsgaard, Michael Rindom, Hansen, Christian Fugl, Jensen, Jonas, Odgaard, Anders, Siersma, Volkert, Comins, Jonathan David, Brodersen, John, and Krogsgaard, Michael Rindom
- Abstract
Purpose: Content validity is the most important property of PROMs. The COSMIN initiative has published guidelines for evaluating the content validity of PROMs, but they have only sparsely been applied to relevant PROMs for musculoskeletal conditions. The aim of this study was to use the COSMIN Risk of Bias checklist to evaluate the content validity of five PROMs, that are highly relevant in musculoskeletal research and used by the arthroscopic surgery community: the modified Harris’ Hip Score (mHHS), the Copenhagen Hip and Groin Outcome Score (HAGOS), the International Knee Documentation Committee Subjective Knee evaluation Form (IKDC-SKF), the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) and the Knee Numeric-Entity Evaluation Score ACL (KNEES-ACL). Methods: The development articles for the five PROMs were identified through searches in PubMed and SCOPUS. A literature search was performed to identify additional studies assessing content validity of the PROMs. Additional information, necessary for the assessments, was obtained from the PROM developers after direct request. To evaluate the quality of the development studies and rate the content validity, the COSMIN Risk of Bias checklist was applied to all studies. Results: All five development studies were identified. Three subsequent content validity studies were identified, all evaluating KOOS and one also IKDC. One content validity study was of inadequate quality and excluded from further analysis. The development of mHHS, IKDC-SKF, and KOOS was rated inadequate and possess insufficient content validity for their target populations. Due to the irrelevance of multiple items, KOOS was in particular inappropriate to evaluate patients with an ACL injury. The development of HAGOS was also rated inadequate, although the insufficiency aspects can be regarded as minor. KNEES-ACL possessed sufficient content validity. Conclusion: Out of five PROMs, only KNEES-ACL possessed sufficient content validity. Particularl
- Published
- 2022
34. Patellofemoral Arthroplasty Results in Better Time-weighted Patient-reported Outcomes After 6 Years than TKA: A Randomized Controlled Trial
- Author
-
Odgaard, Anders, primary, Kappel, Andreas, additional, Madsen, Frank, additional, Kristensen, Per Wagner, additional, Stephensen, Snorre, additional, and Attarzadeh, Amir Pasha, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Poor Patient-Reported Outcomes following Surgical Treatment of Eaton Grade 1 Osteoarthritis of the Thumb Carpometacarpal Joint
- Author
-
Jørgensen, Rasmus Wejnold, additional, Odgaard, Anders, additional, Anderson, Kiran Annette, additional, and Jensen, Claus Hjorth, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Measurement properties of UCLA Activity Scale for hip and knee arthroplasty patients and translation and cultural adaptation into Danish
- Author
-
Mørup-Petersen, Anne, primary, Skou, Søren T, additional, Holm, Christina E, additional, Holm, Paetur M, additional, Varnum, Claus, additional, Krogsgaard, Michael R, additional, Laursen, Mogens, additional, and Odgaard, Anders, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. One-stage versus two-stage revision of the infected knee arthroplasty - a randomized multicenter clinical trial study protocol
- Author
-
Lindberg-Larsen, Martin, Odgaard, Anders, Fredborg, Charlotte, Schrøder, Henrik Morville, Bagger, Jens, Lind-Hansen, Thomas Bruno, Kunov, Anders, Hansen, Per, Lange, Jeppe, Kappel, Andreas, Hansen, Kim, and Emmeluth, Claus
- Subjects
Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,Prosthesis-Related Infections ,Sports medicine ,Knee Joint ,Revision ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Two-stage ,law.invention ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Study Protocol ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rheumatology ,Randomized controlled trial ,Quality of life ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee ,PROM ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,030222 orthopedics ,business.industry ,Arthroplasty ,Knee arthroplasty ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,One-stage ,Community health ,Physical therapy ,Quality of Life ,lcsh:RC925-935 ,business ,Knee Prosthesis ,Infection ,Oxford knee score ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background A two-stage prosthesis exchange procedure has been the gold standard in surgical treatment of the chronically infected knee arthroplasty so far. This includes 2 surgeries/hospitalizations and an interim period of 2–3 months between surgeries with impaired health, functional status and quality of life of the patients. A one-stage exchange procedure holds many obvious advantages compared to the two-stage approach, but outcomes of a one-stage versus two-stage procedures have never been investigated in a randomized clinical trial. The purpose of this study is primarily to investigate time-adjusted differences in functional status of patients after one-stage versus two-stage revision. Secondary, to report time-adjusted differences in quality of life, complications (including re-revisions due to infection) and mortality. Methods This study is a pragmatic, multi-center, randomized, non-inferiority trial comparing one-stage versus two-stage revision of the infected knee arthroplasty. Seven Danish hospitals are currently participating in the study, but additional hospitals can enter the study if adhering to protocol. Ninety-six patients will be included prospectively. Follow-up will be with PROM-questionnaires and clinical controls up to 10 years. The patients who are not able to participate in the randomized trial are followed in a parallel cohort study. PROM’s Oxford Knee Score and EQ5D + EQ5D VAS questionnaires are completed preoperatively and sent out to the study participants at 6 weeks, 3, 6, 9, 12, 18 and 24 months as well as 5 and 10 years postoperatively. In addition a tailor made cost questionnaire on the non-treating hospital resource use, community health and social service use, travel costs, time off work and informal care are sent out. Discussion If one of the two treatment alternatives is found superior in both domains of quality of life (both knee-specific and generic) and health economics, that treatment should be promoted. Other outcomes will open informed discussions about treatment strategies for periprosthetic knee infections. Trial registration The randomized trial is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov with ID NCT03435679, initial release date January 31, 2018 and the cohort study is registered with ID NCT04427943, submitted January 8, 2020 and posted June 11, 2020.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Drug-related challenges following primary total hip and knee arthroplasty
- Author
-
Sørensen, Anne Mette Skov, Nyeland, Martin Erik, Odgaard, Anders, Overgaard, Søren, Jimenez-Solem, Espen, Schelde, Astrid Blicher, Sørensen, Anne Mette Skov, Nyeland, Martin Erik, Odgaard, Anders, Overgaard, Søren, Jimenez-Solem, Espen, and Schelde, Astrid Blicher
- Abstract
We aimed to characterize the in-hospital analgesic use among total hip or knee arthroplasty (THA or TKA) patients, and to identify possible drug-related challenges. We identified 15 263 patients operated with a THA or TKA between 1 January 2012 and 30 April 2016. The prevalence of analgesic users and patients with potential clinically relevant drug-drug interactions (DDIs), along with the prevalence of readmission among patients with vs. without a DDI, were calculated. A DDI was defined as the combination of (A) a diuretic, an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or an angiotensin II receptor blocker, and an non-steroidal anti-inflammatory Drug (NSAID); (B) warfarin and an NSAID; and (C) a benzodiazepine or a benzodiazepine-related drug and an opioid. The prevalence of analgesics administered in THA and TKA patients was 99.3% and 99.1% for paracetamol and 93.8% and 98.8% for opioids, respectively. The prevalence of patients who received interaction A, B or C was 8.4%, 2.5% and 40.7%, respectively. Patients with vs. without a DDI had a higher prevalence of 30-day readmission. In conclusion, most THA and TKA patients were administered paracetamol or opioids. The prevalence of 30-day readmission was higher in patients with than in patients without a potential clinically relevant DDI.
- Published
- 2021
39. Two-year fixation and ten-year clinical outcomes of total knee arthroplasty inserted with normal-curing bone cement and slow-curing bone cement:A randomized controlled trial in 54 patients
- Author
-
Breddam Mosegaard, Sebastian, Rytter, Søren, Madsen, Frank, Odgaard, Anders, Søballe, Kjeld, Stilling, Maiken, Breddam Mosegaard, Sebastian, Rytter, Søren, Madsen, Frank, Odgaard, Anders, Søballe, Kjeld, and Stilling, Maiken
- Abstract
Background: The normal-curing Refobacin® Bone Cement R (RR) and slow-curing Refobacin® Plus Bone Cement (RP) were introduced after discontinuation of the historically most used bone cement, Refobacin®-Palacos® R, in 2005. The aim of this study was to compare total knee arthroplasty component fixation with the two bone cements. Methods: 54 patients with primary knee osteoarthritis were randomized to either RR (N = 27) or RP (N = 27) bone cement and followed for two years with radiostereometric analysis of tibial and femoral component migration and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry measured periprosthetic bone mineral density (BMD). Further, patients were followed up at ten years with clinical outcome scores (OKS and KOOS). Results: At two-years follow-up, tibial total translation was 0.31 mm (95% CI: 0.19 – 0.42) for the RP group and 0.56 mm (95% CI: 0.45 – 0.67) (p < 0.01) for the RR group. There was continuous tibial component migration from one to two years follow-up (MTPM > 0.2 mm) in 13/27 patients from the RR and in 12/26 patients from the RP group. There was no difference between groups in BMD baseline values or changes during follow-up, as well as no correlation between change in BMD and tibial component migration. At ten-years follow-up, the improvement in the clinical outcome scores was similar between groups. There were no prosthesis related complications during the 10-year follow-up. Conclusion: At two years, tibial total translation was lower in the RP compared with the RR cement group, but BMD changes were similar. At ten years, no components were revised and clinical outcome scores were similar between groups.
- Published
- 2021
40. Measurement properties of UCLA Activity Scale for hip and knee arthroplasty patients and translation and cultural adaptation into Danish
- Author
-
Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Skou, Søren T., Holm, Christina E., Holm, Paetur M., Varnum, Claus, Krogsgaard, Michael R., Laursen, Mogens, Odgaard, Anders, Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Skou, Søren T., Holm, Christina E., Holm, Paetur M., Varnum, Claus, Krogsgaard, Michael R., Laursen, Mogens, and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
Background and purpose — The UCLA Activity Scale (UCLA) is a questionnaire assessing physical activity level from 1 (low) to 10 (high) in patients undergoing hip or knee arthroplasty (HA/KA). After translation and cultural adaptation, we evaluated the measurement properties of the Danish UCLA. Patients and methods — After dual panel translation, cognitive interviews were performed among 55 HA/KA patients. An orthopedic surgeon and a physiotherapist estimated UCLA scores for 80 KA patients based on short interviews. Measurement properties were evaluated in 130 HA and 134 KA patients preoperatively and 1-year postoperatively. Results — To suit Danish patients of today, several adaptations were required. Prior to interviews, 4 patients were excluded, and 11 misinterpreted the answer options. Examiners rated the remaining 65 patients (mean age 67 years) 0.2–1.6 UCLA levels lower than patients themselves. The 130 HA and 134 KA patients (mean age 71/68 years) changed from 4.3 (SD 1.9)/4.5 (1.8) preoperatively to 6.6 (1.8)/6.2 (1.0) at 1-year follow-up. 103 (79%) HA and 89 (66%) KA patients reported increased activity. Effect sizes were large (1.2/0.96). Knee patients reaching minimal important change (MIC, ≥ 8 Oxford Knee Score points) had higher 1-year UCLA scores than patients not reaching MIC. Interpretation — Original scale development was undocumented. Content validity was questionable, and there was discrepancy between patient and examiner estimates. UCLA appears valuable for measuring change in self-reported physical activity on a group level. 4 out of 5 HA patients and 2 out of 3 KA patients were more physically active 1 year after joint replacement surgery.
- Published
- 2021
41. Patient-reported outcomes following interposition arthroplasty of the basal joint of the thumb
- Author
-
Wejnold Jørgensen, Rasmus, Odgaard, Anders, Flensted, Frederik, Daugaard, Henrik, Hjorth Jensen, Claus, Wejnold Jørgensen, Rasmus, Odgaard, Anders, Flensted, Frederik, Daugaard, Henrik, and Hjorth Jensen, Claus
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was (1) to evaluate the results following thumb carpometacarpal (CMC) interposition arthroplasties with patient-reported outcomes (PRO) in a large prospective series, (2) to evaluate the correlation between PRO and patient satisfaction following surgery, (3) to evaluate if age, gender, occupational status, sports activities or operative technique correlate with the PRO following surgery. Quick-DASH ranges from 0 to 100 with 100 being the worst score. The mean preoperative Quick-DASH was 49.9. The mean 6 months postoperative Quick-DASH was 25.4 showing an average improvement of 24.6 points. Mixed model analysis revealed a further improvement in Quick-DASH and pain after 6 months. Satisfied patients had significantly lower pain scores and lower Quick-DASH at follow up as compared to dissatisfied patients. Age, gender, hobby activities, occupational status and operative technique do not seem to influence PRO after CMC interposition arthroplasty of the thumb.
- Published
- 2021
42. Clinicians' heuristic assessments of radiographs compared with Kellgren-Lawrence and Ahlbäck ordinal grading:An exploratory study of knee radiographs using paired comparisons
- Author
-
Pedersen, Mads Møller, Mongelard, Kristian Breds Geoffroy, Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Christensen, Karl Bang, Odgaard, Anders, Pedersen, Mads Møller, Mongelard, Kristian Breds Geoffroy, Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Christensen, Karl Bang, and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
Objectives Ordinal scales provide means for communicating the severity of a condition, but they are affected by cognitive biases, they introduce statistical problems and they sacrifice resolution. Clinicians discern more details than contained in scales, for example, when assessing radiographs, but clinicians' distinctions are often based on experience-based rules of thumb, that is, heuristics. The objectives of this study are to compare clinicians' heuristic assessments to ordinal grading, to identify case elements that influence clinicians' judgements and to present a method for quantifying heuristic assessments. Design Clinicians were presented with 17 207 random pairs from a set of 1087 knee radiographs. For each pair, the radiograph with more severe osteoarthritis was selected. The Bradley-Terry model was used to calculate an osteoarthritis strength parameter for each radiograph. Similarly, strength parameters were determined for 12 morphological features with five additional features being considered either present or absent. All radiographs were also graded according to conventional ordinal systems (Kellgren-Lawrence and Ahlbäck). Relations between clinicians' judgements and (1) the heuristics-based osteoarthritis strength, (2) conventional ordinal systems and (3) morphological features were investigated. Results Receiver operating characteristic analysis showed that the Bradley-Terry model provided a good description of clinicians' assessments (area under the curve (AUC)=0.97, 95% CI 0.968 to 0.972). Morphological features (AUC=0.90, 95% CI 0.900 to 0.908) provided a superior description of clinicians' choices compared with conventional ordinal systems (AUC=0.88, 95% CI 0.878 to 0.887 and AUC=0.80, 95% CI 0.796 to 0.809) for Ahlbäck and Kellgren-Lawrence, respectively). The features most strongly associated with osteoarthritis strength were medial joint space width, flattening of the medial femoral and tibial condyles, medial osteophytes and alignment. Co
- Published
- 2021
43. Revision for periprosthetic joint infection rate stratified by seasonality of operation in a national population of total and unicompartmental knee arthroplasty patients:a register-based analysis
- Author
-
Tetens Hald, Julius, Hesselvig, Anne Brun, Jensen, Andreas Kryger, Odgaard, Anders, Tetens Hald, Julius, Hesselvig, Anne Brun, Jensen, Andreas Kryger, and Odgaard, Anders
- Published
- 2021
44. Revision for periprosthetic joint infection rate stratified by seasonality of operation in a national population of total and unicompartmental knee arthroplasty patients: a register-based analysis
- Author
-
Hald, Julius Tetens, primary, Hesselvig, Anne Brun, additional, Jensen, Andreas Kryger, additional, and Odgaard, Anders, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Clinicians’ heuristic assessments of radiographs compared with Kellgren-Lawrence and Ahlbäck ordinal grading: an exploratory study of knee radiographs using paired comparisons
- Author
-
Pedersen, Mads Møller, primary, Geoffroy Mongelard, Kristian Breds, additional, Mørup-Petersen, Anne, additional, Bang Christensen, Karl, additional, and Odgaard, Anders, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Universal Dermal Microbiome in Human Skin
- Author
-
Bay, Lene, Barnes, Christopher James, Fritz, Blaine Gabriel, Thorsen, Jonathan, Restrup, Marlene Elise Møller, Rasmussen, Linett, Sørensen, Johan Kløvgaard, Hesselvig, Anne Brun, Odgaard, Anders, Hansen, Anders Johannes, Bjarnsholt, Thomas, Bay, Lene, Barnes, Christopher James, Fritz, Blaine Gabriel, Thorsen, Jonathan, Restrup, Marlene Elise Møller, Rasmussen, Linett, Sørensen, Johan Kløvgaard, Hesselvig, Anne Brun, Odgaard, Anders, Hansen, Anders Johannes, and Bjarnsholt, Thomas
- Abstract
Human skin microbiota has been described as a "microbial fingerprint" due to observed differences between individuals. Current understanding of the cutaneous microbiota is based on sampling the outermost layers of the epidermis, while the microbiota in the remaining skin layers has not yet been fully characterized. Environmental conditions can vary drastically between the cutaneous compartments and give rise to unique communities. We demonstrate that the dermal microbiota is surprisingly similar among individuals and contains a specific subset of the epidermal microbiota. Variability in bacterial community composition decreased significantly from the epidermal to the dermal compartment but was similar among anatomic locations (hip and knee). The composition of the epidermal microbiota was more strongly affected by environmental factors than that of the dermal community. These results indicate a well-conserved dermal community that is functionally distinct from the epidermal community, challenging the current dogma. Future studies in cutaneous disorders and chronic infections may benefit by focusing on the dermal microbiota as a persistent microbial community.IMPORTANCE Human skin microbiota is thought to be unique according to the individual's lifestyle and genetic predisposition. This is true for the epidermal microbiota, while our findings demonstrate that the dermal microbiota is universal between healthy individuals. The preserved dermal microbial community is compositionally unique and functionally distinct to the specific environment in the depth of human skin. It is expected to have direct contact with the immune response of the human host, and research in the communication between host and microbiota should be targeted to this cutaneous compartment. This novel insight into specific microbial adaptation can be used advantageously in the research of chronic disorders and infections of the skin. It can enlighten the alteration between health and disease to t
- Published
- 2020
47. Patellofemoral arthroplasty is cheaper and more effective in the short term than total knee arthroplasty for isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis:cost-effectiveness analysis based on a randomized trial
- Author
-
Fredborg, Charlotte, Odgaard, Anders, Sørensen, Jan, Fredborg, Charlotte, Odgaard, Anders, and Sørensen, Jan
- Abstract
AIMS: The aim is to assess the cost-effectiveness of patellofemoral arthroplasty (PFA) in comparison with total knee arthroplasty (TKA) for the treatment of isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis (OA) based on prospectively collected data on health outcomes and resource use from a blinded, randomized, clinical trial.METHODS: A total of 100 patients with isolated patellofemoral osteoarthritis were randomized to receive either PFA or TKA by experienced knee surgeons trained in using both implants. Patients completed patient-reported outcomes including EuroQol five-dimension questionnaire (EQ-5D) and 6-Item Short-Form Health Survey questionnaire (SF-6D) before the procedure. The scores were completed again after six weeks, three, six, and nine months, and again after one- and two-year post-surgery and yearly henceforth. Time-weighted outcome measures were constructed. Cost data were obtained from clinical registrations and patient-reported questionnaires. Incremental gain in health outcomes (quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs)) and incremental costs were compared for the two groups of patients. Net monetary benefit was calculated assuming a threshold value of €10,000, €35,000, and €50,000 per QALY and used to test the statistical uncertainty and central assumptions about outcomes and costs.RESULTS: The PFA group had an incremental 12 month EQ-5D gain of 0.056 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.01 to 0.10) and an incremental 12 month cost of minus €328 (95% CI 836 to 180). PFA therefore dominates TKA by providing better and cheaper outcomes than TKA. The net monetary benefit of PFA was €887 (95% CI 324 to 1450) with the €10,000 threshold, and it was consistently positive when different measures of outcomes and different cost assumptions were used.CONCLUSION: This study provides robust evidence that PFA from a one-year hospital management perspective is cheaper and provides better outcomes than TKA when applied to patients with isolated patellofemora
- Published
- 2020
48. Does intraoperative contamination during primary knee arthroplasty affect patient-reported outcomes for patients who are uninfected 1 year after surgery? A prospective cohort study of 714 patients
- Author
-
Justesen, Tobias, Olsen, Jakob B., Hesselvig, Anne B., Mørup-Petersen, Anne, Odgaard, Anders, Justesen, Tobias, Olsen, Jakob B., Hesselvig, Anne B., Mørup-Petersen, Anne, and Odgaard, Anders
- Abstract
Background and purpose — It is well recognized that some knee arthroplasty (KA) patients present with prolonged postoperative inflammation and some develop persistent pain. It can reasonably be speculated that some of these problems develop because of low-grade infections with low virulence bacteria caused by intraoperative contamination. This prospective study was performed to investigate whether intraoperative contamination results in lower patient-reported outcomes (PRO) for patients who were clinically uninfected in the first year after surgery. Patients and methods — We combined data from 2 major prospective studies on patients undergoing primary KA at 2 Danish hospitals between September 2016 and January 2018. Pre- and postoperative (1.5, 3, 6, and 12 months) PROs and intraoperative microbiological cultures were obtained on a total of 714 patients who were included in the study. Based on the microbiological cultures, the patients were divided into 2 groups, contaminated and non-contaminated, and differences in PROs between the 2 groups were analyzed. Results — 84 of 714 (12%) patients were intraoperatively contaminated; none of the 714 patients developed clinical infection. The preoperative Oxford Knee Score was 24 and 23 for contaminated and non-contaminated patients, respectively, improving to 40 and 39 at 1 year (p = 0.8). 1-year AUC for Oxford Knee Score and absolute improvement at each postoperative time point for Forgotten Joint Score and EQ-5D-5L also were similar between contaminated and non-contaminated patients. Interpretation — Patient-reported outcomes from 714 patients do not indicate that intraoperative contamination affects the knee-specific or general health-related quality of life in primary KA patients who are clinically uninfected 1 year after surgery.
- Published
- 2020
49. Reduction in Upper Limb Joint Surgery Among Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients:An Interrupted Time-Series Analysis Using Danish Health Care Registers
- Author
-
Cordtz, René, Hawley, Samuel, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, Højgaard, Pil, Zobbe, Kristian, Kristensen, Lars Erik, Overgaard, Søren, Odgaard, Anders, Soussi, Bolette Gylden, Dreyer, Lene, Cordtz, René, Hawley, Samuel, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, Højgaard, Pil, Zobbe, Kristian, Kristensen, Lars Erik, Overgaard, Søren, Odgaard, Anders, Soussi, Bolette Gylden, and Dreyer, Lene
- Abstract
Objective: Joint replacement surgery is a proxy of severe joint damage in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The aim of this study was to assess the impact of the introduction of biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) on the incidence rate (IR) of upper limb joint replacements among newly diagnosed RA patients. Methods: Using the Danish National Patient Register, patients with incident RA from 1996–2012 were identified. Each patient was matched on age, sex, and municipality, with up to 10 general population controls. The age- and sex-standardized 5-year IR per 1,000 person-years of a composite outcome of any first joint replacement of the finger, wrist, elbow, or shoulder was calculated, and an interrupted time-series analysis was undertaken to investigate trends and changes of the IR in the pre-bDMARD (1996–2001) and the bDMARD eras (2003–2012), with a 1-year lag period in 2002. Results: In total, 18,654 incident patients with RA were identified (mean age 57.6 years, 70.5% women). The IR of joint replacements among patients with RA was stable at 2.46 per 1,000 person-years (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.96, 2.96) from 1996 to 2001 but started to decrease from 2003 onwards (–0.08 per 1,000 person-years annually [95% CI –0.20, 0.02]). Compared with patients with RA, the IR among controls in 1996 was 1/17 and increased continuously throughout the study period. Conclusion: The IR of upper limb joint replacements started to decrease among patients with RA from 2002 onwards, whereas it increased among controls. Our results suggest an association between the introduction of bDMARDs and a lower need of joint replacements among patients with RA.
- Published
- 2020
50. Reliability of stress radiography in the assessment of coronal laxity following total knee arthroplasty
- Author
-
Kappel, Andreas, Mortensen, Jacob Fyhring, Nielsen, Poul Torben, Odgaard, Anders, Laursen, Mogens, Kappel, Andreas, Mortensen, Jacob Fyhring, Nielsen, Poul Torben, Odgaard, Anders, and Laursen, Mogens
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stress radiography is used in the valuation of soft tissue laxity following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). However, reliability and agreement is largely unknown.METHODS: In this prospective reliability study, we included 15 participants with prior TKA. Standardized coronal stress radiographs were obtained in both extension and flexion and with both varus and valgus stress. All radiographs were repeated (test-retest). In extension the Telos stress device was used, and flexion radiographs were obtained using the epicondylar-view. Three independent raters measured angulation between femoral and tibial component from all radiographs. Reliability was assessed by intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) and agreement visualized with Bland-Altman plots and by mean difference and limits of agreement (LOA).RESULTS: Stress radiography in extension showed excellent reliability with ICC = 0.96 (0.95-0.98) and LOA of ±1.2°. Stress radiography at 80-90° of flexion showed good to excellent reliability when measuring medial laxity with ICC = 0.94 (0.89-0.97) and LOA of ±1.7°; however, when measuring lateral laxity the reliability was only moderate to good with ICC = 0.70 (0.51-0.84) and LOA of ±6.3°.CONCLUSION: Stress radiography is clinically applicable and the methods described in this study provide excellent reliability for measurement of laxity in extension. The reliability of measurements in flexion is good to excellent when measuring medial laxity but only moderate to good when measuring lateral laxity.
- Published
- 2020
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.