Total Knee Replacement Prosthesis Assignment
Total Knee Replacement Prosthesis Assignment
Total Knee Replacement Prosthesis Assignment
References 32
1
Total Knee Replacement
INTRODUCTION
Total knee replacement (TKR) surgery, also called knee arthroplasty, is one of
the most successful elective surgeries done today. The surgery replaces severely
damaged cartilage tissue with a metal or plastic prosthesis that duplicates the
function of the knee joint. Since the 1970s, the technology and long-term
success of knee replacement surgery has improved dramatically, providing
relief to people with chronic, debilitating knee pain.
2
The ideal patient for partial knee replacement surgery is someone who has
arthritis in only one section (compartment) of the knee and is not obese. Patients
under age 60 with sedentary lifestyles may also be candidates.
Computer-Assisted Surgery
In addition to traditional surgery, orthopedic surgeons at Mayo Clinic use a
computer-guided imaging system during total knee replacement surgery. This
new technology, also called computer-assisted surgery (CAS), helps the surgeon
align the artificial joint in the bone and may increase the long-term effectiveness
of knee replacements, especially in difficult cases such as those involving knock
knees or bowlegs.
4
INDICATIONS :
ABSOLUTE :
RELATIVE :
Severe osteoporosis
Debilitated poor health
Non functioning extensor mechanism
Painless, well functioning arthrodesis
Significant peripheral vascular disease
Skin conditions such as PSORIASIS within the operated field
Morbid obesityRecurrent urinary tract infection
5
TOTAL KNEE REPLACEMENT
PROSTHESIS
There is no such total knee joint prosthesis that can mimic the complicated
forms of surfaces of the knee joint and the "fuzzy biomechanics" of a healthy
knee joint. Every total knee joint prosthesis is thus a compromise, that mimic
only certain characteristics of the natural knee joint. The classification of total
knee prostheses is equally "fuzzy".
unicompartmental
tricompartmental TKP
PCL retained
According to how many of the three knee joint compartments will be replaced
with the kne joint device There are two models of total knee prostheses, the one
model replaces only one compartment of the knee joint, the other model
replaces the whole (or almost) knee joint.
6
1. Unicompartmental total knee prosthesis:
Unicompartmental knee prosthesis is used in knees where only one half (one
compartment) of the joint is affected by the disease. In this picture the medial
compartment (inner part) of the knee joint has been replaced.
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unicompatmental knee
The polyethylene plate is either fixed to the metal backing plate by the
manufacturer or it moves freely on the polished surface of the metal
backing envelope.
Oxford Uni-compartment
knee
The surgeon, however, may decide not to replace the patellar surface.
The convex femoral component of a total knee prosthesis is a large plate bent to
accommodate the curvatures of the femoral condyles. The femoral component
has a large flange in front for contact with gliding patella.
The slightly concave tibial component is a plate made of a UHMW (ultra high
molecular weight) polyethylene. The plate is often enclosed in a metallic
retainer (back-up). The metallic back-up helps to minimize the deformation of
the polyethylene component under loads. The metallic back-up is often
fabricated from Titanium.
Also the patellar component (made of polyethylene) may have a metallic back-
up.
The surfaces of the total knee components in contact with skeleton are provided
with pegs that improve the fixation of the components to the skeleton.
9
II. Posterior stabilized and PCL retained total knee
Many surgeons believe that when the PCL is well functioning, it should be
retained during the total knee replacement. For this purpose there are
available PCL retaining Total knee prostheses.
Other surgeons believe that PCL cannot function well in a total knee prosthesis
and should be always removed before the total knee is implanted. These
surgeons also believe that after removal of the PCL the surgeon should implant
a special total knee prosthesis that simulates the function of the PCL.
Inside a healthy knee joint there are two cruciate ligaments. These ligaments,
thick as a pencil, are very important to keep the knee joint stable during
bending.
10
The function of the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) in a healthy knee
joint
When the normal knee joint bends the PCL pulls the upper part of the knee joint
- the femoral condyles - backwards. The surgeons call this movement for
"rollback".
(The cruciate ligaments are placed in the middle of the knee joint, so the
schematic picture demonstrates a midline section through the knee joint).
Observations on knee joints damaged at accidents demonstrate that in the knee
joint with damaged PCL the femoral condyle glides unrestricted forwards
during bending. This uncontrolled glide causes severe instability of the knee
joint.
In analogy with healthy knee joints, the majority of surgeons believe that PCL
exercises similar "roll-back" function in a total knee joint.
11
The cruciate ligaments are placed in the middle of the knee joint, so the
schematic picture demonstrates a midline section through the upper (femoral)
component)
Stable total knee = total knee with retained posterior cruciate ligament (PCL)
(upper picture)
In a total knee joint with retained PCL, the retained PCL "rolls" the femoral
component back when the total knee joint bends. The total knee joint is thus
stable. The wear of the polyethylene plate in a stable total knee is minimal.
It follows that retained PCL diminishes the wear of the polyethylene component
and thus retention of a PCL diminishes the risk of loosening and failure of the
total knee prosthesis.
Note that the tibial plate has a space for the PCL. This is a characteristic of
a PCL-retaining total knee model.
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Posterior stabilized total knee prostheses
In knee joints with fixed deformity (contracture) the PCL has become too short.
During the total knee operation, the surgeon is then forced to strip or remove
("sacrifice") the PCL for correction of the deformity.
Moreover, in knee joints with more severe grades of osteoarthritis, the PCL are
severely damaged and without function.
It is common belief among the surgeons that knee joints with damaged or
absent PCL cannot be replaced with the conventional total knee prosthesis,
such replacement would produce an unstable total knee joint.
For replacement of knee joints without PCL there are thus available special
13
The principle of a posterior stabilized total knee prosthesis.
(Upper picture): The femoral component has a transverse cam added to the
backside of the prosthesis.
(Lower picture) In the assembled total knee the tibial post sticks through an
opening in the femoral component. When the prosthesis is in place, the post
engages the transverse cam. The post and the cam make together a loose
transverse hinge. As the total knee bends, this hinge prevents the forwards glide
of femoral component, the knee prosthesis rotates around this hinge instead.
The post "rolls" the femoral component backwards.
In this way the posterior stabilized total knee replaces the function of the PCL.
There are patients with knee joints damaged by osteoarthritis that are without
greater deformity and have a still retained PCL. Yet, many surgeons remove the
still retained PCL and use a posterior stabilized total knee prosthesis for
replacement of these knees too.
14
The reason is that the surgeon may have difficulty to balance the retained PCL
with the new total joint prosthesis. The PCL is adapted to the natural tibial
surface, and not to the tibial plate of the total knee prosthesis.
It is usually easier to
put a posterior stabilized total knee prosthesis in a knee joint with removed PCL
and get a good stability of the new joint
than it is to put a conventional total knee prosthesis in a knee joint with retained
PCL and get a stable total knee joint.
Disadvantages
1.with unbalanced soft tissues there is a risk of subluxation of the total knee
joint
2.the post is made of polyethylene and wears off. "Severe" wear of the post was
found in about 30 % of all posterior stabilized total knees
3.failure of the posterior stabilized total knee caused by wear and damage of the
polyethylene post was observed in 3 % of posterior stabilized total knees in a
five year observation period according to some reports
15
III. CEMENTED OR CEMENTLESS TKP
The surgeon pushes (blows, hammers) the prosthesis directly on the raw bone
surfaces. The prosthesis is held in place by the elasticity of the bone tissue and
by the friction between the surfaces of the skeleton and the prosthesis.
Total knee prostheses for cementless use have often porous coatings on the
surfaces that are in contact with the skeleton. The porous coating partly
enhances the friction of the prosthetic surfaces against the skeleton, partly it
enhances the ingrowth of the host’s bone into the porous surface
In this way the porous coating improves the early fixation of the prosthesis and
it produces a lasting biologic fixation of the prosthesis to the skeleton later.
The surfaces of the total knee components in contact with skeleton are provided
with stems that improve the fixation to the skeleton.
The patellar component that articulates with the metallic flange of the femoral
component is also made of polyethylene, although it is convex. It has also a
metallic back-up.
(The stems are extra long because this is a PCA revision prosthesis -
Howmedica)
16
The advantage of cementless fixation
Absence of small particles of hard bone cement that occur between the total
knee surfaces and increase polyethylene wear
Absence of seal of the space between the total knee prosthesis and the skeleton.
In many statistics, cementless total knees demonstrated higher rates of
loosening than the cemented prostheses.
The surgeon puts a thin layer of bone cement between the prosthetic
components and the prepared skeleton surfaces. It depends on the surgeon if he
uses the bone cement for fixation for all components of the total knee joint or if
he/she uses the bone cement for fixation of only some components.
When the self curing bone cement hardens, it fixes firmly the total knee
components to the skeleton.
The layer of bone cement will level off all unevenness of the cuts made in the
skeleton.
The cement layer acts as an intermediate bumper between the very stiff metal of
the components and the relatively soft skeleton.
The bone cement seals the interface between the prosthesis and the skeleton.
The joint fluid with polyethylene wear particles cannot enter this space and
provoke osteolysis
Pressing the doughy bone cement into the marrow cavity of the thigh and shin
bones may cause general circulatory disturbances
The bone cement layer ages, cracks, and after some time the bond between the
prosthesis and the skeleton is lost .
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IV. Mobile and fixed bearing of polyethylene joint surface
In the conventional total knee prosthesis the polyethylene component is flat and
fixed to the tibia (shinbone). This construction is called fixed (stabile) bearing
total knee model.
ADVANTAGES :
18
In the natural knee joint, the joint surfaces between tibia and femur are not
conforming. Nature has placed a piece of triangular cartilage between these two
joint surface, the meniscus, which takes up and distributes the stresses evenly
between the tibial and femoral joint condyles.
The menisci in the natural knee move quite a lot, and the clever surgeons who
discovered this fact put a moving piece of polyethylene to replicate the
Nature's moving interface system in their total knee joint prostheses.
ADVANTAGES :
19
more natural gait pattern
DISADVANTAGES
1.The polyethylene mobile plate has two wearing surfaces: one is the surface
opposed to the femoral component, the other one is the surface opposed to the
polished tibial tray. It is as yet uncertain, how much polyethylene particles this
doubling of wearing surface produces.
3.The most frequent cause of failure in these prostheses is the accelerated wear,
destruction, or dislocation of the mobile polyethylene plate in knees with
ligament and soft tissues instability.
4.Some studies also claim that the range of movement of mobile bearing total
knees is not better than the movement in the conventional stabile bearing total
knees. (Archibeck 2002)
The alleged advantages of mobile bearing knee joint prostheses are increased
range of motion in the total knee and low wear of the polyethylene plate with
lower risk for loosening. These advantages make this knee prosthesis suitable
for young active patients.
These total knee prostheses permit flexion and extension and allow for a
limited rotation. The linked total knee prostheses, however, prevent movements
to both sides (abduction and adduction) of the knee joint. That is their purpose:
to provide the total knee with intrinsic side stability.
The limited amount of rotation, that these prostheses allow , improves gait and
decreases stresses on the bone -skeleton interface created by walk and other
activities. Thus, in contrast to the old true hinged total knees, the linked total
knee prostheses have lover rates of complications.
These total knee joints are used in knees with severe instability due to
destruction of knee joint ligaments and severe bone loss.
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Severe knee joint instability is often the result of a failed total knee surgery
Preoperative Rehabilitation
• Ensure adequate strength of trunk and upper extremities for support during use
of assistive devices
• Instruction in use of walker/crutches/or cane to maintain desired postoperative
weight bearing status (touchdown weight bearing for uncemented or hybrid
replacements, weight bearing as tolerated for cemented replacements)
• Review of post-operative exercises, bed mobility and transfers, use of
continuous passive motion (CPM) machine as indicated per physician
• General strengthening, flexibility, and aerobic conditioning While it seems
reasonable to believe patients undergoing TKA would benefit from preoperative
strengthening exercises, there is no evidence to support this assumption, either
in improving functional outcome or shortening hospital stay (D’Lima et al.,
Rodgers et al.).However, a study by Jones et al showed that patients who have
greater preoperative dysfunction may require more intensive physical therapy
intervention after surgery because they are less likely to achieve similar
functional outcomes to those of patients who have less preoperative
POSTOPERATIVE REHABILITATION
Note: The following rehabilitation progression is a summary of the guidelines
provided by Kisner and Colby. Refer to their publication to obtain further
information regarding criteria to progress from one phase to the next,
anticipated impairments and functional limitations, interventions, and goals.
*Use of a CPM device is often initiated by the first day after surgery, per
physician protocol. It has been suggested that CPM decreases postoperative
pain, promotes wound healing, decreases incidence of deep venous thrombosis
(DVT), and enables the patient to regain knee flexion more rapidly during early
postoperative days. However, Kumar et al conducted a randomized
prospective study that found no statistically significant difference in range of
motion gains using a CPM device versus active movement. Continuous passive
motion units may be recommended as an adjunct to, not a replacement for, a
supervised postoperative rehabilitation program.
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Muscle strength 3/5-4/5
Ambulation with or without use of an assistive device
Establish home exercise program
Intervention:
• Passive range of motion (PROM)-CPM as indicated per physician
• Ankle pumps to decrease risk of DVT
• Bed mobility and transfers usually initiated 24-48 hours post-surgery,
depending on surgical procedure and co-morbidities
• Heel slides in supine or sitting to increase knee flexion
• Muscle-setting exercises of the quadriceps, hamstrings, and hip adductors,
possibly coupled with neuromuscular electrical stimulation
• Assisted progressing to active straight-leg raises in supine, prone, and
sidelying positions
• Gravity-assisted knee extension in supine by periodically placing a towel roll
under the ankle and leaving the knee unsupported
• Gentle inferior and superior patellar glides
• Neuromuscular inhibition techniques such as agonist-contraction techniques to
decrease muscle guarding, particularly in the quadriceps, and increase knee
flexion
• Gentle stretches for the hamstrings, calf, and iliotibial band
• Pain modulation modalities
• Compressive wrap to control effusion
• Gait training
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• Stationary bike or peddler without resistance to increase flexion ROM
• Pain-free progressive resisted exercises using ankle weights, theraband/tubing
• Proprioceptive training such as weight shifting, tandem walking, lateral
stepping over/around objects, obstacle courses, lower extremity proprioceptive
neuromuscular facilitation (PNF), front and lateral step-ups, closed-kinetic
chain activities
• Closed-kinetic chain strengthening, such as ¼ squats, ¼ front lunges
• Gait training as needed to decrease limp, wean off assistive device
• Protected, progressive aerobic exercise, such as cycling without resistance,
walking, or swimming
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DO’S AND DONT’S POST TOTAL KNE REPLACEMENT
Allowed activities:
Walking
Slow dancing
Stationary or non-stationary bicycle
Bowling
Golf
Low impact aerobics
Croquet
Swimming
Shuffleboard
Horseshoes
Allowed activities with some experience:
Hiking (mild to moderate)
Rowing
Cross Country skiing
Stationary skiing (Nordic Trac)
Faster walking
Tennis (non-competitive)
Certain weight machines
Ice skating
Activities not recommended:
Handball
Squash
Rock climbing
Soccer
Singles Tennis
Volleyball
Football
Gymnastics
Lacrosse
Hockey
Basketball
Jogging
Running
Probably not recommended:
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Inline skating
Downhill skiing
1. Heart infarct
3. Retention of urine
Retention of urine may occur both in male and female patients, more often after
the spinal or epidural anesthesia. In a male patient the latent prostate obstruction
may cause full-blown urine retention after operation. (If you have prostate
problems, they should be dealt with before your total joint surgery.)
To prevent this situation, the surgeons insert routinely urinary catheters to all
patients already during anesthesia, so that the insertion is pain-free. At the same
time the newly operated artificial joint is covered by prophylactic antibiotics.
The catheters are usually removed on the second postoperative day, the removal
is not painful.
4. Postoperative confusion
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A mild form of postoperative confusion may occur after general anesthesia,
more often in aged patients. Risk factors are high age, deficiency of B vitamins,
and "intake of alcohol on regular basis". On the other hand, it is astonishing to
see old patients, tormented by painful joints and in deep depression, to literally
blossom up after a successful total joint surgery.
Total joint replacement is Major Surgery, and as with all Major Surgery there is
a certain risk for deadly complications. If you are scared by all rumors, you
should know that also the non-operative treatment of joint arthritis has its risks,
some of them lethal. These risks are low compared with the risks for surgical
treatment of joint disease, but they are present.
Statistics showed for example, that one out of every 1000 patients treated with
NSAID developed bleeding gastric ulcer .Ten percent of patients with this
complication died, a mortality rate of 1 / 10 000. For comparison, the thirty-day
mortality rate after total hip surgery is nowadays 15 /10 000 (Parvizi, 2001).
The patients often wonder if they will make it through the operation. To allay
your subconscious fears, here follow some optimistic facts about one unpleasant
issue, the risk of death after an artificial joint operation.
Most deaths occurring early after the total joint operations have been
caused either by pulmonary embolus or by myocardial infarction in aged
patients.
Unanimous statistics demonstrate that the death rates after total joint
operations have been steadily diminishing thanks to the introduction of
new operation techniques and improved anesthesia care.
The risk of death has been 0,9 % in the 1970's a it has dropped to 0,1 %
in the 1990's total hip and knee operations ( Sharrock NE 1995; Parvizi ,
2001).
There is also another positive message: patients operated on with artificial
hip and knee joints live longer then do the people in the general
population. (Lie , 2000) Five years after a total hip or knee operation,
89% of patients were still alive whereas only 81% of the people in the
general population of equal age were still alive.
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The important systemic complications after a hip or knee replacement
operation and their frequency are apparent in the Table.
1. Loosening
of the components is the most common cause of failure of all types of total knee
prostheses. Most often loosens the tibial component, followed by patellar
component and femoral component. The loosening is a continuous process
causing increasing discomfort.
The loosening rate of total knee prostheses is about one percent per year. That
means that after 10 years 10 % of all patients with a total knee joint will have
their total knee prostheses failed by loosening and exchanged.
If the patient experiences increasing pain and stiffness in the loose total knee,
the surgeon usually recommends revision operation. The discussion is still
ongoing whether it suffices witch exchange of the loose component only, or
whether the whole total knee prosthesis should be exchanged.
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2. Instability of the total knee joint
has occurred in between 1 to 6 % of all total knee joints. Patient may just feel
that the knee totters a little, in severe case of instability the patient just doesn’t
dare to put weight on the unstable knee.
Uncorrected major knee joint instability will put excessive stress on total knee
components and will eventually cause prosthetic loosening and destruction of
the whole total knee prosthesis.
In most instances treatment is by use of walking aids, simple knee braces, and
more extensive ankle -knee braces (orthosis). Surgical tightening of the soft
tissues around the prosthesis have usually not been effective in stabilizing the
total knee.
If the instability is severe, the surgeon has the option remove the old unstable
total knee prosthesis and put in a more constrained model of the total knee
prosthesis.
Such fractures usually occur after relatively minor injuries. Patients with
"softer" bones, such as patients with rheumatoid arthritis, are at greater risk for
these fractures. More commonly these fractures occur in the femoral shaft at the
tip of the stem of the femoral component.The patient feels pain above the
fracture site and the X-ray pictures then show the fracture.
Statistics show that these fractures occur in about 0,1% of all total knee
prostheses (Furnes 2002) . The majority of these fractures can be managed by
braces, only displaced fractures need operative treatment.
4. Patellar problems
Patellar problems comprise the largest number of complications after total knee
replacement and have been reported in from 6 to 30 % of all total knee
replacements.
The patient with patellar problems has pain in front of his / her new total knee.
In a total knee joint where the surgeon did not replace the patella, the anterior
knee pain not seldom leads to additional operation with replacement of the
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patellar joint surface. But this additional replacement of patella does not always
stop the pain
In a total knee joint where the surgeon replaced the patella already at the first
operation, the patient may feel pain, clunking and instability of the replaced
patella.
The cause of the pain is the fact that no total knee prosthesis model can imitate
the complicated track that the patella follows during the extension and flexion
of the normal knee joint.
All models of total knee prostheses force the patella to follow a straight track
during the knee movement, which leads to increased wear of the patella and
faulty tension in the soft tissue that keep the patella in the right track.
For an unstable patella, the surgeon may try to balance the soft tissues around
the patella. Most often such an operation implies making cuts in the soft tissues
that force the patella back on the right track.
Some patients feel a painful clunk in front of their total knees when they bend
the knee between 30 and 45 degrees. Sometimes the patient cannot move the
knee beyond this range.
The cause is a soft tissue lump that forms on the joint capsule just above the
patella. At 30 - 45 degrees of flexion, the lump catches the anterior flange of the
femoral component, causes pain, and blocks further movement.
If, in about two weeks, you will not achieve 90 degrees of flexion in your new
knee, your surgeon might suspect that scar tissue has formed in your knee and
hinders the movement. The surgeon might recommend a manipulation of your
29
new knee joint in narcosis. You would be put to sleep and the surgeon will
passively bend your knee to 90 degrees or more if possible. This forcible
bending should break down the scar tissue that has been forming in your new
knee.
Statistics show that at risk are patients with second operation in their knees and
patients with diabetes.
Transient swelling of the total knee joint after too much activity is not
uncommon. It will disappear without specific treatment.
Lasting swelling of the total knee joint together with pain may by a sign of
The surgeon usually takes a sample of the joint fluid for bacteriological
examination. This is done by a puncture of the joint with a fine needle; with
proper technique the puncture should not be painful.
The treatment then depends on the condition that produced the swelling.
The infection must be treated accordingly (see the chapter Wound infection)
8. Component breakage
The signs are pain, stiffness, and often also swelling of the total knee. Special
X-ray pictures may disclose the damage.
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9. Injury of the peroneal nerve
The patient feels tingling and numbness in the foot, in cases of more serious
damage the patient cannot stretch the foot. These symptoms are caused by the
damage of the peroneal nerve. If you notice these symptoms notice immediately
your doctor.
The peroneal nerve crosses the knee joint on the outside. It lies there directly
beneath the skin on the hard fibula bone (lesser shin bone) and can be damaged
by direct pressure from outside by tight splints and dressings.
It is important that the knee after the operation is NOT rotated outward, lying on
a brace or continuously moving machine.
It is also suspected that correction of the contracture of the knee joint during
the total knee replacement may stretch the nerve too much and damage it.
Patients with rheumatoid arthritis are at higher risk to experience peroneal nerve
damage after THR than other patients (Schinsky 2001)
In most cases all symptoms disappear after proper treatment. The patient is
usually fitted with a protective brace, loose dressings are applied, the knee is
slightly bent and physiotherapy is started. Some surgeons do also EMG
evaluation of the muscles innervated by the peroneus nerve, other surgeons use
the EMG examination only to follow the improvement.
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is not so rare. The pain occurs either spontaneously or when the patient touches
the scar. Some patients feel a sensation of small "electrical shock" when
touching the scar.
This phenomena is caused by damage to small branches of the main skin nerve
(with the name nervus saphenus). The nerve lies on the inside of the knee and
its branches cross the middle line of the knee. The cut through skin in midline
damages some of these branches. Sometime the scar tissue around these
branches then causes pain or "electricity shocks" when touching them. In most
cases this condition needs no treatment.
is very rare. At risk are patients with known vascular disease and patients with
previous operation on the knee.
The symptoms are intensive pain in a cold, pale, pulse- less leg. This situation
demands an acute consult with the vascular surgeon to decide on further action.
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REFERENCES
2. Turek’s orthopaedics , principles and their application , 6th edition ,by Stuart
L. Weinstein & Joseph A. Buckwalter.
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