
Eirik Solheim- MD, PhD
- Professor at University of Bergen
Eirik Solheim
- MD, PhD
- Professor at University of Bergen
About
87
Publications
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Introduction
Current institution
Additional affiliations
January 2009 - present
January 1995 - present
Deaconess Hospital
January 1991 - December 2001
Publications
Publications (87)
Background
Focal articular cartilage lesions are common, evident in nearly one-fifth of routine arthroscopic examinations. In some cases, surgical intervention may be needed, if rehabilitation has failed to establish proper function. However, choosing the best surgical treatment of articular cartilage defects continues to pose a problem for orthopa...
Background
Before arthroscopy, an arthrotomy had to be made to make a definitive diagnosis and treat any intraarticular pathology. The purpose of this review paper was to investigate the transition from open to arthroscopic surgery.
Methods
The authors have been interested in the subject of the history of arthroscopy since the beginning of their p...
Background:
The purpose was to investigate survival of cartilage repair in the knee joint by osteochondral autograft transfer stratified by location of the lesion; patellofemoral joint (N = 26) versus the medial or lateral femoral condyles (N = 58).
Methods:
For survival analyses, "failure" was defined as the event of a patient reporting a poor...
Objective:
To investigate survival of cartilage repair in the knee by microfracture (MFX; n = 119) or mosaicplasty osteochondral autograft transfer (OAT; n = 84).
Design:
For survival analyses, "failure" was defined as the event of a patient reporting a Lysholm score <65 or undergoing an ipsilateral knee replacement. The Kaplan-Meier method was...
Background:
Few comparative randomized long-term studies on microfracture versus mosaicplasty have been published, and only 2 studies reported a follow-up of 10 years. Hypothesis/Purpose: The purpose was to compare the clinical outcome of microfracture versus mosaicplasty/osteochondral autograft transfer in symptomatic cartilage lesions. The null...
Background:
Focal cartilage lesions (FCLs) are frequently found during knee arthroscopies and may impair quality of life (QoL) significantly. Several treatment options with good short-term results are available, but the natural history without any treatment is largely unknown. The aim of this study was to evaluate patient-reported outcome measures...
Background
A disadvantage of using hamstring tendon autograft consisting of the semitendinosus and gracilis tendons for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction is pain from tendon harvesting and persistent hamstring weakness. In the tendon-sparing all-inside technique, a quadrupled semitendinosus graft and adjustable-loop cortical fixation are su...
Purpose
The hypothesis of the present study assumed that a history of focal cartilage lesions would not affect Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome scores (KOOSs) following knee arthroplasty compared to a matched national cohort of knee arthroplasty patients.
Methods
Fifty‐eight knee arthroplasty patients with previous surgery for focal cartilag...
Background:
Focal cartilage lesions are common in the knee. The risk of later ipsilateral knee arthroplasty remains unknown. The purposes of the present study were to evaluate the long-term cumulative risk of knee arthroplasty after arthroscopic identification of focal cartilage lesions in the knee, to investigate the risk factors for subsequent k...
Background:
Few studies have investigated the outcome ≥20 years after an anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) with a bone-patellar tendon-bone autograft, and there is a wide range in the reported rates of radiographic osteoarthritis (OA).
Purpose:
To report on radiographic OA development and to assess risk factors of knee OA at a med...
Background
A significant proportion of patients undergoing anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (ACLR) later experience graft failure. Some studies suggest an association between a steep posterior tibial slope (PTS) and graft failure.
Purpose
To examine the PTS in a large cohort of patients about to undergo ACLR and to determine whether...
Background:
In spite of supposedly successful surgery, slight residual knee laxity may be found at follow-up evaluations after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR), and its clinical effect is undetermined.
Purpose:
To investigate whether a 3- to 5-mm increase in anterior translation 6 months after ACLR affects the risk of graft failu...
Background
Failed anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (ACLR) can lead to reduced quality of life because of recurrent episodes of instability, restrictions in level of activity, and development of osteoarthritis. A profound knowledge of the causes of a failed surgery can ultimately help improve graft survival rates.
Purpose
To investig...
Background
Rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is a common and feared injury among athletes because of its potential effect on further sports participation. Reported rates of return to pivoting sports after ACL reconstruction (ACLR) vary in the literature, and the long-term consequences of returning have rarely been studied.
Purpose
To...
Background
The anatomic placement of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) grafts is often assessed with postoperative imaging. In clinical practice, graft angles are measured to indicate anatomic placement on magnetic resonance imaging, whereas grid measurements are performed on computed tomography (CT). Recently, a study indicated that graft angle mea...
Purpose
To identify early determinants of clinical outcome after knee cartilage repair.
Methods
205 patients were evaluated before surgery and at median 14-years follow-up.
Results
Baseline factors predicting a good outcome were: single lesion; normal appearing cartilage surrounding the lesion; high baseline Lysholm score; short duration of sympt...
PURPOSE
Some studies suggest a common degenerative path might contribute to a range of shoulder diseases involving subacromial pain syndrome and full-thickness rotator cuff tears. One could therefore theorize arthroscopic subacromial decompression and rotator cuff repair as interventions at different stages of a degenerative shoulder disease. Few s...
Background:
to examine if PROTruding of the Anterior Medial Meniscus (PROTAMM) could be an indirect sign of PCL deficiency by comparing PROTAMM to passive posterior tibial sagging (PSS) for chronic PCL rupture on routine MRI.
Methods:
Patients with PCL reconstruction between 2011 and 2016 were included in a case control study. Primarily cases wi...
Background:
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the outcome after cartilage repair surgery in focal defects of the knee by microfracture versus mosaicplasty.
Methods:
A cohort of 102 patients undergoing microfracture (n=52) or mosaicplasty (n=50) of a single articular cartilage defect in the medial femoral condyle of ≤50mm(2) was evaluated...
Background:
The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is regularly reconstructed if knee joint function is impaired. Anatomic graft tunnel placement, often assessed with varying measurement methods, in the femur and tibia is considered important for an optimal clinical outcome. A consensus on the exact location of the femoral and tibial footprint cente...
PurposeTo map knee morphology radiographically in a population with a torn ACL and to investigate whether anatomic factors could be related to outcomes after ACL reconstruction at mid- to long-term follow-up. Further, we wanted to assess tibial tunnel placement after using the 70-degree “anti-impingement” tibial tunnel guide and investigate any rel...
Background:
The management of cartilage and osteochondral lesions in the knee remains problematic and controversial. Our group reported the 2-year and 5-year results of a randomized controlled trial comparing autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) and microfracture in patients with focal femoral cartilage injuries. The objective of the present...
Purpose
The aim of the study was to investigate to what extent patients undergo evidence-based conservative treatment prior to arthroscopic subacromial decompression of the shoulder.
Methods
One hundred and twenty patients (65 women, 55 men, median age 53.5 years (range 28–70), referred to arthroscopic subacromial decompression at two hospitals in...
Purpose To compare the outcome of 2 arthroscopic techniques for treating recalcitrant lateral epicondylitis. Methods The study included patients undergoing arthroscopic treatment of lateral epicondylitis during 2 different time periods: April 2005 to October 2007 (tenotomy) and May 2009 to June 2010 (debridement). By using a patient-administered fo...
Purpose
The purpose of the current study was to investigate the potential effect of intraoperative fluoroscopy on the accuracy of femoral tunnel placement in anatomic ACL reconstruction, using an ideal anatomic point as reference and evaluating postoperative tunnel placement based on 3D CT.
Methods
An experienced ACL surgeon, using the anatomic app...
Purpose
To evaluate mid- to long-term results after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair and to explore possible predictors of inferior outcome.
Methods
Patients treated for full-thickness supraspinatus and/or infraspinatus tears from 2004 to 2008, using a uniform single-row arthroscopic technique, were included in the study. Pre- and post-operative Qu...
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the outcome at a minimum of 7 years following meniscal repair using the RapidLoc (suture anchor) system. It was hypothesized that most patients would have an intact meniscus, as has been reported in several short- and medium-term studies.
In the time period from 2002 to 2007, all patients with a vert...
Purpose:
Focal chondral lesions of the knee are commonly occurring. A lot is known about their frequency, size and localisation in arthroscopic series, but less about the symptoms they elicit and little about how the arthroscopic findings and symptoms correlate. The purposes of the present study included to investigate the relationship between art...
To evaluate the long-term clinical outcome after microfracture treatment of focal chondral defects of the knee and to investigate possible early determinants of the outcome.
A prospective cohort of 110 patients, treated with microfracture, was evaluated at a median of 12 years (range 10-14) by Lysholm score, VAS of knee function and VAS of knee pai...
Purpose:
To evaluate the effect of feedback from post-operative 3D CT in the learning process of placing the femoral graft tunnel anatomically using the anteromedial (AM)-portal technique in single-bundle anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction.
Methods:
An experienced knee surgeon converting from transtibial to AM-portal technique was o...
To achieve pain control after arthroscopic shoulder surgery, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are a complement to other analgesics. However, experimental studies have raised concerns that these drugs may have a detrimental effect on soft tissue-to-bone healing and, thus, have a negative effect on the outcome. We wanted to investigate i...
The aim of this study was threefold: to investigate the incidence of sensory deficits after harvesting hamstrings autografts, to localise and measure the area of altered sensibility and to investigate the impact of any sensory deficit on the patients daily life.
A consecutive series of sixty-one patients were examined for sensory deficits related t...
Reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) is a well-established surgical procedure. However, post-operative imaging in the early phase is not routinely performed. The rationale for performing such imaging is to provide a baseline examination for future controls, to provide immediate feedback to surgeons regarding tunnel placement, and...
To examine the relationship between the radiographically assessed placement of the tibial tunnel and the long-term clinical and subjective outcome in anterior cruciate ligament-reconstructed patients.
Patients were examined clinically, with subjective score systems and with standardised radiographs 10-12 years postoperatively. Only patients reconst...
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to compare the outcome of arthroscopic and open tendon release in tennis elbow (TE). METHODS: We compared the outcome of patients treated by an open tendon release in the period from 2002 to 2005 (n = 80) with that of patients treated by an arthroscopic release of the extensor carpi radialis brevis in the peri...
Purpose
To evaluate the long-term clinical, patient-reported and radiological outcome of patients reconstructed for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) insufficiency. We wanted to examine the relationship between clinical findings and patient-reported scores.
Methods
The 96 first successive patients that underwent ACL reconstruction using transtibial...
In January 2008, we established the Norwegian Register for Shoulder Instability Surgery. We report on the establishment, the baseline data, and the results at 1-year follow-up.
Primary and revision shoulder stabilization is reported by the surgeon on a 1-page paper form containing the patient's history of shoulder injury, clinical findings, and per...
The objectives of this study were to evaluate the results in the outpatient treatment of recalcitrant lateral epicondylitis with release of the common extensor origin according to Hohmann and to determine any prognostic factors.
Eighty tennis elbows in 77 patients with a characteristic history of activity-related pain at the lateral epicondyle inte...
We compared the results of microfracture in single versus multiple symptomatic articular cartilage defects in the knee in 110 patients with a median age of 38 years (range 15-60). Cases of reoperation of the cartilage defect were classified as failures. Clinical outcome in non-failures was evaluated by the Lysholm score and grading of knee pain and...
We evaluated short- and medium-term results of the treatment of articular cartilage defects of the knee with autogenous cylindrical osteochondral grafts (mosaicplasty) in 69 patients (median age 33 years) with symptomatic articular cartilage defects. Data of Lysholm score and visual analogue scale (VAS) of pain (0=no pain; 100=worst possible pain)...
The optimal treatment for cartilage lesions has not yet been established. The objective of this randomized trial was to compare autologous chondrocyte implantation with microfracture. This paper represents an update, with presentation of the clinical results at five years.
Eighty patients who had a single chronic symptomatic cartilage defect on the...
Frozen shoulder is a debilitating, long-lasting condition. At Bergen Surgical Hospital we have performed arthroscopic capsular release since 2003 in patients where conservative treatment has failed. The procedure is done as day surgery. The purpose of this study was to evaluate our results.
From June 2003 until October 2005 arthroscopic capsular an...
New methods have been used, with promising results, to treat full-thickness cartilage defects. The objective of the present study was to compare autologous chondrocyte implantation with microfracture in a randomized trial. We are not aware of any previous randomized studies comparing these methods.
Eighty patients without general osteoarthritis who...
Focal chondral or osteochondral defects can be painful and disabling, have a poor capacity for repair, and may predispose patients for osteoarthritis. New surgical procedures that aim to reestablish hyaline cartilage have been introduced and the results seem promising. The purpose of this study is to provide reliable data on chondral and osteochond...
Three different membranes were tested for guided bone regeneration in 8-mm unicortical trephine defects in rabbit tibia. All experimental and control defects healed with bone. The critical size defect in rabbit tibia is larger than 8 mm, because control defects, 8 mm in diameter, healed spontaneously. Around remnants of the biodegradable Polyglacti...
Revascularisation of bone grafts is influenced by both the anatomical origin and the pre-implantation processing of the graft. We investigated the revascularisation by entrapment of 141Ce (cerium)-labelled microspheres in large, fresh and demineralised syngeneic grafts of predominantly cancellous (iliac bone) or cortical (tibial diaphysis) bone thr...
Bone formation generally depends on adequate blood flow. Failure of bone grafts has been attributed to delayed revascularisation of the graft. We compared the relationship between revascularisation and osteogenesis, evaluated as entrapment of (141)Ce-labelled microspheres and uptake of (85)Sr, respectively, in fresh or demineralised syngeneic bone...
Implantation of demineralized bone induces new bone formation by the action of contained growth factors, of which bone morphogenetic proteins are of prime importance. A biodegradable polymer may be used as a carrier for demineralized bone particles or recombinant bone growth factors to prevent displacement of the implant, preserve its volume and sh...
Articular cartilage has little ability to regenerate. Cartilage lesions usually persist, may provoke pain, swelling, locking and disability, and may predispose for development of osteoarthritis. Long-term results after traditional surgical techniques are unsatisfactory. In recent years, autotransplantation of chondrocytes and osteochondral cylinder...
Articular cartilage has little ability to regenerate. Cartilage lesions usually persist, may provoke pain, swelling, locking and disability, and may predispose for development of osteoarthritis. Long-term results after traditional surgical techniques are unsatisfactory. In recent years, auto-transplantation of chondrocytes and osteochondral cylinde...
Chondrocytes in adult human cartilage have little mitotic capacity even after injuries. Deep injuries penetrating the subchondral bone plate lead to the release of pluripotent mesenchymal stem cells which have the potential to differentiate into different types of connective tissue, including bone and cartilage. The release and stimulation of these...
Demineralized allogenic bone implanted in the subcutis or muscle of rodents causes formation of heterotopic bone by osteoinduction. The osteoinductive response may be weaker in primates than in rodents. It was suggested that the osteoinductive response of demineralized bone for clinical use could be enhanced by using young donors, because studies h...
Bone contains several growth factors, including bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta), insulin-like growth factors I and II (IGF-I and IGF-II), platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) and basic and acidic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF and aFGF). Spatial and temporal variations in the expression and secretion...
Bone contains several growth factors, including bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta), insulin-like growth factors I and II (IGF-I and IGF-II), platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) and basic and acidic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF and aFGF). The BMPs are the only factors known to provoke bone formation he...
Chondrocytes in adult human cartilage have little mitotic capacity even after injuries. Deep injuries penetrating the subchondral bone plate lead to the release of pluripotent mesenchymal stem cells which have the potential to differentiate into different types of connective tissue, including bone and cartilage. The release and stimulation of these...
All cruciate ligament injuries in the three upper divisions for men and women (3392 players) in Norwegian team handball in the 1989-90 and 1990-91 seasons were registered. A questionnaire was mailed to all injured players. Ninety-three cruciate ligament injuries were registered; 87 in the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), and six in the posterior c...
The anatomical and functional outcome and complications after closed reduction and external fixation of unstable fractures of the distal radius were reviewed in 29 patients. The fractures were reduced by longitudinal traction and closed manipulation under fluoroscopic control, and the reduced position was retained by a standard half-frame Hoffmann...
We have used open reduction and internal fixation with a T-plate in 31 displaced, intraarticular fractures of the distal radius which were judged irreducible or in which closed reduction failed. The mean follow-up time was 4 (3-7) years. The dorsal angulation, the radial length, the articular step-off and the intraarticular gap between fragments we...
Our knowledge on how often tears of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) initially remain undetected and the outcome of the resulting non-operative regimen is still incomplete. To investigate these issues, we conducted a follow-up study in young individuals that 4 to 5 years earlier had sustained a knee injury during a sports event that had been di...
Thirty 8-week-old male Wistar rats were randomly allocated into three groups of 10 rats each. A 5-mm defect in the left parietal bone was made in each rat. In the defects of the first group of rats, no implant was used (control group). In the second group, polyorthoester membranes were placed in the defects without active substance. In the third gr...
Fifty open tibial fractures were treated with the Ex-fi-re external fixation system from 1987 to 1994. According to the Gustilo and Anderson classification, there were 12 Grade I, 14 Grade II, 10 Grade IIIA, 13 Grade IIIB, and 1 Grade IIIC injuries. Eight fractures were segmental. The average patient patient age was 39 years (range, 16-85 years). W...
During 1988 we recorded all Colles' fractures (n = 530) in a prospective study in the city of Bergen. According to defined criteria, the fractures were treated by immobilisation in plaster cast with or without reduction; reduction and immobilisation by a Hoffman external fixation device; or open reduction and internal fixation. Included in the pres...
Inhibition of orthotopic reossification after surgical removal of bone is sometimes indicated and may be accomplished by implantation of interpositional materials or by systemic administration of indomethacin. However, implantation of nonresorbable foreign material may induce a chronic inflammation and predispose to infections; and systemic adminis...
It has been shown that different sterilization procedures of demineralized bone may influence its osteoinductive properties. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of ethylene oxide sterilization for 1, 3, and 6 hours on the osteoinductive potential of allogeneic demineralized bone implanted heterotopically in rats. Sixty male Wistar rats...
Several studies have suggested that grafts from membranous derived bone (e.g., calvarial grafts) retain their volume better than those from endochondral derived bone (e.g., iliac bone grafts). Increased osteogenesis in grafts of the former type has been offered as the explanation. However, simple volume measurements of the recovered grafts do not d...
Forty-two patients referred to the outpatient clinic of Hagavik Orthopaedic Hospital within 3 weeks after an acute knee injury was found by arthroscopy to have a partial or total tear of the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). In these patients, the results of clinical tests and instrumented laxity tests without anesthesia prior to the arthroscopy we...
In a prospective study, 645 consecutive Colles' fractures treated conservatively were followed until union. The fractures subsequently lost some of their manipulated position during the immobilization period. However, the anatomical end result was significantly improved compared with the initial deformity. The mean shortening of the radius during p...
A requirement for the clinical use of demineralized bone is the possibility of storing the material without loss of its osteoinductive properties. Seventy-five 8-week-old male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to one of five groups of 15 rats each. Lyophilized demineralized allogeneic bone was prepared and implanted in the abdominal muscle either...
Some studies have suggested that membranous bone grafts undergo less resorption than endochondral grafts, and faster revascularization of the former has been proposed as the explanation. We studied fresh syngeneic full-thickness bone grafts from calvaria, mandibula, tibia diaphysis, and iliac bone implanted in the back muscles of young Lewis rats....
Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction by free patellar tendon graft was performed using 2 different surgical approaches to the intercondylar notch in 67 consecutive patients with chronic anterior cruciate ligament insufficiency. In the first 30 patients (Group A), the traditional medial parapatellar arthrotomy with lateral luxation of the patel...
The effect of a composite of demineralized bone mixed with polyorthoester on the healing of large segmental defects in the rat radius was studied. Sixty male Wistar rats were divided into four groups, A through D, and an osteoperiosteal diaphyseal defect of 50 per cent of the length of the bone was made in the right radius of each rat. In Group A,...
Host tissue response and heterotopic osteoinduction by composites of demineralized bone matrix and three different substances used as bioresorbable carriers implanted in the abdominal muscles were evaluated by strontium 85 uptake and histology 4 weeks postoperatively in 60 male Wistar rats. Both fibrin-collagen paste and fibrin sealant inhibited bo...
Heterotopic bone formation in the abdominal muscle of 45 male 8-week-old Wistar rats induced by implantation of 5, 10, or 15 mg demineralized bone (DBM) powder was evaluated at 4 weeks by 85Sr uptake of the implants and area histomorphometry of the induced bone. Two indices of 85Sr uptake were calculated: the osteogenic index [(counts/min/mg implan...
A study was done to evaluate the effect of a system for the local delivery of indomethacin on demineralized bone-induced formation of heterotopic bone in the abdominal muscles of rats. Two separate investigations were conducted on a total of forty-eight Wistar rats. In both series, two types of implants were used: polyorthoester and demineralized b...
Local hemostatics for osseous tissue should preferably be absorbable and biocompatible and should not inhibit osteogenesis. The tissue response and effect on demineralized bone-induced heterotopic osteogenesis in the abdominal muscle of 120 male Wistar rats by different local hemostatics were evaluated by light microscopy and 85Sr uptake analyses....
A study was performed to evaluate regeneration of defects in rat calvaria either unfilled or filled with a bioerodible polyorthoester only, demineralized bone only, or a composite of both. At 4 weeks, histological and radiographic studies showed that defects filled with a composite of bioerodible polyorthoester and demineralized bone or demineraliz...
A composite of a local, sustained, drug-release system, Alzamer bioerodible polyorthoester, and demineralized bone-matrix (DBM) particles implanted in the abdominal muscle of 89 Wistar rats induced cartilage and bone formation at the same rate as DBM when evaluated histologically and by 85Sr uptake. The composite implant was technically easier to u...
The platelets play an important role in the normal hemostasis, and it is known that both natural and synthetic macromolecules may induce platelet activation and aggregation. Thus, the purpose of the present study was to investigate the platelet aggregating effect of five different local hemostatics. Platelet aggregation was assessed by aggregometry...