1.Arthroscopic patelloplasty and circumpatellar denervation for the treatment of patellofemoral osteoarthritis.
Gang ZHAO ; Yujie LIU ; Bangtuo YUAN ; Xuezhen SHEN ; Feng QU ; Jiangtao WANG ; Wei QI ; Juanli ZHU ; Yang LIU
Chinese Medical Journal 2015;128(1):79-84
BACKGROUNDPatellofemoral osteoarthritis commonly occurs in older people, often resulting in anterior knee pain and severely reduced quality of life. The aim was to examine the effectiveness of arthroscopic patelloplasty and circumpatellar denervation for the treatment of patellofemoral osteoarthritis (PFOA).
METHODSA total of 156 PFOA patients (62 males, 94 females; ages 45-81 years, mean 66 years) treated in our department between September 2012 and March 2013 were involved in this study. Clinical manifestations included recurrent swelling and pain in the knee joint and aggravated pain upon ascending/descending stairs, squatting down, or standing up. PFOA was treated with arthroscopic patelloplasty and circumpatellar denervation. The therapeutic effects before and after surgery were statistically evaluated using Lysholm and Kujala scores. The therapeutic effects were graded by classification of the degree of cartilage defect.
RESULTSA total of 149 cases were successfully followed up for 14.8 months, on average. The incisions healed well, and no complications occurred. After surgery, the average Lysholm score improved from 73.29 to 80.93, and the average Kujala score improved from 68.34 to 76.48. This procedure was highly effective for patients with cartilage defects I-III but not for patients with cartilage defect IV.
CONCLUSIONSFor PFOA patients, this procedure is effective for significantly relieving anterior knee pain, improving knee joint function and quality of life, and deferring arthritic progression.
Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Cartilage, Articular ; innervation ; surgery ; Denervation ; methods ; Humans ; Knee Joint ; innervation ; surgery ; Middle Aged ; Osteoarthritis, Knee ; surgery ; Patellofemoral Joint ; innervation ; surgery ; Quality of Life
2.The value of 3 dimensional-fat suppression-spoiled gradient-recalled acquisition sequence on single compartment osteoarthritis for unicompartmental arthroplasty preoperative assessment.
Gang ZHAO ; Yujie LIU ; Email: LIUYUJIE301@163.COM. ; Feng QU ; Bangtuo YUAN ; Jiangtao WANG ; Xuezhen SHEN ; Hongliang LI ; Xi LU ; Qi GUO ; Wei QI ; Yang LIU ; Juanli ZHU
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2015;53(7):528-532
OBJECTIVETo analyze the 3 dimensional-fat suppression-spoiled gradient-recalled acquisition (3D-FS-SPGR) sequence in the diagnosis of knee articular cartilage injury.
METHODSA total of 56 knee osteoarthritis patients (26 males, 30 females, ages 52-73 years, mean 61.8 years) treated in Department of Orthopedics, Chinese People's Liberation Army General Hospital between June 2013 and May 2014 were involved in this study. All patients underwent knee MRI, plus 3D-FS-SPGR sequence, arthroscopic exploration, and in contrast to the results of MRI results analysis, evaluation 3D-FS-SPGR and conventional sequence of cartilage damage consistent with the arthroscopic accuracy.
RESULTSDivided 56 knee joints into 336 cartilage articular surface, included 55.1% normal articular surface, 21.4% early osteoarthritis and 23.5% advanced osteoarthritis. The accordance of 3D-FS-SPGR sequence grading and arthroscopic was 90.2%. The sensitivity of 3D-FS-SPGR sequence was 93.1%, specificity was 98.3%, and Kappa value was 0.849. The sensitivity of T2WI sequence was 84.4%, specificity was 96.9%, and the Kappa value was 0.671.
CONCLUSIONFor unicompartment osteoarthritis , MRI 3D-FS-SPGR sequence is effective in sensitivity and specificity of cartilage damage.
Aged ; Arthroplasty ; Arthroscopy ; Cartilage, Articular ; Female ; Humans ; Knee Injuries ; diagnosis ; Knee Joint ; physiopathology ; surgery ; Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; methods ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Orthopedic Procedures ; Osteoarthritis, Knee ; surgery ; Preoperative Care ; Sensitivity and Specificity