360 results on '"E. Herbst"'
Search Results
102. Radiology: preoperative radiation for advanced malignant tumors
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W E, Herbst, R N, Cooley, and A T, Ozarda
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Neoplasms ,Humans - Published
- 1966
103. [The physically handicapped child in high schools]
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E, Herbst
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Male ,Adolescent ,Psychology, Adolescent ,Germany, West ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Female ,Child ,Education - Published
- 1965
104. Low energy dynamics for reactive collisions of C+ with D2
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L. D. Doverspike, R. L. Champion, and E. Herbst
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Range (particle radiation) ,Chemical reaction kinetics ,Low energy ,Deuterium ,Scattering ,Chemistry ,Kinetic isotope effect ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Atomic physics ,Excitation - Abstract
The reaction C++D2→CD++D has been studied with an ion‐beam, gas‐target scattering apparatus over the energy range 0.64–1.58 eV. The results indicate that no long‐lived complex is formed in the reaction, however the product excitation and the backscattering indicate a strong three‐body interaction. (AIP)
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- 1975
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105. Laser photoelectron spectrometry of methylene(1-). Singlet-triplet splitting and electron affinity of methylene
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S. V. Oneil, G. B. Ellison, P. F. Zittel, E. Herbst, William P. Reinhardt, and W. C. Lineberger
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General Chemistry ,Laser ,Mass spectrometry ,Photochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,chemistry ,Electron affinity (data page) ,law ,Singlet state ,Methylene - Published
- 1976
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106. THE EFFECT OF MEMBRANE THICKNESS IN DIALYSIS
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J. H. E. Herbst
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Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Membrane thickness ,General Chemistry ,Dialysis (biochemistry) ,Catalysis - Abstract
not available
- Published
- 1954
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107. Das Cacaoöl
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E. Dieterich and E. Herbst
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Clinical Biochemistry ,General Materials Science ,General Medicine ,Analytical Chemistry - Published
- 1884
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108. Die Untersuchung von Chocolade
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E. Herbst
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Engineering ,Management science ,business.industry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,General Materials Science ,Analytical Chemistry (journal) ,General Medicine ,business ,Analytical Chemistry - Published
- 1883
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109. The radiative association of CH2/+
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E. Herbst, P.R. Certain, and J.G. Schubert
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Physics ,Chemical kinetics ,Space and Planetary Science ,TheoryofComputation_ANALYSISOFALGORITHMSANDPROBLEMCOMPLEXITY ,Analytical chemistry ,Radiative transfer ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Atomic physics - Abstract
The rate coefficient of the radiative association reaction C/sup +/+H/sub 2/..-->..CH/sub 2//sup +/+h..nu.. has been calculated to be 10/sup -14//sup .//sup 0//sup plus-or-minus//sup 1//sup .//sup 5/ cm/sup 3/ s/sup -1/ at 90 K. The significance of this rate coefficient is discussed for both diffuse and dense interstellar clouds.
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- 1977
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110. Rate of the reaction N2H/+/ + CO yields HCO/+/ + N2 and its significance for the interstellar chemistry of N2H/+
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J. D. Payzant, E. Herbst, Diethard K. Bohme, and Harold I. Schiff
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Chemical kinetics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Microwave emission ,Space and Planetary Science ,Chemistry ,Inorganic chemistry ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Chemical reaction ,Carbon monoxide - Published
- 1975
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111. Ion-molecule syntheses of interstellar molecular hydrocarbons through C4H - Toward molecular complexity
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E. Herbst
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Physics ,Molecular cloud ,Interstellar cloud ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Cosmochemistry ,Ion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hydrocarbon ,chemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,Abundance (ecology) ,Chemical physics ,Molecule ,Atomic carbon ,Atomic physics - Abstract
The possibility that complex hydrocarbons can be produced in dense interstellar clouds by ion-molecule gas phase reactions is considered in detail. Steady-state calculations indicate that the observed abundances of species such as C/sub 4/H cannot be reproduced via gas phase models unless a large amount of atomic carbon (CI) is present. With an assumed CI fractional abundance of 10/sup -5/, our calculations can reproduce the fractional abundance of C/sub 4/H observed in TMC 1. Thus, in our view, the presence of CI, itself not readily explicable via standard ion-molecule treatments, appears to be necessary to explain the abundances of complex hydrocarbon species.
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- 1983
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112. Is H-A Source of Diffuse Interstellar Lines?
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T. A. Patterson, E. Herbst, David W. Norcross, and W. C. Lineberger
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Physics ,Astrochemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,Interstellar cloud ,Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Published
- 1974
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113. A new look at radiative association in dense interstellar clouds
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E. Herbst
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Interstellar medium ,Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Association (object-oriented programming) ,Interstellar cloud ,Radiative transfer ,Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Statistical mechanics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
A corrected statistical theory of radiative association reactions is presented and discussed. Calculations are undertaken to determine the rate coefficients of a variety of radiative association reactions of possible importance in dense interstellar clouds. Our results confirm the suggestion of Smith and Adams that certain radiative association reactions occur quite rapidly at low temperature and are probably important in the synthesis of complex interstellar molecules.
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- 1980
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114. Cosmic-ray-induced photodissociation and photoionization rates of interstellar molecules
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E. Herbst, Roland Gredel, Stephen Lepp, and Alexander Dalgarno
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Physics ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Photodissociation ,Interstellar cloud ,Photoionization mode ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Photoionization ,Secondary electrons ,Interstellar medium ,Space and Planetary Science ,Ionization ,Physics::Atomic and Molecular Clusters ,Physics::Atomic Physics ,Emission spectrum ,Atomic physics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
In the Prasad-Tarafdar mechanism, ultraviolet photons are created in the interior of dense interstellar clouds by the impact excitation of molecular hydrogen by secondary electrons generated by cosmic-ray ionization. Detailed calculations of the emission spectrum are described, and the resulting photodissociation and photoionization rates of a wide range of interstellar molecules are calculated. 84 refs.
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- 1989
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115. Photometry of stars in the nuclear bulge of the Galaxy through a low absorption window at l=0d, b=--8d
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E. Herbst and S. van den Bergh
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Physics ,Spiral galaxy ,Space and Planetary Science ,Bulge ,Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Type-cD galaxy ,Star count ,Astrophysics ,Interacting galaxy ,Galaxy merger ,Galaxy ,Dwarf galaxy - Published
- 1974
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116. Nonequilibrium chemical effects in shocked interstellar clouds
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E. Herbst and S. Knudson
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Exothermic reaction ,Chemical effects ,Chemical kinetics ,Physics ,Interstellar medium ,Molecular interactions ,Space and Planetary Science ,Interstellar cloud ,Thermodynamics ,Non-equilibrium thermodynamics ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Endothermic process - Published
- 1981
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117. The cepheid SV CRU and the cluster Ruprecht 97
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G. L. H. Harris, W. Herbst, S. van den Bergh, and E. Herbst
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Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Cepheid variable ,Cluster (physics) ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Published
- 1976
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118. A survey of bright variable stars in M33
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E. Herbst, C. T. Kowal, and S. van den Bergh
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Physics ,T Tauri star ,Spiral galaxy ,Space and Planetary Science ,K-type main-sequence star ,Blue supergiant ,Flare star ,Cataclysmic variable star ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Supergiant ,Variable star - Published
- 1975
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119. What are the products of polyatomic ion-electron dissociative recombination reactions
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E. Herbst
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Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Radical ,Interstellar cloud ,Polyatomic ion ,Molecule ,Physical chemistry ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Electron ,Atomic physics ,Chemical reaction ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,Dissociative recombination - Abstract
A statistical theory of polyatomic ion--electron dissociative recombination reactions is presented and applied to the calculation of branching ratios for the various sets of neutral products of the reactions HCNH/sup +/+e, H/sub 3/O/sup +/+e, CH/sub 3//sup +/+e, and NH/sub 4//sup +/+e, all thought to be important in interstellar cloud chemistry.
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- 1978
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120. An investigation of the effect of a centrifugal barrier on proposed large rate coefficients for ion-polar neutral reactions at low temperatures
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E. Herbst
- Subjects
Physics ,Chemical kinetics ,Centrifugal force ,Space and Planetary Science ,Polar ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Atomic physics ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,Ion - Published
- 1986
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121. Radiative association in dense, H2-containing interstellar clouds
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E. Herbst
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Physics ,Hydrogen ,Methylamine ,Interstellar cloud ,Polyatomic ion ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Chemical kinetics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,Excited state ,Radiative transfer ,Atomic physics ,Order of magnitude - Abstract
A method for estimating the order of magnitude of rate coefficients of radiative association reactions involving polyatomic species is outlined. Calculations are undertaken on reactions of possible importance in dense interstellar clouds. Several of the calculated rate coefficients are utilized in a study of the gas phase syntheses of H/sub 2/CNH (methanimine) and H/sub 3/CNH/sub 2/ (methylamine). (AIP)
- Published
- 1976
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122. Laser photoelectron spectrometry of the negative ions of silicon and its hydrides
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E. Herbst, W. C. Lineberger, and A. Kasdan
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Silicon ,Electron energy spectrum ,Binding energy ,General Physics and Astronomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Mass spectrometry ,Laser ,Ion ,law.invention ,chemistry ,law ,Excited state ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Atomic physics ,Ground state - Abstract
Fixed−frequency laser photoelectron spectrometry has been utilized to study the ions Si−, SiH−, and SiH−2. In each case, the photodetached electron energy spectrum consists primarily of sharp, easily assignable peaks. The electron affinities of Si, SiH, and SiH2 have been determined to be (1.385±0.005) eV, (1.277±0.009) eV, and (1.124±0.020) eV, respectively. Two bound excited states attributed to 2D and 2P terms have been observed for Si−, and their binding energies determined. Similarly, two bound excited states, assigned to 1Δ and 1Σ+ symmetry, have been discovered in SiH−. The internuclear distance re in the ground state of SiH− has been determined by a Franck−Condon factor analysis to be (1.474±0.004) A. In addition, spectroscopic constants of the excited states have been deduced. Transitions from the ground state of SiH− to both the 1A1 and 3B1 states of SiH2 have been observed; unlike the case of CH2, the 1A1 state is the lower in energy.
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- 1975
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123. The rate of the radiative association reaction between CH3(+) and NH3 and its implications for interstellar chemistry
- Author
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E. Herbst
- Subjects
Physics ,Exothermic reaction ,Molecular cloud ,Interstellar cloud ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Activation energy ,Chemical reaction ,Reaction rate ,Chemical kinetics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Chemical physics ,Radiative transfer ,Atomic physics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
A theory of radiative association reaction rates for systems in which one or more competitive exothermic binary channels exist has been developed. The theory is utilized to calculate the rate of the radiative association reaction between CH3(+) and NH3, which is important in the synthesis of CH3NH2 in dense interstellar clouds. This reaction is calculated to have a large rate coefficient despite the existence of two competitive exothermic channels. The cause of the large radiative association rate coefficient is an activation energy barrier of 2.3 eV in the dominant binary exit channel. It is suggested that a variety of other radiative association reactions, of importance to interstellar chemistry, can also occur with large rate coefficients at low temperature despite the presence of competitive exothermic channels if similar activation energy barriers are present. 18 references.
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- 1985
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124. Indirect observation of unobservable interstellar molecules
- Author
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William Klemperer, Sheldon Green, Patrick Thaddeus, and E. Herbst
- Subjects
Interstellar medium ,Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Interstellar cloud ,Molecule ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Atomic physics ,Electromagnetic radiation ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Microwave ,Charged particle ,Radio astronomy ,Ion - Abstract
It is suggested that the abundances of neutral non-polar interstellar molecules unobservable by radio astronomy can be systematically determined by radio observation of the protonated ions. As an example, observed N2H(+) column densities are analyzed to infer molecular nitrogen abundances in dense interstellar clouds. The chemistries and expected densities of the protonated ions of O2, C2, CO2, C2H2 and CH4 are then discussed. Microwave transition frequencies fo HCO2(+) and C2H3(+) are estimated, and a preliminary astronomical search for HCO2(+) is described.
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- 1977
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125. Metastable isomers - A new class of interstellar molecules
- Author
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Sheldon Green and E. Herbst
- Subjects
Physics ,Interstellar cloud ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Chemical reaction ,Charged particle ,Ion ,Cosmochemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,Chemical physics ,Metastability ,Excited state ,Molecule ,Atomic physics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
The abundances of a variety of metastable isomers of small organic molecules, analogous to HNC/HCN, in dense interstellar clouds are considered. These metastable species, some of which are thought to exist as intermediates in laboratory organic chemical reactions, are of considerable interest to chemists. Current ideas of gas-phase, ion-molecule chemistry are utilized to demonstrate that such metastable species should often be present in dense clouds in sufficient abundance to be observed. Unfortunately, the spectral constants of metastable isomers have rarely been determined in the laboratory, and quantum chemical calculations of a varying degree of accuracy must be utilized; results are included of some new quantum chemical calculations. The interstellar chemistry and expected microwave spectra of a representative sample of possibly important interstellar metastable isomers are discussed.
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- 1979
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126. An additional uncertainty in calculated radiative association rates of molecular formation at low temperatures
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E. Herbst
- Subjects
Chemical kinetics ,Physics ,Chemical reaction kinetics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Quantum mechanics ,Molecular cloud ,Polyatomic ion ,Radiative transfer ,Thermodynamics ,Molecule ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Order of magnitude - Abstract
The effect of introducing a centrifugal barrier correction to our previously published theory of radiative association rate coefficients for polyatomic products is demonstrated. Discrepancies of up to one order of magnitude from our earlier calculated rate coefficients are found.
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- 1980
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127. Current Literature
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Eunice E. Herbst
- Subjects
History ,Law - Published
- 1964
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128. Apparatus to Deliver Liquid at Constant Rate
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J. H. E. Herbst
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Constant rate ,Materials science ,Thermodynamics ,General Medicine - Abstract
not available
- Published
- 1950
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129. Current Literature
- Author
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Eunice E. Herbst
- Subjects
History ,Law - Published
- 1965
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130. CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF COLLAPSING LOW-MASS PRESTELLAR DENSE CORES.
- Author
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U. Hincelin, B. Commerçon, V. Wakelam, F. Hersant, S. Guilloteau, and E. Herbst
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ELECTROMAGNETISM ,STELLAR evolution ,SYMPATRIC speciation ,CHEMICALS - Abstract
The first hydrostatic core, also called the first Larson core, is one of the first steps in low-mass star formation as predicted by theory. With recent and future high-performance telescopes, the details of these first phases are becoming accessible, and observations may confirm theory and even present new challenges for theoreticians. In this context, from a theoretical point of view, we study the chemical and physical evolution of the collapse of prestellar cores until the formation of the first Larson core, in order to better characterize this early phase in the star formation process. We couple a state-of-the-art hydrodynamical model with full gas-grain chemistry, using different assumptions for the magnetic field strength and orientation. We extract the different components of each collapsing core (i.e., the central core, the outflow, the disk, the pseudodisk, and the envelope) to highlight their specific physical and chemical characteristics. Each component often presents a specific physical history, as well as a specific chemical evolution. From some species, the components can clearly be differentiated. The different core models can also be chemically differentiated. Our simulation suggests that some chemical species act as tracers of the different components of a collapsing prestellar dense core, and as tracers of the magnetic field characteristics of the core. From this result, we pinpoint promising key chemical species to be observed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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131. HERSCHEL OBSERVATIONS OF EXTRAORDINARY SOURCES: ANALYSIS OF THE HIFI 1.2 THz WIDE SPECTRAL SURVEY TOWARD ORION KL II. CHEMICAL IMPLICATIONS.
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N. R. Crockett, E. A. Bergin, J. L. Neill, C. Favre, G. A. Blake, E. Herbst, D. E. Anderson, and G. E. Hassel
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ORGANIC architecture ,NITROGEN ,GAS phase reactions ,CYANIDE process ,HIGH temperature chemistry - Abstract
We present chemical implications arising from spectral models fit to the Herschel/HIFI spectral survey toward the Orion Kleinmann-Low nebula (Orion KL). We focus our discussion on the eight complex organics detected within the HIFI survey utilizing a novel technique to identify those molecules emitting in the hottest gas. In particular, we find the complex nitrogen bearing species CH
3 CN, C2 H3 CN, C2 H5 CN, and NH2 CHO systematically trace hotter gas than the oxygen bearing organics CH3 OH, C2 H5 OH, CH3 OCH3 , and CH3 OCHO, which do not contain nitrogen. If these complex species form predominantly on grain surfaces, this may indicate N-bearing organics are more difficult to remove from grain surfaces than O-bearing species. Another possibility is that hot (Tkin ∼ 300 K) gas phase chemistry naturally produces higher complex cyanide abundances while suppressing the formation of O-bearing complex organics. We compare our derived rotation temperatures and molecular abundances to chemical models, which include gas-phase and grain surface pathways. Abundances for a majority of the detected complex organics can be reproduced over timescales ≳105 years, with several species being underpredicted by less than 3σ. Derived rotation temperatures for most organics, furthermore, agree reasonably well with the predicted temperatures at peak abundance. We also find that sulfur bearing molecules that also contain oxygen (i.e., SO, SO2 , and OCS) tend to probe the hottest gas toward Orion KL, indicating the formation pathways for these species are most efficient at high temperatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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132. THE 2014 KIDA NETWORK FOR INTERSTELLAR CHEMISTRY.
- Author
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V. Wakelam, J.-C. Loison, E. Herbst, B. Pavone, A. Bergeat, K. Béroff, M. Chabot, A. Faure, D. Galli, W. D. Geppert, D. Gerlich, P. Gratier, N. Harada, K. M. Hickson, P. Honvault, S. J. Klippenstein, S. D. Le Picard, G. Nyman, M. Ruaud, and S. Schlemmer
- Published
- 2015
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133. The Effect of C-Arm Position on Femoral Tunnel Placement in Medial Patellofemoral Ligament Reconstruction.
- Author
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Thürig G, Herbst E, Deichsel A, Peez C, Briese T, Glasbrenner J, Raschke MJ, and Kittl C
- Abstract
Background: Medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) reconstruction is a common treatment for patellar instability. Yet nearly 40% of revisions result from femoral tunnel misplacement. One reason may be the positioning of the C-arm relative to the knee., Purpose: To assess how the C-arm's position affects femoral MPFL placement when the image receptor is positioned either contralateral or ipsilateral to the operated knee., Study Design: Controlled laboratory study., Methods: Ten human cadaveric knee specimens were dissected, and the femoral MPFL insertion site was identified and marked using a 10-mm eyelet. According to the possible clinical scenarios, true lateral radiographs in 2 different C-arm positions were taken. In the first scenario, the image receptor was on the ipsilateral side, being 5 cm away from the knee with the x-ray beam directed from medial to lateral (ML5). In the second scenario, the image receptor was on the contralateral side, being 25 cm away from the knee with the x-ray beam directed from lateral to medial (LM25). In each radiograph, the eyelet position was recorded and the distance (proximal-distal and anterior-posterior) from the optimal radiographic insertion point according to the literature was determined. Differences between the groups were calculated using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test, and a P value of <.05 was considered significant., Results: The anatomic femoral MPFL insertion in the ML5-position was located a mean of 2.7 ± 2.4 mm proximal and 4.5 ± 5.5 mm anterior to the Schöttle point. This resulted in an absolute distance of 7.2 ± 3.0 mm. In the LM25-position, it was located a mean of -0.7 ± 1.8 mm distal and 3.0 ± 5.3 mm anterior, which resulted in an absolute distance of 5.4 ± 3.2 mm. The ML5 was located more anterior (1.5 ± 2.1 mm) and proximal (3.4 ± 2.4 mm) compared with the LM25 position. Measurements following methods described in the literature significantly differed in both axes in the LM25 view when compared with the ML5 view measurements ( P = .005)., Conclusion: Compared with the ipsilateral C-arm position (ML5), the contralateral C-arm position (LM25) showed a smaller range with a lower standard deviation in identifying the femoral MPFL approach across all measurement methods., Clinical Relevance: When applying the method according to Schöttle et al to locate the femoral MPFL insertion point, it should be noted that in the proximal-distal orientation, the femoral MPFL insertion point is situated proximal to the Blumensaat line in the contralateral view (LM25). In contrast, when using the ipsilateral view (ML5), the femoral MPFL footprint is positioned just distal to the proximal edge of the medial condyle., Competing Interests: The authors declared that they have no conflicts of interest in the authorship and publication of this contribution. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
- Published
- 2024
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134. Anterior Slope-Modifying Osteotomies Alter the Length Change Behavior of the Superficial Medial Collateral Ligament: A Biomechanical Study.
- Author
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Peez C, Ottens C, Deichsel A, Raschke MJ, Briese T, Herbst E, Robinson JR, and Kittl C
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- Humans, Biomechanical Phenomena, Aged, Middle Aged, Tibia surgery, Male, Female, Knee Joint surgery, Knee Joint physiology, Osteotomy methods, Medial Collateral Ligament, Knee surgery, Cadaver
- Abstract
Background: Increased tibial slope has been shown to lead to higher rates of anterior cruciate ligament graft failure. A slope-decreasing osteotomy can reduce in situ anterior cruciate ligament force and may mitigate this risk. However, how this procedure may affect the length change behavior of the medial ligamentous structures is unknown., Purpose/hypothesis: The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of anterior slope-modifying osteotomies on the medial ligamentous structures. It was hypothesized that (1) decreasing the tibial slope would lead to shortening of the superficial medial collateral ligament (sMCL), (2) while the fibers of the posterior oblique ligament (POL) would be unaffected., Study Design: Descriptive laboratory study., Methods: Eight fresh-frozen cadaveric knee specimens underwent anatomic dissection to precisely identify the medial ligamentous structures. The knees were mounted in a custom-made kinematics rig with the quadriceps muscle and iliotibial tract loaded. An anterior slope-modifying osteotomy was performed and fixed using an external fixator, which allowed modification of the wedge height between -15 and +10 mm in 5-mm increments. Threads were mounted between pins positioned at the anterior, middle, and posterior parts of the tibial and femoral attachments of the sMCL and POL. For different tibial slope modifications, length changes between the tibiofemoral pin combinations were recorded using a rotary encoder as the knee was flexed between 0° and 120°., Results: All sMCL fiber regions shortened with slope reduction ( P < .001) and lengthened with slope increase ( P < .001), with the anterior sMCL fibers more affected than the posterior sMCL fibers. A 15-mm anterior closing-wedge high tibial osteotomy (ACWHTO) resulted in a 6.9% ± 3.0% decrease in the length of the anterior sMCL fibers compared with a 3.6% ± 2.3% decrease for the posterior sMCL fibers. A 10-mm anterior opening-wedge high tibial osteotomy (AOWHTO) increased anterior sMCL fiber length by 5.9% ± 2.3% and posterior sMCL fiber length by 1.6% ± 1.0%. The POL fibers were not significantly affected by a slope-modifying osteotomy., Conclusion: Tibial slope-modifying osteotomies changed the length change pattern of the sMCL such that an AOWHTO increased whereas an ACWHTO decreased the sMCL strain. This effect was most pronounced for the anterior fibers of the sMCL. The length change pattern of the POL remained unaffected by slope-modifying osteotomy., Clinical Relevance: Surgeons should be aware that anterior tibial slope-modifying osteotomies affect the biomechanics of the sMCL. After an extensive ACWHTO, patients may develop a medial or anteromedial instability, while an AOWHTO may overconstrain the medial compartment., Competing Interests: One or more of the authors has declared the following potential conflict of interest or source of funding: This study received grant support from the German Knee Society (DKG). AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto.
- Published
- 2024
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135. A Flat Reconstruction of the Medial Collateral Ligament and Anteromedial Structures Restores Native Knee Kinematics: A Biomechanical Robotic Investigation.
- Author
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Deichsel A, Peez C, Raschke MJ, Albert A, Herbort M, Kittl C, Fink C, and Herbst E
- Subjects
- Humans, Biomechanical Phenomena, Male, Joint Instability surgery, Joint Instability physiopathology, Middle Aged, Female, Aged, Robotics, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods, Rotation, Robotic Surgical Procedures, Medial Collateral Ligament, Knee surgery, Knee Joint surgery, Knee Joint physiology, Cadaver
- Abstract
Background: Injuries of the superficial medial collateral ligament (sMCL) and anteromedial structures of the knee result in excess valgus rotation and external tibial rotation (ER) as well as tibial translation., Purpose: To evaluate a flat reconstruction of the sMCL and anteromedial structures in restoring knee kinematics in the combined MCL- and anteromedial-deficient knee., Study Design: Controlled laboratory study., Methods: Eight cadaveric knee specimens were tested in a 6 degrees of freedom robotic test setup. Force-controlled clinical laxity tests were performed with 200 N of axial compression in 0°, 30°, 60°, and 90° of flexion: 8 N·m valgus torque, 5 N·m ER torque, 89 N anterior tibial translation (ATT) force, and an anteromedial drawer test consisting of 89 N ATT force under 5 N·m ER torque. After determining the native knee kinematics, we transected the sMCL, followed by the deep medial collateral ligament (dMCL). Subsequently, a flat reconstruction of the sMCL with anteromedial limb, mimicking the function of the anteromedial corner, was performed. Mixed linear models were used for statistical analysis ( P < .05)., Results: Cutting of the sMCL led to statistically significant increases in laxity regarding valgus rotation, ER, and anteromedial translation in all tested flexion angles ( P < .05). ATT was significantly increased in all flexion angles but not at 60° after cutting of the sMCL. A combined instability of the sMCL and dMCL led to further increased knee laxity in all tested kinematics and flexion angles ( P < .05). After reconstruction, the knee kinematics were not significantly different from those of the native state., Conclusion: Insufficiency of the sMCL and dMCL led to excess valgus rotation, ER, ATT, and anteromedial tibial translation. A combined flat reconstruction of the sMCL and the anteromedial aspect restored this excess laxity to values not significantly different from those of the native knee., Clinical Relevance: The presented reconstruction might lead to favorable results for patients with MCL and anteromedial injuries with an anteromedial rotatory knee instability., Competing Interests: The authors declared that they have no conflicts of interest in the authorship and publication of this contribution. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto.
- Published
- 2024
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136. Large variability in degree of constraint of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty liners between different implant systems.
- Author
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Moroder P, Herbst E, Pawelke J, Lappen S, and Schulz E
- Abstract
Aims: The liner design is a key determinant of the constraint of a reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (rTSA). The aim of this study was to compare the degree of constraint of rTSA liners between different implant systems., Methods: An implant company's independent 3D shoulder arthroplasty planning software (mediCAD 3D shoulder v. 7.0, module v. 2.1.84.173.43) was used to determine the jump height of standard and constrained liners of different sizes (radius of curvature) of all available companies. The obtained parameters were used to calculate the stability ratio (degree of constraint) and angle of coverage (degree of glenosphere coverage by liner) of the different systems. Measurements were independently performed by two raters, and intraclass correlation coefficients were calculated to perform a reliability analysis. Additionally, measurements were compared with parameters provided by the companies themselves, when available, to ensure validity of the software-derived measurements., Results: There were variations in jump height between rTSA systems at a given size, resulting in large differences in stability ratio between systems. Standard liners exhibited a stability ratio range from 126% to 214% (mean 158% (SD 23%)) and constrained liners a range from 151% to 479% (mean 245% (SD 76%)). The angle of coverage showed a range from 103° to 130° (mean 115° (SD 7°)) for standard and a range from 113° to 156° (mean 133° (SD 11°)) for constrained liners. Four arthroplasty systems kept the stability ratio of standard liners constant (within 5%) across different sizes, while one system showed slight inconsistencies (within 10%), and ten arthroplasty systems showed large inconsistencies (range 11% to 28%). The stability ratio of constrained liners was consistent across different sizes in two arthroplasty systems and inconsistent in seven systems (range 18% to 106%)., Conclusion: Large differences in jump height and resulting degree of constraint of rTSA liners were observed between different implant systems, and in many cases even within the same implant systems. While the immediate clinical effect remains unclear, in theory the degree of constraint of the liner plays an important role for the dislocation and notching risk of a rTSA system., Competing Interests: P. Moroder is a consultant and receives royalties from Arthrex and Medacta, unrelated to this study. All other authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (© 2024 Moroder et al.)
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- 2024
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137. Arthroscopic Centralization of the Medial Meniscus Reduces Load on a Posterior Root Repair Under Dynamic Varus Loading: A Biomechanical Investigation.
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Deichsel A, Peez C, Raschke MJ, Richards RG, Gueorguiev B, Zderic I, Herbst E, and Kittl C
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- Humans, Biomechanical Phenomena, Middle Aged, Aged, Male, Tibial Meniscus Injuries surgery, Knee Joint surgery, Knee Joint physiopathology, Female, Arthroscopy methods, Menisci, Tibial surgery, Cadaver, Weight-Bearing physiology
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Background: In addition to the integrity of the meniscal hoop function, both the anterior and posterior meniscus roots as well as the meniscotibial and meniscofemoral ligaments are crucial in restraining meniscal extrusion. However, the interaction and load sharing between the roots and these peripheral attachments (PAs) are not known., Purposes: To investigate the influence of an insufficiency of the PAs on the forces acting on a posterior medial meniscus root repair (PMMRR) in both neutral and varus alignment and to explore whether meniscal centralization reduces these forces., Study Design: Controlled laboratory study., Methods: In 8 fresh-frozen human cadaveric knees, an arthroscopic transosseous root repair (step 1) was performed after sectioning the posterior root of the medial meniscus. The pull-out suture was connected to a load cell to allow measurement of the forces acting on the root repair. A medial closing-wedge distal femoral osteotomy was performed to change the mechanical axis from neutral to 5° of varus alignment. The meniscus was completely released from its PAs (step 2), followed by transosseous arthroscopic centralization (step 3). Each step was tested in both neutral and varus alignment. The specimens were subjected to nondestructive dynamic varus loading under axial compression of 300 N in 0°, 15°, 30°, 45°, and 60° flexion. The changes in force acting on the PMMRR were statistically analyzed using a mixed linear model., Results: Axial loading in neutral alignment led to an increase of the force of root repair of 3.1 ± 3.1 N (in 0° flexion) to 6.3 ± 4.4 N (in 60° flexion). In varus alignment, forces increased significantly from 30° (3.5 N; 95% CI, 1.1-5.8 N; P = .01) to 60° (7.1 N; 95% CI, 2.7-11.5 N; P = .007) flexion, in comparison with neutral alignment. Cutting of the PAs in neutral alignment led to a significant increase of root repair forces in all flexion angles, from 7.0 N (95% CI, 1.0-13.0 N; P = .02) to 9.1 N (95% CI, 4.1-14.1 N; P = .003), in comparison with the intact state. Varus alignment significantly increased the forces in the cut states from 4.8 N (95% CI, 1.0-8.5 N; P = .02) to 11.1 N (95% CI, 4.2-18.0 N; P = .006) from 30° to 60° flexion, in comparison with the neutral alignment. Arthroscopic centralization led to restoration of the native forces in both neutral and varus alignment, with no significant differences between the centralized and intact states., Conclusion: An insufficiency of the PAs of the medial meniscus, as well as varus alignment, led to increased forces acting on a PMMRR. These forces were reduced via an arthroscopic meniscal centralization., Clinical Relevance: Performing arthroscopic meniscal centralization concomitantly with PMMRR may reduce failure of the repair by reducing the load of the root., Competing Interests: The authors declared that they have no conflicts of interest in the authorship and publication of this contribution. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto.
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- 2024
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138. S2k Guideline for Tibial Plateau Fractures - Classification, Diagnosis, and Treatment.
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Berninger MT, Schüttrumpf JP, Barzen S, Domnick C, Eggeling L, Fehske K, Frosch KH, Herbst E, Hoffmann R, Izadpanah K, Kösters C, Neumann-Langen M, Raschke M, Zellner J, and Krause M
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- Humans, Germany, Intersectoral Collaboration, Tibial Plateau Fractures, Tibial Fractures classification, Tibial Fractures surgery, Tibial Fractures therapy, Tibial Fractures diagnostic imaging, Tibial Fractures diagnosis
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Tibial plateau fractures are mostly complex and surgically demanding joint fractures, which require a comprehensive understanding of the fracture morphology, ligamentous and neurovascular injuries, as well as the diagnostic and therapeutic options for an optimal clinical outcome. Therefore, a standardised and structured approach is required. The success of the treatment of tibial plateau fractures relies on the interdisciplinary cooperation between surgical and conservative physicians in an outpatient and inpatient setting, physical therapists, patients and service providers (health insurance companies, statutory accident insurance, pension providers). On behalf of the German Society for Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery (DGOU), the German Trauma Society (DGU) and the Society for Arthroscopy and Joint Surgery (AGA), under the leadership of the Fracture Committee of the German Knee Society (DKG), a guideline for tibial plateau fractures was created, which was developed in several voting rounds as part of a Delphi process. Based on the current literature, this guideline is intended to make clear recommendations and outline the most important treatment steps in diagnostics, therapy and follow-up treatment. Additionally, 25 statements were revised by the authors in several survey rounds using the Likert scale in order to reach a final consensus., Competing Interests: Die Autorinnen/Autoren geben an, dass kein Interessenkonflikt besteht., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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139. Learning & motivational talk in smoking cessation interventions: An examination of session language in two randomized trials.
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Borsari B, Herbst E, Ladd BO, Delacruz J, Mastroleo N, Smith AR, Fetterling T, Poole L, Baxley C, Wu A, Jackson K, Myers M, and Catley D
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Objectives: Motivational Interviewing (MI), a client-centered approach that seeks to evoke and resolve ambivalence, and health education (HE), which provides health information and advice, may both provide some benefit to unmotivated smokers. In HE, it is possible that client language reflective of new learning, or "learning talk" (LT), and rejection of health advice, or "rejection talk," (RT), may uniquely reflect intent of subsequent behavior change., Methods: This project utilized MI and HE sessions from two randomized clinical trials (RCTs), one in a low-income, diverse community civilian sample of 255 unmotivated smokers, and the other in a sample of Veterans with mental illness who were unmotivated smokers (n = 55). Mixed methods approaches were utilized to reliably code sessions using the Motivational Interviewing Skill Code 2.5 (MISC 2.5)
1 and a refined Learning Talk coding system2 ., Results: Reliability of LT and RT codes ranged from fair to excellent (ICCs from 0.43-0.93)., Conclusion: LT appears to be a unique construct and its impact on post-session changes in smoking is warranted., Practice Implications: This system can be used in a study to code existing interventions for smokers using both MI and HE techniques and relate in-session client LT to subsequent smoking behaviors., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2024
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140. Combined PCL instabilities cannot be identified using posterior stress radiographs in external or internal rotation: A cadaveric study.
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Briese T, Riemer R, Deichsel A, Peez C, Herbst E, Glasbrenner J, Raschke MJ, and Kittl C
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Purpose: Posterior stress radiography is recommended to identify isolated or combined posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) deficiencies. The posterior drawer in internal (IR) or external rotation (ER) helps to differentiate between these combined instabilities. The purpose of this study was to evaluate posterior stress radiography (PSR) in isolated and combined PCL deficiency with IR and ER compared to PSR in neutral rotation (NR) for diagnosing combined PCL instabilities., Methods: Six paired fresh-frozen human cadaveric legs (n = 12) were mounted in a Telos device for PSR. The tibia was rotated using an attached foot apparatus capable of rotating the foot 30° internally and externally. A posterior tibial load of 15 kp (147.1 N) was applied to the tibial tubercle at 90° knee flexion, and a lateral radiograph was obtained. This was repeated with the foot in 30° IR and ER. The PCL, posterolateral complex (PLC), and posteromedial complex (PMC) were sectioned in six knees, while the PMC was sectioned before the PLC in the other six knees. Posterior tibial displacement (PTD) was measured radiographically. Statistical analysis was performed using a two-way ANOVA and a mixed model with Bonferroni correction, and the significance was set at p < 0.05. Furthermore, intra- and interobserver reliability was determined., Results: Cutting the PCL significantly increased the radiographic PTD by 9.8 ± 1.8 mm (side-to-side difference compared to the intact state of the knee, n = 12; p < 0.001). This further increased to 12.2 ± 2.3 mm (n = 6; p < 0.01) with an additional PLC deficiency and to 15.4 ± 3.4 mm (n = 6; p < 0.05) with an additional PMC deficiency. A combined PLC and PMC deficiency resulted in an increase of the PTD to 15.9 ± 4.5 mm (n = 12; p < 0.01). In the PCL/PLC deficient state, ER did not demonstrate a higher PTD, compared to the NR and IR posterior drawer. In the PCL/PMC deficient state in IR, PTD was 1.6 ± 0.7 mm (p < 0.01) higher compared to NR and 3.2 ± 1.9 mm (p < 0.05) higher compared to ER. We showed excellent intra- and interobserver reliability (0.987-0.997)., Conclusion: Combined PCL instabilities resulted in a significant increase in posterior tibial displacement in posterior stress radiographs. However, PSR in IR or ER was unable to differentiate between these combined instabilities. Based on our data, additional stress radiographs in rotation are unlikely to provide any diagnostic benefit in the clinical setting., Level of Evidence: There is no level of evidence as this study was an experimental laboratory study., (© 2024 The Author(s). Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy.)
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- 2024
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141. Analysis of postoperative complications 5 years after osteosynthesis of patella fractures-a retrospective, multicenter cohort study.
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Berninger MT, Korthaus A, Eggeling L, Herbst E, Neumann-Langen MV, Domnick C, Fehske K, Barzen S, Kösters C, Zellner J, Raschke MJ, Frosch KH, Hoffmann R, and Krause M
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- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Bone Plates, Bone Screws, Patella Fracture, Fracture Fixation, Internal adverse effects, Patella injuries, Patella surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Fractures, Bone surgery
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Purpose: The study aims to investigate the influence of patient- and fracture-specific factors on the occurrence of complications after osteosynthesis of patella fractures and to compare knee joint function, activity, and subjective pain levels after a regular postoperative course and after complications in the medium term., Methods: This retrospective, multicenter cohort study examined patients who received surgery for patella fracture at level 1 trauma centers between 2013 and 2018. Patient demographics and fracture-specific variables were evaluated. Final follow-up assessments included patient-reported pain scores (NRS), subjective activity and knee function scores (Tegner Activity Scale, Lysholm score, IKDC score), complications, and revisions., Results: A total of 243 patients with a mean follow-up of 63.4 ± 21.3 months were included. Among them, 66.9% of patients underwent tension band wiring (TBW), 19.0% received locking plate osteosynthesis (LPO), and 14.1% underwent screw osteosynthesis (SO). A total of 38 patients (15.6%) experienced complications (TBW: 16.7%; LPO: 15.2%; SO: 11.8%). Implant-related complications of atraumatic fragment dislocation and material insufficiency/dislocation, accounted for 50% of all complications, were significantly more common after TBW than LPO (p = 0.015). No patient-specific factor was identified as a general cause for increased complications. Overall, particularly following complications such as limited range of motion or traumatic refracture, functional knee scores were significantly lower and pain levels were significantly higher at the final follow-up when a complication occurred. Implant-related complications, however, achieved functional scores comparable to a regular postoperative course without complications after revision surgery., Conclusion: The present study demonstrated that implant-related complications occurred significantly more often after TBW compared to LPO. The complication rates were similar in all groups., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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142. Collateral ligament strain is linearly related to coronal lower limb alignment: A biomechanical study.
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Peez C, Hägerich LM, Ruhl F, Klimek M, Briese T, Glasbrenner J, Deichsel A, Raschke MJ, Kittl C, and Herbst E
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to analyse the influence of coronal lower limb alignment on collateral ligament strain., Methods: Twelve fresh-frozen human cadaveric knees were used. Long-leg standing radiographs were obtained to assess lower limb alignment. Specimens were axially loaded in a custom-made kinematics rig with 200 and 400 N, and dynamic varus/valgus angulation was simulated in 0°, 30°, and 60° of knee flexion. The changes in varus/valgus angulation and strain within different fibre regions of the collateral ligaments were captured using a three-dimensional optical measuring system to examine the axis-dependent strain behaviour of the superficial medial collateral ligament (sMCL) and lateral collateral ligament (LCL) at intervals of 2°., Results: The LCL and sMCL were exposed to the highest strain values at full extension (p < 0.001). Regardless of flexion angle and extent of axial loading, the ligament strain showed a strong and linear association with varus (all Pearson's r ≥ 0.98; p < 0.001) and valgus angulation (all Pearson's r ≥ -0.97; p < 0.01). At full extension and 400 N of axial loading, the anterior and posterior LCL fibres exceeded 4% ligament strain at 3.9° and 4.0° of varus, while the sMCL showed corresponding strain values of more than 4% at a valgus angle of 6.8°, 5.4° and 4.9° for its anterior, middle and posterior fibres, respectively., Conclusion: The strain within the native LCL and sMCL was linearly related to coronal lower limb alignment. Strain levels associated with potential ultrastructural damages to the ligaments of more than 4% were observed at 4° of varus and about 5° of valgus malalignment, respectively. When reconstructing the collateral ligaments, an additional realigning osteotomy should be considered in cases of chronic instability with a coronal malalignment exceeding 4°-5° to protect the graft and potentially reduce failures., Level of Evidence: There is no level of evidence as this study was an experimental laboratory study., (© 2024 The Author(s). Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy.)
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- 2024
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143. Fragment size of lateral Hoffa fractures determines screw fixation trajectory: a human cadaveric cohort study.
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Peez C, Zderic I, Deichsel A, Lodde M, Richards RG, Gueorguiev B, Kittl C, Raschke MJ, and Herbst E
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- Humans, Biomechanical Phenomena, Aged, Female, Male, Bone Density, Middle Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Bone Screws, Fracture Fixation, Internal methods, Fracture Fixation, Internal instrumentation, Cadaver, Femoral Fractures surgery
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Background and Purpose: Recommendations regarding fragment-size-dependent screw fixation trajectory for coronal plane fractures of the posterior femoral condyles (Hoffa fractures) are lacking. The aim of this study was to compare the biomechanical properties of anteroposterior (AP) and crossed posteroanterior (PA) screw fixations across differently sized Hoffa fractures on human cadaveric femora., Patients and Methods: 4 different sizes of lateral Hoffa fractures (n = 12 x 4) were created in 48 distal human femora according to the Letenneur classification: (i) type I, (ii) type IIa, (ii) type IIb, and (iv) type IIc. Based on bone mineral density (BMD), specimens were assigned to the 4 fracture clusters and each cluster was further assigned to fixation with either AP (n = 6) or crossed PA screws (n = 6) to ensure homogeneity of BMD values and comparability between the different test conditions. All specimens were biomechanically tested under progressively increasing cyclic loading until failure, capturing the interfragmentary movements via motion tracking., Results: For Letenneur type I fractures, kilocycles to failure (mean difference [∆] 2.1, 95% confidence interval [CI] -1.3 to 5.5), failure load (∆ 105 N, CI -83 to 293), axial displacement (∆ 0.3 mm, CI -0.8 to 1.3), and fragment rotation (∆ 0.5°, CI -3.2 to 2.1) over 5.0 kilocycles did not differ significantly between the 2 screw trajectories. For each separate subtype of Letenneur type II fractures, fixation with crossed PA screws resulted in significantly higher kilocycles to failure (∆ 6.7, CI 3.3-10.1 to ∆ 8.9, CI 5.5-12.3) and failure load (∆ 275 N, CI 87-463 to ∆ 438, CI 250-626), as well as, less axial displacement from 3.0 kilocycles onwards (∆ 0.4°, CI 0.03-0.7 to ∆ 0.5°, CI 0.01-0.9) compared with AP screw fixation., Conclusion: Irrespective of the size of Letenneur type II fractures, crossed PA screw fixation provided greater biomechanical stability than AP-configured screws, whereas both screw fixation techniques demonstrated comparable biomechanical competence for Letenneur type I fractures. Fragment-size-dependent treatment strategies might be helpful to determine not only the screw configuration but also the surgical approach.
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- 2024
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144. The only constant in life is change: A moment of gratitude and respect for the past and a start for the new KSSTA team!
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Hirschmann MT, Herbst E, Milano G, and Musahl V
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- Humans, Societies, Medical, Orthopedics
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- 2024
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145. Effects of transcranial direct current stimulation and sensorimotor training in anterior cruciate ligament patients: a sham-controlled pilot study.
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Reuter S, Lambert C, Schadt M, Imhoff AB, Centner C, Herbst E, Stöcker F, and Forkel P
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Motor Cortex physiology, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries physiopathology, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries rehabilitation
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Background: Studies showed changes in the central nervous system in patients who sustained an anterior cruciate ligament tear. There is a lack of evidence regarding the effectiveness of transcranial direct-current stimulation in such patients., Methods: A sham-controlled randomised study. One group of patients (n = 6) underwent 6 weeks of sensorimotor training after an anterior cruciate ligament tear during transcranial direct-current stimulation. The stimulation consisted of 20 minutes (3 sessions/week; 2 weeks) of 2 mA anodal transcranial direct-current stimulation over the primary motor and premotor cortex. The second group (n = 6) received sham stimulation with 6 weeks of sensorimotor training. Centre of pressure deviations in the medio-lateral and anterior-posterior direction and centre of pressure velocity were measured., Results: The results demonstrated a significant effect of sensorimotor training on the centre of pressure in medio-lateral and anterior-posterior direction (p=0.025) (p=0.03) in the leg in which an anterior cruciate ligament tear occurred. The type of training did not affect the results. Post-hoc tests showed no significant effect of training in the subgroups (p≥0.115)., Conclusion: Sensorimotor training led to a decrease in sway of the centre of pressure in patients who sustained an anterior cruciate ligament tear, but the addition of anodal transcranial direct-current stimulation placed over the primary motor cortex did not potentiate the adaptive responses of the sensorimotor training., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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146. A practical guide to the implementation of AI in orthopaedic research, Part 6: How to evaluate the performance of AI research?
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Oettl FC, Pareek A, Winkler PW, Zsidai B, Pruneski JA, Senorski EH, Kopf S, Ley C, Herbst E, Oeding JF, Grassi A, Hirschmann MT, Musahl V, Samuelsson K, Tischer T, and Feldt R
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Artificial intelligence's (AI) accelerating progress demands rigorous evaluation standards to ensure safe, effective integration into healthcare's high-stakes decisions. As AI increasingly enables prediction, analysis and judgement capabilities relevant to medicine, proper evaluation and interpretation are indispensable. Erroneous AI could endanger patients; thus, developing, validating and deploying medical AI demands adhering to strict, transparent standards centred on safety, ethics and responsible oversight. Core considerations include assessing performance on diverse real-world data, collaborating with domain experts, confirming model reliability and limitations, and advancing interpretability. Thoughtful selection of evaluation metrics suited to the clinical context along with testing on diverse data sets representing different populations improves generalisability. Partnering software engineers, data scientists and medical practitioners ground assessment in real needs. Journals must uphold reporting standards matching AI's societal impacts. With rigorous, holistic evaluation frameworks, AI can progress towards expanding healthcare access and quality., Level of Evidence: Level V., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy.)
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- 2024
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147. A practical guide to the implementation of artificial intelligence in orthopaedic research-Part 2: A technical introduction.
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Zsidai B, Kaarre J, Narup E, Hamrin Senorski E, Pareek A, Grassi A, Ley C, Longo UG, Herbst E, Hirschmann MT, Kopf S, Seil R, Tischer T, Samuelsson K, and Feldt R
- Abstract
Recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) present a broad range of possibilities in medical research. However, orthopaedic researchers aiming to participate in research projects implementing AI-based techniques require a sound understanding of the technical fundamentals of this rapidly developing field. Initial sections of this technical primer provide an overview of the general and the more detailed taxonomy of AI methods. Researchers are presented with the technical basics of the most frequently performed machine learning (ML) tasks, such as classification, regression, clustering and dimensionality reduction. Additionally, the spectrum of supervision in ML including the domains of supervised, unsupervised, semisupervised and self-supervised learning will be explored. Recent advances in neural networks (NNs) and deep learning (DL) architectures have rendered them essential tools for the analysis of complex medical data, which warrants a rudimentary technical introduction to orthopaedic researchers. Furthermore, the capability of natural language processing (NLP) to interpret patterns in human language is discussed and may offer several potential applications in medical text classification, patient sentiment analysis and clinical decision support. The technical discussion concludes with the transformative potential of generative AI and large language models (LLMs) on AI research. Consequently, this second article of the series aims to equip orthopaedic researchers with the fundamental technical knowledge required to engage in interdisciplinary collaboration in AI-driven orthopaedic research., Level of Evidence: Level IV., Competing Interests: Michael T. Hirschmann is a consultant for Medacta, Symbios and Depuy Synthes. Kristian Samuelsson is a member on the board of directors for Getinge AB (publ). Robert Feldt is Chief Technology Officer and founder in Accelerandium AB, a software consultancy company., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy.)
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- 2024
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148. Exposure of Hoffa Fractures Is Improved by Posterolateral and Posteromedial Extensile Approaches: A Qualitative and Quantitative Anatomical Study.
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Peez C, Deichsel A, Briese T, Gueorguiev B, Richards RG, Zderic I, Glasbrenner J, Kittl C, Raschke MJ, and Herbst E
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- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Knee Joint surgery, Middle Aged, Femur surgery, Femur anatomy & histology, Aged, 80 and over, Dissection methods, Cadaver, Femoral Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Background: The current literature lacks recommendations regarding surgical approaches to best visualize and reduce Hoffa fractures. The aims of this study were to (1) define surgical corridors to the posterior portions of the lateral and medial femoral condyles and (2) compare the articular surface areas visible with different approaches., Methods: Eight fresh-frozen human cadaveric knees (6 male and 2 female donors; mean age, 68.2 ± 10.2 years) underwent dissection simulating 6 surgical approaches to the distal femur. The visible articular surface areas for each approach were marked using an electrocautery device and subsequently analyzed using image-processing software. The labeled areas of each femoral condyle were statistically compared., Results: At 30° of flexion, visualization of the posterior portions of the lateral and medial femoral condyles was not possible by lateral and medial parapatellar approaches, as only the anterior 29.4% ± 2.1% of the lateral femoral condyle and 25.6% ± 2.8% of the medial condyle were exposed. Visualization of the lateral femoral condyle was limited by the posterolateral ligamentous structures, hence a posterolateral approach only exposed its central (13.1% ± 1.3%) and posterior (12.4% ± 1.1%) portions. Posterolateral extension by an osteotomy of the lateral femoral epicondyle significantly improved the exposure to 53.4% ± 2.7% and, when combined with a Gerdy's tubercle osteotomy, to 70.9% ± 4.1% (p < 0.001). For the posteromedial approach, an arthrotomy between the anteromedial retinaculum and the superficial medial collateral ligament, and one between the posterior oblique ligament and the medial gastrocnemius tendon, allowed visualization of the central (13.5% ± 2.2%) and the posterior (14.6% ± 2.3%) portions of the medial femoral condyle, while a medial femoral epicondyle osteotomy significantly improved visualization to 66.1% ± 5.5% (p < 0.001)., Conclusions: Visualization of the posterior portions of the femoral condyles is limited by the specific anatomy of each surgical corridor. Extension by osteotomy of the femoral epicondyles and Gerdy's tubercle significantly improved articular surface exposure of the femoral condyles., Clinical Relevance: Knowledge of the surgical approach-specific visualization of the articular surface of the femoral condyles might be helpful to properly reduce small Hoffa fragments., Competing Interests: Disclosure: No external funding was received for this work. The Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest forms are provided with the online version of the article ( http://links.lww.com/JBJS/H882 )., (Copyright © 2024 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated.)
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- 2024
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149. Biomechanical Stability of Third-Generation Adjustable Suture Loop Devices Versus Continuous Loop Button Device for Cortical Fixation of ACL Tendon Grafts.
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Deichsel A, Leibrandt L, Raschke MJ, Klimek M, Oeckenpöhler S, Herbst E, Kittl C, and Glasbrenner J
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Background: Concerns regarding the primary stability of early adjustable loop button (ALB) devices for cortical fixation of tendon grafts in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) have led to the development of new implant designs., Purpose: To evaluate biomechanical stability of recent ALB implants in comparison with a continuous loop button (CLB) device., Study Design: Controlled laboratory study., Methods: ACLR was performed in a porcine model (n = 40) using 2-strand porcine flexor tendons with a diameter of 8 mm. Three ALB devices (Infinity Button [ALB1 group]; Tightrope II RT [ALB2 group]; A-TACK [ALB3 group]) and 1 CLB device (FlippTack with polyethylene suture) were used for cortical tendon graft fixation. Cyclic loading (1000 cycles up to 250 N) with complete unloading were applied to the free end of the tendon graft using a uniaxial testing machine, followed by load to failure. Elongation, stiffness, yield load, and ultimate failure load were recorded and compared between the groups using a Kruskal-Wallis test with post hoc Dunn correction., Results: Elongation after 1000 cycles at 250 N was similar between groups (ALB1, 4.5 ± 0.7 mm; ALB2, 4.8 ± 0.8 mm; ALB3, 4.5 ± 0.6 mm; CLB, 4.5 ± 0.8 mm), as was load to failure (ALB1, 838 ± 109 N; ALB2, 930 ± 89 N; ALB3, 809 ± 103 N; CLB, 842 ± 80 N). Stiffness was significantly higher in the ALB1 group compared with the CLB group (262.3 ± 21.6 vs 229.3 ± 15.1 N/mm; P < .05). No significant difference was found between the 4 groups regarding yield load. Constructs failed either by rupture of the loop, breakage of the button, or rupture of the tendon., Conclusion: The tested third-generation ALB devices for cortical fixation in ACLR withstood cyclic loading with complete unloading without significant differences to a CLB device., Clinical Relevance: The third-generation ALB devices tested in the present study provided biomechanical stability comparable with that of a CLB device. Furthermore, ultimate failure loads of all tested implants exceeded the loads expected to occur in the postoperative period after ACLR., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that there are no conflicts of interest in the authorship and publication of this contribution. AOSSM checks author disclosures against the Open Payments Database (OPD). AOSSM has not conducted an independent investigation on the OPD and disclaims any liability or responsibility relating thereto., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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150. Valgus malalignment causes increased forces on a medial collateral ligament reconstruction under dynamic valgus loading: A biomechanical study.
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Peez C, Deichsel A, Zderic I, Richards RG, Gueorguiev B, Kittl C, Raschke MJ, and Herbst E
- Subjects
- Humans, Cadaver, Knee Joint surgery, Biomechanical Phenomena, Hamstring Tendons, Collateral Ligaments surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the forces on a medial collateral ligament (MCL) reconstruction (MCLR) relative to the valgus alignment of the knee., Methods: Eight fresh-frozen human cadaveric knees were subjected to dynamic valgus loading at 400 N using a custom-made kinematics rig. After resection of the superficial medial collateral ligament, a single-bundle MCLR with a hamstring tendon autograft was performed. A medial opening wedge distal femoral osteotomy was performed and fixed with an external fixator to gradually adjust the alignment in 5° increments from 0° to 10° valgus. For each degree of valgus deformity, the resulting forces acting on the MCLR were measured through a force sensor and captured in 15° increments from 0° to 60° of knee flexion., Results: Irrespective of the degree of knee flexion, increasing valgus malalignment resulted in significantly increased forces acting on the MCLR compared to neutral alignment (p < 0.05). Dynamic loading at 5° valgus resulted in increased forces on the MCLR at all flexion angles ranging between 16.2 N and 18.5 N (p < 0.05 from 0° to 30°; p < 0.01 from 45° to 60°). A 10° valgus malalignment further increased the forces on the MCLR at all flexion angles ranging between 29.4 N and 40.0 N (p < 0.01 from 0° to 45°, p < 0.05 at 60°)., Conclusion: Valgus malalignment of the knee caused increased forces acting on the reconstructed MCL. In cases of chronic medial instabilities accompanied by a valgus deformity ≥ 5°, a realigning osteotomy should be considered concomitantly to the MCLR to protect the graft and potentially reduce graft failures., Level of Evidence: Level III., (© 2024 European Society of Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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