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JBJS welcomes reader comments on published articles. Letters to the Editor are reviewed by JBJS editors but are not peer-reviewed. To submit your letter, please follow the "submit a response" link that appears in the content box at the upper right of the full text of the article.
Letters to the Editor to:
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- Scientific Articles:
Christopher P. Chiodo, Jorge I. Acevedo, V. James Sammarco, Brent G. Parks, Henry R. Boucher, Mark S. Myerson, and Lew C. Schon
- Intramedullary Rod Fixation Compared with Blade-Plate-and-Screw Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis: A Biomechanical Investigation
J Bone Joint Surg Am 2003; 85: 2425-2428
[Abstract]
[Full text]
[PDF]
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Electronic letters published:
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Intaramedullary Rod versus Blade Plate Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis
- Konrad Mader, Thomas Gausepohl, Dietmar Pennig
(14 June 2004)
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Dr. Schon responds to Dr. Mader, et al.
- Lew C. Schon, M.D., Christopher P. Chiodo, MD, Jorge I. Acevedo, MD, V. James Sammarco, MD, Brent G. Parks, MSc, Harry R. Boucher, MD, and Mark S. Myerson, MD.
(14 June 2004)
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Dr. Schon responds:
- Lew C Schon, Christopher P. Chiodo, Jorge I. Acevedo, V. James Sammarco, Brent G. Parks, Henry R. Boucher, and Mark S. Myerson.
(10 February 2004)
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Intra-Medullary Rod versus Blade-Plate and Screw Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis
- Stuart D. Miller, M.D.
(10 February 2004)
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Intaramedullary Rod versus Blade Plate Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis |
14 June 2004 |
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Konrad Mader, Surgeon St. Vinzenz- Hospital, Cologne, Germany, Thomas Gausepohl, Dietmar Pennig
Send letter to journal:
Re: Intaramedullary Rod versus Blade Plate Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis
k.mader{at}ndh.net Konrad Mader, et al.
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To the Editor:
We read with great interest the biomechanical investigation by Chiodo et al.
The authors concluded that a blade-plate with a
supplemental screw in the sagittal plane provides a stiffer construct than
does intramedullary fixation.
We think that two issues are problematic in the experimental technique and may
have influenced the results of the investigation in favour of the blade-
plate.
The intramedullary rod (DePuy/ACE, Warsaw, Indiana)
is made of titanium, while the humeral blade-plate (Synthes, Paoli,
Pennsylvania) is a stainless steel implant. The use of two different
implant materials with different metallurgic compositions and differing
biomechanical load and fatigue characteristics may influence the loading
stiffness in the experimental setup. This potential error could have been
easily avoided by using implants of identical material.
The inferior
fatigue resistance of titanium was demonstrated clearly by Vallittu and
and Kokkonen(1).
Banovetz et al. have shown in a clinical setting that titanium implants have a higher rate of
implant failure than those made of stainless steel because of titanium's lower fatigue strength. (2)
In this study, locking of the intramedullary implant was performed with two interlocking
bolts placed from medial to lateral in the os calcis and talus. Mann et al. have
demonstrated in a biomechanical study that a posterior-to-anterior (PA)
calcaneal interlocking screw increases the stiffness of a retrograde
arthrodesis nail used for tibiotalocalcaneal fusion when compared with the standard
lateral-to-medial (transverse) screw(3). In
accordance with these biomechanical results a retrograde arthrodesis nail
with PA locking in talus, os calcis and tibia was prospectively studied
clinically with a high union rate and no implant failure occured (4).
In the blade-plate group, a supplementary screw was inserted in the
sagital plane. This supplementary screw might have significantly
influenced the results in favour of the afore- mentioned implant.
>P>We would therefore recommend that a study be performed that uses identical implant
materials and locking of the intramedullary nail in a PA direction in order to elucidate
the fatigue characteristics of the implants when tested in an experimental
setup with optimum biomechanical prerequisites. A recommendation to use a
blade-plate construct can not be made from the data presented in this article.
K. Mader, MD
T. Gausepohl, MD
D. Pennig, MD, PhD
Department of Trauma Surgery, Hand
And Reconstructive Surgery
St. Vinzenz- Hospital, Cologne
Germany
k.mader@ndh.net
References
1. Vallittu PK, Kokkonen M.
Deflection fatigue of cobalt-chromium, titanium, and gold alloy cast
denture clasp. J Prosthet Dent. 1995 Oct;74(4):412-9.
2. Banovetz JM, Sharp R, Probe RA, Anglen JO.
Titanium plate fixation: a review of implant failures. J Orth Trauma 1996;
10: 389-394.
3. Mann MR, Parks BG, Pak SS, Miller SD.
Tibiotalocalcaneal arthrodesis: A biomechanical analysis of the rotational
stability of the Biomet ankle arthrodesis nail. Foot Ankle 2001;22:731-3.
4. Mader K, Pennig D, Gausepohl T, Patsalis T.
Calcaneotalotibial arthrodesis with a retrograde posterior-to-anterior
locked nail as a salvage procedure for severe ankle pathology. J Bone
Joint Surg Am. 2003 (Suppl. 4):123-8. |
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Dr. Schon responds to Dr. Mader, et al. |
14 June 2004 |
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Lew C. Schon, M.D. Dept. of Orthopaedics, Union Memorial Hosp., 3333 N. Calvert St., #400, Baltimore, MD 21218, Christopher P. Chiodo, MD, Jorge I. Acevedo, MD, V. James Sammarco, MD, Brent G. Parks, MSc, Harry R. Boucher, MD, and Mark S. Myerson, MD.
Send letter to journal:
Re: Dr. Schon responds to Dr. Mader, et al.
lyn.camire{at}medstar.net Lew C. Schon, M.D., et al.
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To the Editor:
>Drs. Mader and colleagues raise a valid point about the
need to use identical materials in tests such as those in our study. The intramedullary rod and humeral
blade plate used in our study were both titanium, but we did not specify the material of the
humeral blade plate in the paper. The Synthes blade plate was titanium,
and thus our data were obtained using identical materials.
>In the study by Mann et al., one posterior-anterior screw was
compared with one lateral-medial screw in terms of rotational stiffness
only. They did not test the constructs under dorsiflexion, and there was
no control for osteopenia. Further, these investigators used one screw
distally as opposed to the standard clinical protocol of two screws in
tibiocalcaneal arthrodesis and three screws in tibiotalocalcaneal
arthrodesis. Our study looked at rotation, dorsiflexion, and, for the
first time, fatigue loading using a true tibiotalocalcaneal fusion model
with a full complement of screws and an evaluation of bone density. We
followed the clinical protocol for intramedullary rod insertion with a
first generation nail, which reflected the standard protocol at the time
of the study.
>We agree that use of the supplementary screw may have influenced
the results in favor of the blade plate. We used this construct because
that was our clinical technique. This screw is easier to insert with a
blade and more difficult with a rod, and thus we have not used the
supplementary screw with the rod clinically. We didn't consider this
appropriate to test because it is not practical clinically, and we don't
know of any surgeon using this technique. We are currently investigating
posterior-anterior versus lateral-medial screw fixation with an
intramedullary rod and other variations of technique such as use of a
supplementary screw.
>Drs. Mader et al. have done a clinical study on results using an
intramedullary rod with posterior to anterior screw fixation. Further
comparative clinical studies like theirs will be helpful in further
illuminating the differences among available techniques. |
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Dr. Schon responds: |
10 February 2004 |
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Lew C Schon, Attending physician, Director Foot and Ankle Service Union Memorial Hospital, Orthopaedics, Christopher P. Chiodo, Jorge I. Acevedo, V. James Sammarco, Brent G. Parks, Henry R. Boucher, and Mark S. Myerson.
Send letter to journal:
Re: Dr. Schon responds:
lyn.camire{at}medstar.net Lew C Schon, et al.
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We appreciate the correspondence from Dr. Miller in response to our
article.
The results of Dr. Miller’s study had not yet been published at the
time our study was initiated, and the results with the “second-generation”
nail he mentions were not yet available to us. However, we are not
certain such data would have led us to change our design for this study
because many surgeons were using so-called “first-generation” nails at the
time of our study and many continue to use these nails today.
As Dr. Miller points out, he compared rod fixation with anterior-
posterior distal screws against rod fixation with medial-lateral distal
screws only with regard to rotational strength. A study comparing
dorsiflexion and plantarflexion strength with these two screw orientations
is currently under way in our laboratory.
Alhough this point is not related to our study, we believe that the use of
supplemental posterior-to-anterior screws placed outside of a nail cannot
be recommended in the clinical setting. With an appropriately sized rod,
we find that there is insufficient room for use of such screws. Future
studies by others may establish more data on this topic.
Sincerely,
Lew C. Schon, M.D. |
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Intra-Medullary Rod versus Blade-Plate and Screw Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis |
10 February 2004 |
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Stuart D. Miller, M.D., Orthopedic Surgeon Foot and Ankle Service, Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore, MD 21218
Send letter to journal:
Re: Intra-Medullary Rod versus Blade-Plate and Screw Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis
STUBONEDOC{at}AL.COM Stuart D. Miller, M.D.
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December 19, 2003
To the Editor:
I was confused by the article “Intramedullary Rod Fixation Compared
with Blade-Plate-and-Screw Fixation for Tibiotalocalcaneal Arthrodesis: A
Biomechanical Investigation” (2003;85:2425-2428) by Chiodo et al. While
the study was well done and the analysis excellent, the editorial
reviewers certainly should have questioned the basic parameters of the
experimental design. Why did the investigators choose a first-generation
intramedullary nail for testing, when the same lab previously demonstrated
that the second-generation design, with a posterior-anterior distal
locking screw instead of a lateral to medial screw, was 40% stronger in rotational strength (1)
The other difficult element of this testing was the addition of a
posterior-to-anterior screw for augmentation of ankle fusion for the blade
plate. Dr. Myerson has advocated this screw for augmentation of
intramedullary nail fixation as well (personal communication). Why didn't the
investigators add a similar screw to the intramedullary nail construct
and measure the increase in fixation?
I have used one screw to augment my
intramedullary nail arthrodesis and have even managed two screws from the
calcaneus into the distal tibia to further augment fixation. In the
bench-testing situation where the joint surfaces are not debrided and
prepared, I would assume that the screw plays an even more important role
in stabilizing the joint.
My concerns are noted here because readers might assume that the
blade plate is stronger than the intramedullary nail on the basis of this experiment which was
limited to the blade-plate-and-screw construct versus an early design of
intramedullary nail. A modern nail design and the addition of a calcaneal-
tibial screw might make the intramedullary-nail-and-screw fixation
comparable to the blade-plate-and-screw fixation.
Sincerely,
Stuart D. Miller, M.D.
Foot and Ankle Service
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Union Memorial Hospital
Baltimore, Maryland 21218
Note: Dr. Miller is one of the designers and developers of the Biomet
Ankle Arthrodesis Nail and receives royalties from its sale
references
1.Mann, M.R., Parks, B.G., Pak, S.S., and Miller,
S.D., “Tibiocalcaneal Arthrodesis: A Biomechanical Analysis of the
Rotational Stability of the Biomet Ankle Arthrodesis Nail” Foot and Ankle
International, 22(9): 731-733, 2001.) |
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