Jagadale Vivek
Orthopedics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, USA.
Cureus. 2019 Aug 26;11(8):e5495. doi: 10.7759/cureus.5495.
Particle disease from the release of metal, cement, ceramic, or polyethylene particles is a rare condition in total knee replacement. Wear, fracture, or corrosion of the components leads to foreign body reaction in the joint, followed by pain, swelling, limited motion, difficulty in walking, functional disability, and occasional systemic disease. This paper presents two cases of metal-on-cement disease as an etiology for the implant failure wherein the metal particles were shed off from the implant, along with cement and polyethylene particles, leading to a complex foreign body reaction in the failed total knee. We have coined this phenomenon as "cementallosis." Initial symptoms and signs from implant failure in both patients were mild, intermittent mediolateral knee pain that was aggravated after walking but no pain at rest or at night. The pain was associated with a 'buckling' sensation, recurrent knee swelling, and gradually worsening knee range of motion. Clinical examination in both cases was suggestive of a well-healed anterior midline surgical scar, mild to moderate effusion, mild diffuse tenderness over the entire joint, limited functional range of motion, grade 1+ laxity throughout the range of motion, and intact distal neurovascular status. Routine blood and synovial fluid workup were inconclusive for identifying the exact etiology of the patient's symptoms. Radiographs, computed tomography (CT) scans, as well as bone scans, were negative for prosthetic joint infection, component malalignment, polyethylene wear, maltracking, or loosening of the components but showed mild to moderate effusions, synovial hypertrophy, and mild scattered periprosthetic osteolysis. Intraoperatively, there was significant synovial hypertrophy with dark pigment deposition and apparent dissociation of the femoral and tibial components from the underlying cement mantle, although the cement was well-adhered to the underlying bone. Synovial fluid and multiple tissue specimens were suggestive of complex foreign body granulomas with metal, cement, and polyethylene particles. These patients had undergone surgery by the same surgery team in the community using the same implant. These cases demonstrate the failure of a total knee arthroplasty implant at the metal-cement interface with features of adverse local tissue reactions that resemble a pseudotumor from the metal-on-metal disease in the knee joint. We have compared and contrasted the clinical presentations, laboratory, imaging, histopathological, and intraoperative study findings in these cases. Knowing what to look for will aid in early diagnosis, ordering necessary investigations, better surgery planning, reducing operative time, as well as improving outcomes and cost of care. The aim of this paper is to educate the audience about this new phenomenon as a cause of knee prosthesis failure produced by a complex pseudotumor-like foreign body reaction that involves metal, cement, and polyethylene particles.
在全膝关节置换术中,因金属、水泥、陶瓷或聚乙烯颗粒释放而导致的颗粒病是一种罕见情况。部件的磨损、断裂或腐蚀会导致关节内的异物反应,继而引发疼痛、肿胀、活动受限、行走困难、功能障碍,偶尔还会引发全身性疾病。本文介绍了两例金属对水泥病作为植入物失败病因的病例,其中金属颗粒与水泥和聚乙烯颗粒一起从植入物上脱落,导致失败的全膝关节出现复杂的异物反应。我们将这种现象称为“水泥沉着症”。两名患者植入物失败的初始症状和体征均为轻度、间歇性的膝关节中外侧疼痛,行走后加重,但休息或夜间无疼痛。疼痛伴有“打软腿”感、膝关节反复肿胀以及膝关节活动范围逐渐恶化。两例患者的临床检查均显示手术前正中切口瘢痕愈合良好、轻度至中度积液、整个关节轻度弥漫性压痛、功能活动范围受限、活动范围内1+级松弛以及远端神经血管状态完好。常规血液和滑液检查对于确定患者症状的确切病因并无定论。X线片、计算机断层扫描(CT)以及骨扫描均未显示假体关节感染、部件排列不齐、聚乙烯磨损、轨迹不良或部件松动,但显示有轻度至中度积液、滑膜增生以及轻度散在的假体周围骨质溶解。术中可见明显的滑膜增生,伴有深色色素沉着,股骨和胫骨部件与下方的水泥套明显分离,尽管水泥与下方骨质粘连良好。滑液和多个组织标本提示存在含有金属、水泥和聚乙烯颗粒的复杂异物肉芽肿。这些患者在社区由同一手术团队使用相同的植入物进行了手术。这些病例证明了全膝关节置换植入物在金属 - 水泥界面处的失败,伴有不良局部组织反应的特征,类似于膝关节金属对金属疾病中的假肿瘤。我们对这些病例的临床表现、实验室检查、影像学检查、组织病理学检查以及术中研究结果进行了比较和对比。了解需要关注的内容将有助于早期诊断、安排必要的检查、更好地进行手术规划、缩短手术时间,以及改善治疗效果和护理成本。本文的目的是让读者了解这种由涉及金属、水泥和聚乙烯颗粒的复杂假肿瘤样异物反应导致膝关节假体失败的新现象。