| Literature DB >> 28719761 |
Marie S Kane1, Karlee Lau1, Dennis C Crawford1.
Abstract
CONTEXT: We present the current spectrum of postoperative management practices for patients receiving distal femur osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplants. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: The Joint Restoration Foundation database was examined in cooperation with the Metrics of Osteochondral Allografts study group to identify 121 surgeons who had performed at least 1 OCA transplant in the past year; 63% of surgeons responded. STUDYEntities:
Keywords: cartilage; knee; osteochondral allograft; rehabilitation; weightbearing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28719761 PMCID: PMC5665113 DOI: 10.1177/1941738117717011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Health ISSN: 1941-0921 Impact factor: 3.843
Figure 1.(a) Surgeons’ years of experience in osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantation. (b) Number of OCA transplants performed per year.
Figure 2.Postoperative weightbearing protocols from most restrictive to least restrictive. FWB, full weightbearing; NWB, nonweightbearing; TTWB, toe-touch weightbearing; WBAT, weightbearing as tolerated.
Figure 3.Number of weeks until unrestricted activity was allowed.
Figure 4.Restrictiveness of initial rehabilitation protocol (most to least) as a function of number of osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantations performed per year.
Figure 5.Dependence of time to unrestricted activity (weeks) on initial rehabilitation protocol (most restrictive to least restrictive).
Figure 6.Dependence of change in rehabilitation protocol (to less restrictive, no change, to more restrictive) on the initial rehabilitation approach (most restrictive to least restrictive).
Figure 7.Reasons given for change in rehabilitation protocol by those respondents who changed their protocol over time. Many respondents chose more than 1 reason for the protocol change.
Figure 8.Change in rehabilitation protocol (more restrictive, less restrictive, no change) as a function of experience with osteochondral allograft (OCA) transplantation (years).
Review of patient cohort studies regarding osteochondral allograft transplantation
| Study | No. of Patients | Graft ± Fixation | Weightbearing | Brace | CPM | Activity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McDermott et al[ | 95 | NWB 7-10 days, PWB 6-12 months | 6-12 months | |||
| Davidson et al[ | 67 | D/PF | PWB (crutches) 6 weeks, FWB 6 weeks | 3 weeks | 3 weeks | Sports and full activity at 6 months |
| Bugbee and Convery[ | 55 | D/PF or S/F | NWB 6-12 weeks | Yes | ADL by 4 months, impact at 6 months | |
| Gross et al[ | 60 | S/F | WB in brace at 8 weeks | Cast 2 weeks, custom WB orthosis 1 year | 2-3 days | WB when osteotomy healed (if osteotomy needed) |
| Chu et al[ | 43 | S/PF or S/F | NWB 12+ weeks | Yes | Progressive WB after 12 weeks | |
| Garrett[ | 17 | D/PF, S/F | NWB 6 weeks, PWB 3-4 months | Yes | Gradual return to moderate activity | |
| LaPrade et al[ | 23 | D/PF | NWB for 8 weeks | Exercises with knee immobilizer for 8 weeks | 8 weeks | Low-impact activities for 12 months |
| Krych et al[ | 43 | D/PF | NWB or TTWB for 4-6 weeks | 4-6 weeks | On individual patient basis based on lower extremity strength | |
| Levy et al[ | 129 | D/PF or S/F | TTWB for 8-12 weeks | Closed-chain exercises at 4 weeks, full active ROM by 8-12 weeks | Progressive WB at 12 weeks, normal activities at 6 months | |
| Williams et al[ | 19 | D/PF | TTWB for 8 weeks | Hinged brace for 8 weeks, unloader brace for 8 weeks to 4 months | 6 weeks | Supervised rehabilitation until 4-8 months |
| McCulloch et al[ | 25 | D/PF | TTWB on crutches for 6 weeks | 6 weeks | ||
| Emmerson et al[ | 66 | D/PF or S/F | Protected WB for 12 weeks | While in hospital | Closed-chain exercises at 4 weeks, full activity at 3-4 months, sports and recreation at 4-6 months | |
| Brown et al[ | 34 | D/PF | Immediate WB | 1 week minimum, full open-chain passive ROM | Immediate open-chain ROM |
ADL, activities of daily living; CPM, continuous passive motion; D, dowel; F, fixation; NWB, nonweightbearing; PF, press fit; PWB, partial weightbearing; ROM, range of motion; S, shell; TTWB, toe-touch weightbearing; WB, weightbearing.