The authors reviewed 65 Insall-Burstein (Zimmer, Warsaw, IN) total condylar posterior-stabilized knee prostheses in 50 patients with rheumatoid arthritis with a follow-up period of at least 5 years (range, 5-13 years). Forty-two knees in 31 patients were evaluated using the Knee Society knee and functional rating scores. Radiographic assessment was performed using standing long radiographs (hip to ankle). Radiolucent lines were studied using fluoroscopic-centered views. Excellent or good clinical results were obtained in 95\% of the cases, and the average knee score improved from 22.5 to 90 points. No cases of radiologic loosening were observed. Incomplete radiolucent lines around the tibial component were detected in only 17\% and were nonprogressive. Two patients developed hematogenous late deep infection, which required removal of the prosthesis in both, followed, at a second stage, by arthrodesis in one and prosthesis reimplantation in the other. Three knees (7\%) had a painful impingement of the patella. Two of these were successfully reoperated with arthroscopic debridement of the peripatellar synovial tissues. Survivorship analysis, based on endpoints such as prosthesis removal for any cause or radiologic loosening (complete radiolucent line thicker than 1 mm, tilt, or subsidence of the component), showed a cumulative success rate of 96.2\% at 13 years.
Insall-Burstein posterior-stabilized knee prosthesis in rheumatoid arthritis / P. Aglietti;R. Buzzi;F. Segoni;G. Zaccherotti. - In: THE JOURNAL OF ARTHROPLASTY. - ISSN 0883-5403. - STAMPA. - 10:(1995), pp. 217-225.
Insall-Burstein posterior-stabilized knee prosthesis in rheumatoid arthritis.
AGLIETTI, PAOLO;BUZZI, ROBERTO;
1995
Abstract
The authors reviewed 65 Insall-Burstein (Zimmer, Warsaw, IN) total condylar posterior-stabilized knee prostheses in 50 patients with rheumatoid arthritis with a follow-up period of at least 5 years (range, 5-13 years). Forty-two knees in 31 patients were evaluated using the Knee Society knee and functional rating scores. Radiographic assessment was performed using standing long radiographs (hip to ankle). Radiolucent lines were studied using fluoroscopic-centered views. Excellent or good clinical results were obtained in 95\% of the cases, and the average knee score improved from 22.5 to 90 points. No cases of radiologic loosening were observed. Incomplete radiolucent lines around the tibial component were detected in only 17\% and were nonprogressive. Two patients developed hematogenous late deep infection, which required removal of the prosthesis in both, followed, at a second stage, by arthrodesis in one and prosthesis reimplantation in the other. Three knees (7\%) had a painful impingement of the patella. Two of these were successfully reoperated with arthroscopic debridement of the peripatellar synovial tissues. Survivorship analysis, based on endpoints such as prosthesis removal for any cause or radiologic loosening (complete radiolucent line thicker than 1 mm, tilt, or subsidence of the component), showed a cumulative success rate of 96.2\% at 13 years.I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.