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Institution

Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre

HealthcareOxford, United Kingdom
About: Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre is a healthcare organization based out in Oxford, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Arthroplasty. The organization has 2082 authors who have published 2920 publications receiving 145718 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that Osteoset T is helpful in the management of patients with chronic osteomyelitis, but the filling of the defect in bone is variable and prolonged wound ooze is usually self-limiting and not associated with recurrent infection.
Abstract: We report our experience using a biodegradable calcium sulphate antibiotic carrier containing tobramycin in the surgical management of patients with chronic osteomyelitis. The patients were reviewed to determine the rate of recurrent infection, the filling of bony defects, and any problems with wound healing. A total of 193 patients (195 cases) with a mean age of 46.1 years (16.1 to 82.0) underwent surgery. According to the Cierny-Mader classification of osteomyelitis there were 12 type I, 1 type II, 144 type III and 38 type IV cases. The mean follow-up was 3.7 years (1.3 to 7.1) with recurrent infection occurring in 18 cases (9.2%) at a mean of 10.3 months post-operatively (1 to 25.0). After further treatment the infection resolved in 191 cases (97.9%). Prolonged wound ooze (longer than two weeks post-operatively) occurred in 30 cases (15.4%) in which there were no recurrent infection. Radiographic assessment at final follow-up showed no filling of the defect with bone in 67 (36.6%), partial filling in 108 (59.0%) and complete filling in eight (4.4%). A fracture occurred in nine (4.6%) of the treated osteomyelitic segments at a mean of 1.9 years (0.4 to 4.9) after operation. We conclude that Osteoset T is helpful in the management of patients with chronic osteomyelitis, but the filling of the defect in bone is variable. Prolonged wound ooze is usually self-limiting and not associated with recurrent infection.

174 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that histological evidence of osteonecrosis is a common finding in failed resurfaced hips and is likely to play a role in the causation of these fractures.
Abstract: We present the histological findings of bone retrieved from beneath the femoral components of failed metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasties. Of a total of 377 patients who underwent resurfacing arthroplasty, 13 required revision; for fracture of the femoral neck in eight, loosening of a component in three and for other reasons in two. None of these cases had shown histological evidence of osteonecrosis in the femoral bone at the time of the initial implantation. Bone from the remnant of the femoral head showed changes of osteonecrosis in all but one case at revision. In two cases of fracture which occurred within a week of implantation, the changes were compatible with early necrosis of the edge of the fracture. In the remaining six fractures, there were changes of established osteonecrosis. In all but one of the non-fracture cases, patchy osteonecrosis was seen. We conclude that histological evidence of osteonecrosis is a common finding in failed resurfaced hips. Given that osteonecrosis is extensive in resurfaced femoral heads which fail by fracture, it is likely to play a role in the causation of these fractures.

173 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Aug 1999-Bone
TL;DR: The potentials for using osteogenic stem cells and biomaterials in orthopedics for skeletal healing is immense, and work in this area is likely to expand significantly in the future.

171 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 1995-Bone
TL;DR: The diffusion chamber is validated as an experimental system to study human osteogenesis using appropriately primed cell populations based on the results of this study on human osteoprogenitor cell populations derived from trabecular bone explants or marrow suspensions.

171 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A meta-analysis combining data from the UK and the Netherlands with the three published studies of Europe and Asia provides strong evidence of a positive association of the GDF5 SNP with knee OA for Europeans as well as for Asians.
Abstract: We have performed a meta-analysis combining data for over 11,000 individuals. It provides compelling evidence for a positive association between a functional SNP in the 5' UTR of GDF5 (+104T/C; rs143383) and osteoarthritis (OA) in European and Asian populations. This SNP has recently been reported to be associated with OA in Japanese and Han Chinese populations. Attempts to replicate this association in European samples have been inconclusive as no association was found in the case-control cohorts from the UK, Spain and Greece when studied individually. However, the pooled data of UK and Spain found an association of the T-allele with an odds ratio (OR) 1.10. Whilst the European studies had adequate power to replicate the original findings from the Japanese cohort (OR = 1.79), these results suggest that the role of the GDF5 polymorphism may not be as strong in Europeans. To clarify whether the European studies were hampered by insufficient power we combined new data from the UK and the Netherlands with the three published studies of Europe and Asia. The results provide strong evidence of a positive association of the GDF5 SNP with knee OA for Europeans as well as for Asians. The combined association for both ethnic groups is highly significant for the allele frequency model (P = 0.0004, OR = 1.21) and the dominant model (P <0.0001, OR = 1.48). These findings represent the first highly significant evidence for a risk factor for the development of OA which affects two highly diverse ethnic groups.

171 citations


Authors

Showing all 2120 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Douglas G. Altman2531001680344
George Davey Smith2242540248373
Cyrus Cooper2041869206782
James J. Collins15166989476
Richard J.H. Smith118130861779
Andrew Carr11184254974
Paul Dieppe10561853529
Matthew A. Brown10374859727
David W. Murray9769943372
Ray Fitzpatrick9547740322
Derrick W. Crook9247429885
Richard W Morris9151935165
Richard J. K. Taylor91154343893
Sharon J. Peacock9049433352
Derick T Wade9039837413
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202315
202246
2021138
2020129
2019126
2018110