Search This Blog

This blog....

...is really just me transferring a folder of papers - scientific or otherwise - that I give my trainees at the start of their time with me, along with my ISCP profiles and any other (even barely) relevant stuff that I wanted to share. I thought I would put it online, and as things stand it is in an entirely open access format. I welcome any comments, abuse, compliments, gifts etc
This blog has embedded pdf files. They are linked to Google Drive and will not work on computers which deny access to that, such as many NHS workstations. Some browsers are better than others for this, such as Firefox or Chrome. The files can be read within the blogpost or opened separately via the icon in their top right hand corner, which also allows you to download and save them, if you want. It should be tablet and smartphone friendly.

Translate

Sunday 10 June 2018

Achilles, Pascal, Occam, TUNC and Bonini

In the world of eponyms in surgery - Monteggia, Fournier, Chiari etc - I actually prefer the non-medical ones.

There is, for example, Achilles' Dilemma in hip resurfacing  ("to choose whether to live a short and glorious life or live a long and boring life"); Occam's Razor in diagnostics; Pascal's Wager in avoiding hip dislocation (just use an elevated lip - there is no down side). In case you're wondering, TUNC theory is an acronym not an eponym, for any confused readers.

Here, though, is a new one for me. Bonini's Paradox (courtesy of Kevin Williamson, writing on US politics).

Let us consider hip replacement first. A sphere sits within a hemisphere, as a near perfect fit. It can move freely in any direction for everyday function. It has intrinsic stability by nature of its shape. It is a fairly accurate facsimile of a real hip in many ways. It is a simple design philosophy, if subject to highly sophisticated manufacturing. It is very forgiving in practice, if you put it in slightly askew.

Not so knee replacement. Here there are several radii of curvature in coronal and sagittal planes, not one. A highly complex ligamentous arrangement ensures stability and translational movement. The lateral tibial plateau is smaller in life than the medial side. The lateral plateau has convexity. The shock absorption from the menisci varies between the two sides. Yet the knee prosthesis has a symmetrical biconcave tibial plateau with no difference in impact resistance, no benefit from the cruciates (except in those cruciate retaining cases with a pristine PCL), and relies on a difficult-to-consistently-get-right 'balancing' of the intact collaterals. It is a very unforgiving scenario, so no wonder that pretty much everyone admits these days that knee outcomes are poorer overall than those from hip replacement, particularly in high activity patients.

Attempts to make more complex knee replacements incorporating these issues have generally failed, with either poorer results or at best, unpredictable ones. It's not been for lack of trying by implant companies (1, 2).

Back to Bonini, who is a business professor at Stanford University, looking at reproducing complex systems, for example, a computer model of the brain:

And this is Bonini's Paradox: The less information a model carries about its subject, the less useful it's going to be in helping someone understand that subject. And yet, the more information a model carries about its subject, the less useful it's going to be in helping someone understand any single point of that subject. Any sufficiently detailed map of a region is going to be just as dense and difficult as the region itself. Any sufficiently detailed model of a brain is going to be a brain.

...and any sufficiently detailed model of a knee is going to be a knee. Wikipedia quotes French poet and philosopher Paul Valery, with a similar take, from years earlier in 1937: "Everything simple is false. Everything which is complex is unusable."

Indeed, a hip replacement is undoubtedly 'false', but it nearly always works. A more complex knee replacement is also false, but it just edges a little bit along the spectrum towards unusable.

Another quote from the Gizmodo article already cited: Any model, of anything, is in an act of editing. It picks out what we think is important regarding the subject, and directs our attention to how that important thing can be manipulated.

Even orthopaedic surgeons aren't gods. I suppose





...OK, everybody got that?




Classifications are often rubbish

I used to pride myself on knowing lots of orthopaedic and trauma classifications. Many of them still provide a useful lingua orthopaedica when discussing cases, a few - such as Lauge-Hansen - definitely guide treatment, and a lot of them eg femoral revision classifications, are usually fairly pointless for me in practice, much as I admire their authors

I gave a lecture on revision hips where I introduced a new classification - at least I'd not seen it used in this way before. I actually do use the broad categories, say for the acetabulum, where cavitary bone defect, rim defect and pelvic discontinuity, do have some sort of practical meaning. But I definitely prefer this one, which I presented  at a lecture in Budapest in 2007. A year later I saw someone - who'd been in the audience - repeat it word for word, without due credit. Such is life.

Here are the slides from that PowerPoint (with the odd redaction):







Anyway, I mention it because I saw of of my pet hates suitably challenged recently, on Twitter of all places. The pet hate is the question that it seems all medical students are routinely taught to ask: "on a scale of 1 to 10, how bad is your pain?"

I have never used this stupid question in practice, as it is almost a definition of why we're advised to avoid non-parametric data in research. It means almost nothing in every case that it's used. I've seen it asked, and more than once heard the sullen deadpan reply of '11'. Of course. Probably just after the phrase "I have a high pain threshold you know, doctor, but..."

So I was delighted to see the following, made available by cancer survivor and wit, @TeaLady24. It just needs to be provided in a wipe clean laminate (with the numbers removed), at every outpatient clinic. 

"...just point to the one which represents your feelings best..."


genius, in it's way (click to enlarge)