Total Knee Conversion Rates and Functional Outcome After Calcium Phosphate Injection for Bone Marrow Lesions of the Knee
Untreated osteoarthritis (OA)-related bone marrow lesions (OA-BML) can hasten the progression of knee OA. Previous studies have shown that fluoroscopically guided intraosseous calcium-phosphate (CaP) injections of OA-BML during knee arthroscopy can lead to pain reduction, improved functionality, and prolonged time until conversion to total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The purpose of this retrospective study is to compare the clinical outcomes of patients who underwent knee arthroscopy and CaP injection for OA-BML versus knee arthroscopy for non-OA-BML pathologies. Two-year follow-up data and patient-reported outcomes including knee injury and operative outcome scores, joint replacement scores (KOOS, JR) were available … Results indicate that patients in the CaP group had less frequent conversion to TKA compared with patients in the knee arthroscopy group. (Read the full article here.)