We investigated the usefulness of flap surgery for Gustilo type IIIB and C severe open fracture of the tibia, for which treatment is difficult. The subjects were 16 patients with severe open fracture of the tibia who received a treatment at our division between April 2000 and October 2008. There were 13 males and 3 females, and the mean age at injury was 41.2 years. Radical debridement and temporal external fixation were performed on the day of injury, and soft tissue reconstruction and definitive osteosynthesis were performed within a few days after injury to the best.Introduction
Materials & Methods
Growing of the geriatric population has brought about increase of lower extremity fractures. The purpose of this study was to investigate the occurrence of surgical site infection after the surgery for lower extremity fractures, except proximal femoral fracture, in over eighty years old patients. Patients with closed lower extremity fracture which were treated surgically in 2011 were divided into two groups (Group O; the equal or more than 80 years old, Group Y; from 20 to 65 years old), and the incidence of infection and the outcome after its treatment was compared between Group O and Group Y.Background
Methods
The changes of stress distribution in the femoral head with Perthes disease were observed under several condition. Finite element models were constructed referring to X-ray images and magnetic resonance images of the intact hip joint. The model was divided into five parts: cancellous bone, articular cartilage, necrotic bone, cortical bone, physeal cartilage. Material properties were alloted to these components by the past literature. The body weight and abductor muscle force were applied as loading. The model was altered to study the effect of age, the extent of necrosis, and lateralization of the fomoral head. Analysis were performed on a digital computer PC-9821(NEC) using the finite element program. There was no significant difference in stress distribution patterns regardless of age or extent of necrosis. However, compressive stresses were concentrated on the lateral portion of the epiphysis by lateralization of femoral head. The femoral head deformity in Perthes disease was more affected by the lateralization than by the age and the extent of necrosis.