Share Total Knee Tips & Pearls From Dr. Adam Rosen (A Virtual Total Knee Fellowship Podcast)
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By Dr. Adam Rosen
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1010 ratings
The podcast currently has 102 episodes available.
I am going to cover some of the things I consider when approaching Uni's
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This is an important episode because we are all at risk. If you are in trouble or suffering ask for help, get help, seek help and ask for help again. If you see a colleague or friend who is having trouble ask how you can help and be sure to check in with them or seek help from your attending or other supervisors.
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This is the 100th Episode of the Total Knee Tips & Pearls Podcast
Some techy stuff on TKA
Recommended Distal Femoral Resections
8mm - Stryker Triathlon
9mm - DePuy Attune
9.5mm - Smith & Nephew
10mm - Zimmer Persona, DJO, Microport
Anterior Flange Angle to Prevent Notching
3 degrees - S&N, Zimmer
5 degrees - DJO, DePuy
6 degrees - Microport
7 degrees - Stryker
Recommended Tibial Slope
0 degrees - Stryker PS, Aesculap
3 degrees - Stryker CR, Aesculap, Persona PS, Attune PS, Microport, S&N
5 degrees - Attune CR
7 degrees - Attune CR, Persona CR
1 mm Poly Options
Stryker, Zimmer, Depuy, S&N
Metal Sensitive Option
S&N Oxinium
Zimmer Ti-Nidium
Microport NitrX
DJO ArmourCoat
Aesculap Advanced Surface Technology
TJO Aurum
Narrow Options
Zimmer, DePuy, S&N, Aesculap
Smallest - Zimmer 1 Narrow (55.5 mm M/L, 48.1 mm AP)
Biggest - Aesculap F8 (82 MM M/L, 80.5 mm AP)
Lots of stuff! Check with your reps and always refer to the technique manual, this is just a brief review but does not take the place of training and education.
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Two studies have shown that essential amino acids (EAA) can help function, and suppress atrophy of the rectus after TKA.
Dreyer et al. J Clinc Invest. 2013;123(11):4654-4666. Essential amino acid supplementation in patients following total knee arthroplasty.
Ueyama et al. The Bone & Joint Journal Vol 102-B, No. 6, Supp A. Perioperative essential amino acid supplementation suppresses rectus femoris muscle atrophy and accelerates early functional recovery following total knee arthroplasty.
The two brands I recommend to patients are Thorne ( https://amzn.to/3KPuC2i ) and Pure Encapsulations ( https://amzn.to/3ObJj1U )
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Do not take my word for it but do your research and verify everything. Here I'll review the four common cups many of us use
Zimmer G7 - ream under by 1 mm, 36 mm ID options at 50 with 10 degree and +5 lat offset
Stryker Trident II Tritanium - ream line to line, 36 neutral option at 48 and 36 mm options with lip and offset at 52 mm
DePuy Pinnacle - under by 1 mm, 2mm or line to line, 36 mm ID options at 52 mm
Smith and Nephew - under by 1 mm or line to line, 36 mm ID option at 52 mm
If you are a 40 mm fan, you can get 40 mm with Zimmer at 54 mm, Stryker at 52 mm, Depuy and Smith and Nephew at 56 mm
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Here I share with some some tips and tricks on what I look for and what I do when caring for the 50 and older patient with knee pain that does not have severe arthritis and does have a meniscus tear.
I also share some tips on what to do during boards collections to make sure you have copies of the intra-op photos and how I discuss the surgical findings with my patients in the office.
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Here is my take on the three new broach only collared hip stems
Depuy Actis
130 degree neck shaft angle
sizes 0-12
high offset 6mm (sizes 0-3) and 8 mm (sizes 4-12)
Zimmer Avenier
135 neck shaft angle
sizes 0-9
high offset 6mm
collared and non-collared options
coxa vara neck 126.5 degrees
Stryker Insignia
130 degress neck shaft angle
sizes 0-11
high offset 5 mm
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LLD is a real issue. Here I will go over a number of things that can cause or lead to a LLD. I will share things I look for and how I talk to patients about LLD and what things you can do at the time of surgery to control for LLD.
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What you are looking for in a fellowship is a personal decision. I covered this topic before but we are in the middle of fellowship applications and most applicants have the same questions.
Here I discuss volume, autonomy, approaches, implants, technology, clinic, revisions and finding a job.
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I used nav in 2005 and was looking forward to robotics when they came on the scene. First it was Mako and now Rosa and Velys. Unfortunately, the powers that be have not allowed them in our system yet.
I think it is important for residents and fellows to be trained with robots. It is a part of education today. Robotic training will help you land a job. Robotics may help you attract patients.
Augmented reality may offer some of the same information because that technology is advancing quickly.
But, you need to know how to do a manual total knee well. A robot may not be available. Software may be corrupt or fail. Garbage in, garbage out. If it doesn't look right or feel right do not just believe what you see on. a screen or a heads-up display. You need reps on manual total knees so you have a bailout if things don't work with the technology.
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The podcast currently has 102 episodes available.
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