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The goal of the current study is to objectively measure intraoperative the initial thumb stability after trapezium removal when performing trapeziectomy, alone or in combination with suspension and tendon interposition and to evaluate if there are differences in the stability between the patients and with the different surgical steps. Additionally, the subjective stability rating of the surgeon will be compared with the objective measures and if there is a correlation between clinical/patient-related parameters and the measured intraoperative stability.
Full description
Osteoarthritis of the first carpometacarpal joint (CMC I OA) treatment strategies typically focus on pain relief and restoring motion and function. Besides different other treatment modalities, such as trapeziectomy (removal of the trapezium bone) alone, the resection-suspension-interposition arthroplasty (after trapezium resection additional stabilisation with a tendon strip) (LRTI) are the most popular interventions. When performing trapeziectomy, alone or in combination with suspension and tendon interposition, the surgeon perceives individual differences in joint stability. However, there are no quantitative data available on the stability of the CMC I joint after trapeziectomy. Furthermore, the relative contribution of the different surgical steps to the stability of the joint is unknown. The goal of the current study is to objectively measure intraoperative thumb stability and evaluate if there are differences in the stability between the patients and with the different surgical steps. Additionally, the subjective stability rating of the surgeon will be compared with the objective measures. Additionally, the subjective stability rating of the surgeon will be compared with the objective measures and if there is a correlation between clinical/patient-related parameters and the measured intraoperative stability.
Procedure 1: Patient enrollment
During the preoperative consultation, the surgeon identifies patients which meet the inclusion criteria. Before any study specific examinations are performed, the patient has to give written informed consent to participate in the study according to the clinical investigation protocol. Patients will have enough time to decide for or against participation until before the surgery (usually one-six weeks after the consultation).
Baseline data:
After inclusion in the study, documented by patient informed consent, the following data will be collected:
Furthermore, the participant answers questions about his/her hand usage in daily life, pain and completes the brief Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire.
Procedure 2: Surgery
Stability Assessment:
After trapeziectomy according to the standard surgical procedure, the surgeon subjectively rates the CMC I joint stability (stable, somewhat stable and instable) by displacing the thumb proximally. The objective stability measurement is performed after the subjective assessment: The hand is standardized positioned in a pinch grip position. A standard reposition forceps is attached to the base of the first metacarpal bone. Next, the reposition forceps is connected to the force sensor and the thumb ray displaced by 10 mm towards the scaphoid with a guide. While the counteracting forces are measured with a force sensor. This procedure is applied by the surgeon after every step of the LRTI surgery:
The measurement is repeated three times for every step. A high value indicates high stability. For blinding purposes, the surgeon will not see the measurement results.
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29 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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