Percutanous acetabular surgery is a new and developing technique in fixation of acetabulum fractures. The most common screw used is the anterior column screw that traverses anterograde or retrograde through the anterior column of the acetabulum. Standard height and width calculations derived from CT scans do not take the trajectory of the screw into consideration. They have been shown to exaggerate the available safe bone corridor for screw passage. Posterior column screws can be placed in a retrograde fashion via the ischial tuberosity to fixate posterior column. Limited international data is available and no studies to date have been conducted on the South African population. This study assesses the anterior and posterior acetabular columns of South African individuals and ascertains the safe bone corridor sizes. Pelvic CT-scans of 100 randomly selected patients were reviewed. Specific computer software was used to virtually place anterior screws through the anterior acetabular column, in its clinical trajectory. Specific entry points inferior to the pubic tubercles significantly changed the relation of the screw trajectory to the mid- column isthmus and were incorporated in the measurement of the anterior column. All the available lengths and diameters were measured and averages were calculated for males and females.Purpose of the study
Methods
Hallux valgus surgery can result in moderate to severe post-operative pain requiring the use of narcotic medication. The percutaneous distal metatarsal osteotomy is a minimally invasive approach which offers many advantages including minimal scarring, immediate weight bearing and decreased post-operative pain. The goal of this study is to determine whether the use of narcotics can be eliminated using an approach combining multimodal analgesia, ankle block anesthesia and a minimally invasive surgical approach. Following ethics board approval, a total of 160 ambulatory patients between the ages of 18-70 with BMI ≤ 40 undergoing
In recent years internal fixation of the spine by using posterior approach with minimally invasive and percutaneous technique were increasingly used in trauma. The
Introduction. We report a single-centre, prospective, randomised study for pedicle screw insertion, by using a Computer Assisted Surgery (CAS) technique with three dimension (3D) intra-operative images intensifier versus conventional surgical procedure. Methods. 143 patients (68 women and 75 men) were included in this study. 72 patients underwent conventional surgery (C = conventional). 71 patients were operated on with the help of a 3D intra-operative imaging system (N = navigated). We performed 34