Background: Traditional methods for correcting a severe varus and flexion deformity of the knee during total knee arthroplasty can often lead to excessive release of the medial collateral ligament, hematoma formation, and reliance on constrained implants. The "inside-out" technique for correction of varus deformities involves performing a posteromedial capsulotomy at the level of the tibial cut and incising the superficial medial collateral ligament in a pie-crust manner in extension followed by serial manipulations with valgus stress. Our hypothesis was that this technique effectively corrects severe knee varus and flexion deformity with a reduced risk of complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Early reports on modern ceramic-on-ceramic total hip replacements have demonstrated excellent clinical and radiographic results with few cases of catastrophic failure, which, in the case of earlier designs, often had been caused by implant fracture. Several reports, however, have noted the presence of audible squeaking. The purpose of the present study was to determine the incidence of squeaking in association with the use of this bearing couple.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Improvements in pain management techniques in the last decade have had a major impact on the practice of total hip and knee arthroplasty (THA and TKA). Although there are a number of treatment options for postoperative pain, a gold standard has not been established. However, there appears to be a shift towards multimodal approaches using regional anesthesia to minimize narcotic consumption and to avoid narcotic-related side effects.
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