Objective To summarize the characteristic manifestations in the middle and old aged people with meniscus injury and the outcome of the treatment under the arthroscope. Methods Fifty-two patients, aged 52-58 years, with meniscus injury to a total of 57 knee joints, were diagnosed and treated under the arthroscope. The history of their knee diseases was 1-21 years. Horizontal tearsoccurred in 19 knee joints, degenerative tears in 13 knee joints, complex tears in 9 knee joints, longitudinal tears in 5 knee joints, oblique tears in 4 knee joints, radial tears in 4 knee joints, and flap tears in 3 knee joints. Three meniscus tears were sutured and 54 meniscus tears were cut fully or partly under thearthroscope. Results All the postoperative patients were followed up for 6-15 months, and the average follow-up period after operation was 9 months. According to the DONG Tianxiang’s standards for the therapy under the arthroscope, the excellent result was achieved in 39 knee joints, good in 12 knee joints, and fair in 6 knee joints, with no failure. The excellent and good rate was 89.5%. Conclusion The clinical manifestations of meniscus injury are not typical in the middle and old aged people. The therapeutic effect with the help of the arthroscope is satisfactory with an advantage of minimal traumatic invasiveness to the knee joint.
ObjectiveTo summarize the effectiveness of limited orthopedic surgery combined with external fixation for the treatment of lower extremity sequelae of middle and old aged post-poliomyelitis, and then to explore the strategy of surgical correction and functional reconstruction method.MethodsFrom the database of 23 310 cases of poliomyelitis sequelae treated by QIN Sihe Orthopaedic Surgical team between September 1982 and December 2017, 629 patients over 41 years old were retrieved and the epidemiological characteristics of the patients were analyzed. Between March 2011 and June 2015, 57 patients with poliomyelitis sequelae treated with limited operation and external fixation were followed up 2-6 years, and the history of poliomyelitis sequelae was 41-67 years (mean, 47.1 years). Preoperative histopathological gait included 29 cases of quadriceps gait, 17 cases of walking with crutch, and 11 cases of claudication only. The operative methods included Achilles tendon lengthening in 52 cases, supracondylar osteotomy in 39 cases, knee flexion release in 36 cases, calcaneal arthrodesis in 27 cases, flexion and hip arthrodesis in 21 cases, tibia and fibula osteotomy in 19 cases, triple arthrodesis in 11 cases, and tendon transposition in 1 case. After operation, 18 cases were treated with combined external fixator and 39 cases with Ilizarov ring external fixator.ResultsOf the 629 cases, 481 cases were less than 50 years old (76.47%), accounting for 144 cases between 51 and 65 years old (22.89%). Among them, 495 cases (78.70%) were diagnosed after 2003. Of the 57 patients obtained complete follow-up information, 7 had slight infection of needle path during traction orthopaedics, 2 had early postoperative venous thrombosis of lower extremities, and 2 had incomplete paralysis of the common peroneal nerve. There was no complications such as skin incision infection, vascular injury, and bone nonunion. According to the evaluation standard of postoperative efficacy standard in correction of lower extremity deformities, the results were excellent in 23 cases, good in 20 cases, fair in 12 cases, and poor in 2 cases, with an excellent and good rate of 75.44%. The 2 patients with poor effectiveness were reoperated to improve their function.ConclusionLimited orthopedic surgery combined with external fixation for the treatment of lower extremity sequelae of middle and old aged post-poliomyelitis can effectively correct deformities of lower limbs, improve function, delay the disability aggravated by decay, and avoid serious complications.
ObjectiveTo investigate the influence of mechanical and biological valves on clinical benefits of elderly patients with valvular heart disease.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed the clinical data of 280 elderly patients with valvular heart disease treated by valve replacement between 2008 and 2014 year. The patients were divided into two groups by tendency score matching including a group A with biological valves and a group B with mechanical valves. Finally, there were 96 patients in each group. There were 43 males and 53 females at age of 64.41±6.52 years in the group A, 44 males and 52 females at age of 64.07±6.20 years in the group B.ResultsThe bleeding rate of skin and mucosa of the group B was significantly higher than that of the group A (P<0.05). There was no statistical difference in mortality within 30 days after operation, all-cause mortality, re-hospitalization rate, re-valve replacement rate, combined atrial flutter/atrial fibrillation ratio, drug use, incidence of cerebral infarction, cerebral hemorrhage, new peripheral vascular embolism and visceral hemorrhage, heart function (NYHA) classification, the cumulative survival rate of all the patients during follow-up (P=0.63), or the cumulative survival rate of the patients with no thrombus/hemorrhage (P=0.75) between the two groups (P>0.05).ConclusionMechanical valve replacement and bioprosthetic valve replacement in the treatment of valvular heart disease in the elderly can achieve similar clinical benefits and both have clinical application value.
ObjectiveTo compare the complications of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) between aortic valve stenosis (AS) patients ≥90 years and patients <90 years, and to explore the efficacy and safety of TAVR in AS patients ≥90 years.MethodsDatabases including PubMed, The Cochrane Library, EMbase, Medline, CNKI, Wanfang Data and China Biology Medicine disc (CBMdisc) were searched by computer from inception to May 2019. Two reviewers independently screened the literature, extracted the data and evaluated the quality of the included studies. RevMan 5.3 and Stata 15.0 were used for meta-analysis.ResultsA total of 12 cohort studies were included, including60 186 patients (11 350 patients ≥90 years and 48 836 patients <90 years). Meta-analysis showed that compared with the patients <90 years, those ≥90 years had higher all-cause mortality in the hospital (OR=1.51, 95%CI 1.37 to 1.66, P<0.000 01),on postoperative 30 d (OR=1.68, 95%CI 1.50 to 1.89, P<0.000 01) and at postoperative 1 year (OR=1.36, 95%CI 1.25 to 1.48, P<0.000 01), and had higher incidence of stroke (OR=1.31, 95%CI 1.18 to 1.46, P<0.000 01), bleeding events (OR=1.14, 95%CI 1.07 to 1.20, P<0.000 01) and vascular complications (OR=1.31, 95%CI 1.18 to 1.46, P<0.000 01). ConclusionAll-cause mortality and the incidence of some complications after TAVR in AS patients ≥90 years are higher than those in patients <90 years, but this difference is clinically acceptable. Therefore, TAVR treatment is safe and effective for elderly patients.
ObjectiveTo systematically review the prevalence of osteoarthritis in Chinese aged 40 and above from January 2000 to December 2019.MethodsPubMed, ScienceDirect, Wiley Online Library, The Cochrane Library, CBM, VIP, CNKI and WanFang Data databases were electronically searched to collect cross-sectional studies on osteoarthritis in Chinese aged 40 and above from January 1st, 2000 to December 31st, 2019. Two reviewers independently screened literature, extracted data and assessed risk of bias of included studies. Meta-analysis was then performed using R 3.5.2 software.ResultsA total of 29 cross-sectional studies with a total sample of 60 711 cases and 19 707 patients were included. The results of meta-analysis showed that, the crude prevalence of osteoarthritis in Chinese aged 40 and over was 38.46% (95%CI 24.31% to 46.22%). Subgroup analysis results showed that the prevalence of lumbar osteoarthritis was the highest (24.79%, 95%CI 13.28% to 27.37%), followed by knee osteoarthritis prevalence (20.50%, 95%CI 14.51% to 27.23%) which increased with age. The prevalence of knee osteoarthritis in females (25.14%, 95%CI 19.54% to 31.19%) was higher than that in males (18.99%, 95%CI 13.86% to 24.71%). The prevalence of knee and lumbar osteoarthritis in rural areas was higher than that in urban areas. The prevalence of knee osteoarthritis in western China (23.59%, 95%CI 18.34% to 30.35%) was higher than that in eastern China (18.36%, 95%CI 12.43% to 27.92%) and central China (15.54%, 95%CI 11.22% to 21.53%). The prevalence of lumbar osteoarthritis in western China (31.17%, 95%CI 19.21% to 50.60%) was higher than that in eastern China (24.38%, 95%CI 16.26% to 36.54%). The incidence of cervical osteoarthritis in the eastern China (20.49%, 95%CI 13.90% to 30.21%) was higher than that in the western China (12.32% 95%CI 8.09% to 18.75%). The prevalence of hand osteoarthritis in western China (6.85%, 95%CI 2.71% to 8.13%) was higher than that in eastern China (2.7%, 95%CI 1.33% to 5.48%).ConclusionsCurrent evidence shows that the prevalence of osteoarthritis in Chinese aged 40 and above is high, and the prevalence of lumbar osteoarthritis is the highest, and the prevalence in western China is higher than that in eastern and central China, followed by knee osteoarthritis, in which the prevalence in females, rural areas, and western China is high. Due to limited quality and quantity of the included studies, more high quality studies are required to verify above conclusion.