1 . The results of transplanting the greater trochanter in 225 "low-friction" arthroplasties of the hip have been examined. 2. Non-union occurred in an average of 7 per cent of cases. 3. When non-union occurred the results still showed improvement. 4. Four different methods of fixation were used, of which that using two wires, crossed in the horizontal and coronal planes, never failed to secure union. 5.
1 . A ten-year study of fifty-four operations for transplantation of the hamstring muscles in thirty-one spastic patients has been made. 2. Twenty-one patients were improved after operation, six were not improved, and in four the duration of follow-up was too short for proper assessment. One patient died from other causes. 3. Greatest benefit was not obtained until one year after operation. 4. The results varied considerably in different grades of spastic patient. Important factors affecting the results were age, sex, personality, balance and function of arm and hip. Hand and major hip operations should be carried out before hamstring transplantation. 5. The objectives of operation are discussed. These were most consistently achieved in older, more ambitious or more responsible males with good balance and with good arm and hip function. 6. Factors which were of less direct importance were mental capacity, minor degrees of limb length inequality, and foot deformities. 7. Operative correction of foot deformities should not be done before hamstring transplantation. 8. Serial plaster correction of the knee flexion deformity before operation is preferred to division of the patellar retinacula. 9.
We investigated the clinical, arthroscopic and biomechanical outcome of transplanting autologous chondrocytes, cultured in atelocollagen gel, for the treatment of full-thickness defects of cartilage in 28 knees (26 patients) over a minimum period of 25 months.
1. Experiments to examine the antigenicity of homologous bone tissues in rats are reported. The tissues studied included fresh marrow-free cortical bone blocks and chips, fresh, boiled, frozen and freeze-dried marrow-containing iliac bone, fresh iliac bone devoid of marrow, and fresh red marrow. 2. The various tissues were transplanted from hooded to Wistar rats. Three weeks later a skin graft from each donor was transplanted to its respective host to detect the presence of transplantation immunity, which was indicated by the early rejection of the skin graft. 3. Homografts of fresh cortical bone evoked transplantation immunity indicating that it contained transplantation antigens which were also in the skin. 4. Homografts of fresh marrow-containing iliac bone also evoked transplantation immunity, which was shown to be caused by the red marrow. 5. Fresh iliac homografts devoid of marrow did not elicit transplantation immunity. This suggests that iliac bone tissue may not contain transplantation antigens or that the small amount of iliac bone inserted was insufficient. 6. Microscopy of the grafts, removed after three weeks, showed that the inflammatory infiltrations around the bone homografts and autografts were not very different, but that the amount of new bone formed was different. The autografts produced a lot of new bone, the homografts only a little. 7. It is suggested that the immune response evoked in the host by the foreign graft impairs the formation of new bone by fresh homografts of cortical blocks, cortical chips and marrow-containing iliac bone. 8. The impairment of new bone formation by homografts of marrow-free iliac bone is discussed. Such bone grafts fail to evoke detectable transplantation immunity. Why these grafts do not form more new homologous bone than the other homografts studied, is not clear. 9. Homografts of boiled and frozen iliac bone do not evoke any detectable change in the sensitivity of the host to donor tissue. 10. Homografts of freeze-dried marrow-containing iliac bone elicit a slight but significant prolongation of the survival of skin homografts. The implication, in terms of modern immunological theory, is that in such grafts certain tissue antigens still persist.
1. The present study is an attempt to analyse and apportion significance to the role of inductive mechanisms in bone transplantation. 2. The experimental model used in the present work is that of the composite homograftautograft of cancellous bone previously described (Burwell 1964 3. Iliac bone was removed from hooded rats and washed free from its marrow. The bone was then treated by various physical and chemical methods (some of which have been used by other workers to prepare bank bone), namely freezing (-20 degrees Centigrade, -79 degrees Centigrade, -196 degrees Centigrade); freeze-drying (without sterilisation, sterilisation with high energy radiation, sterilisation with ß-propiolactone); decalcification (with E.D.T.A.); irradiation (in the frozen state at a dose of 4 million rads); boiling in water; immersion in merthiolate solution; extraction of organic components with ethylenediamine: and calcining at 660 degrees Centigrade. The treated bone was then impregnated with fresh autologous marrow procured from the femoral shaft of the Wistar rat into which the treated composite graft was to be implanted. The grafts were inserted intramuscularly and removed for study after two, six and twelve weeks. 4. After fixation, serial sectioning and staining, each graft was examined microscopically, and the proportion of new bone/grafted bone scored using an arbitrary scale (0-4). The mean score (and the standard error of the mean score) was then plotted for each treated composite graft and also for several types of fresh cancellous bone grafts. 5. It was found (Fig. 2) that the various treated composite grafts formed a spectrum of bone-forming capacities–the maximum scores being attained by the frozen and freeze-dried composite grafts, the lowest scores by the "deproteinised" composite grafts. 6. The reasons for these differences are discussed. It is concluded that cancellous bone, after transplantation, has the property to induce and promote osteogenesis in marrow; moreover, that this property is contained in the organic components of bone. 7. From the standpoint of inductive mechanisms, cancellous bone treated by freezing or freeze-drying seems to be the most suitable devitalised bone for grafting purposes; bone which has been boiled or merthiolated less suitable; and "deproteinised" bone the least suitable. 8. Freeze-dried bone sterilised physically (by high energy radiation) or chemically (by ß-propiolactone) did not form significantly less new bone than did freeze-dried bone which had not been sterilised. 9. Remodelling mechanisms in bone transplantation are briefly discussed and attention drawn to the deficiencies of present knowledge. The quantitative studies of other workers have indicated that freeze-dried bone may be more rapidly remodelled than is frozen bone. 10. The importance of fresh red marrow in promoting osteogenesis in bone transplantation and in the healing of certain fractures, is emphasised. It seems likely that the interrelationship of bone and marrow revealed by experiment has wider significance not only in health and in response to injury but also in causation of certain idiopathic bone disorders.
1. The effects of the insertion of pieces of fresh cancellous bone into the subcutaneous tissues of the ear upon lymph nodes and spleens have been investigated in seventy rabbits. 2. The main immunological response is found to occur in the first regional nodes draining the sites of insertion of homografts of bone, which show a considerable increase in weight compared with nodes draining autografts of bone. 3. An increased number of large and medium lymphoid cells occurs principally in the first regional node of the homografted animals, as Scothorne and McGregor (1955) observed using skin as the homografted tissue. 4. The large and medium lymphoid cell response is found in both the cortex and the medulla of the lymph nodes. In the cortex a sectoral distribution of the cellular response is observed and the name reactive cortex is given to these sectors. Evidence is presented to show that the sectoral pattern of reactivity is probably determined by the localised entry into the node of iso-antigens through lymphatic vessels draining the bed of the graft. 5. We have made a quantitative analysis of the large and medium lymphoid cell response in the reactive parts of the diffuse lymphoid tissue of the cortex. The mean maximal large and medium lymphoid cell response occurs five days after the insertion of bone homografts. 6. The origin and fate of the large and medium lymphoid cells and their role in the production of antibodies is reviewed in the light of recent work. 7. A correlation is made between the maximal production of large and medium lymphoid cells in the first regional lymph node, the invasion of the graft bed with small lymphocytes and the inhibition of new bone formation in the homografts.
1. An immunological examination of the sera of thirty rabbits which had received primary and secondary homografts of cancellous bone into a subcutaneous site did not reveal the presence of circulating precipitins, haemagglutinins or passive haemagglutinins. These findings are consistent with the observations of Bonfiglio and his colleagues (1955). 2. Electrophoretic examination of the serum of four rabbits receiving primary and secondary homografts of bone into an intramuscular site did not reveal any change in the serum protein fractions. 3. A search for auto-antibodies produced by primary and secondary autografts of cancellous bone was unsuccessful in fifteen rabbits. 4. The multiple injections of saline extracts of bone into four rabbits did not evoke the production of demonstrable circulating antibodies, results which are in accord with the findings of Bonfiglio and colleagues (1955) and Curtiss and colleagues (1959). 5. For the first time the production of classical antibodies in response to injections of extracts of heterologous bone has been recorded. The repeated injections of a saline extract of rabbit bone intraperitoneally into ten mice produced demonstrable precipitins and passive haemagglutinins both to protein and polysaccharide fractions present in the bone extracts. 6. Knowledge concerning the production of humoral antibodies to transplants and extracts of bone has been reviewed.
1. An experimental technique for the transplantation of epiphysial cartilage in the rabbit is described. 2. Autogenous transposition of the distal epiphysial cartilage of the ulna was followed by normal growth in five of eighteen animals. 3. Homogenous transplantation was unsuccessful in all the animals studied. 4. Homogenous grafting gives rise to an immunity reaction confined to the reserve Zone of the cartilage. 5. It is suggested that the difference between the fate of homogenous grafts of epiphysial and non-epiphysial cartilage lies in the vascularity of the former.
1 . Fresh bone autografts to a muscle bed in the rat gave rise to vigorous new bone formation from about the fourth day. The graft took the form of a hollow ossicle with central bone marrow at eighteen days: it became progressively more regular in outline and was still present at six months. 2. Fresh bone homografts produced two separate phases of new bone formation–early and late. In the early phase non-lamellar woven bone appeared at about the fourth day, continued to grow until eight days, and subsequently died. It arose from osteogenic cells of the homograft. In the late phase, which developed in relation to a few grafts after four weeks, the new bone was lamellar in character, and remained closely applied to the graft surface. Evidence is presented that this bone arose by metaplasia of the host connective tissues at the graft site. There was a local inflammatory response to the bone homograft. 3. Both phases of homograft new bone formation were abolished if the animal was prepared by a skin homograft from the same donor four weeks before, but not if four months elapsed between the two grafting procedures. 4. Freeze-dried bone homografts did not give rise to the early phase of homograft new bone but produced a few examples of the late phase after five months. The inflammatory response was less intense with freeze-dried homografts than with fresh homografts. 5. Skin homografts three weeks after fresh bone homografts from the same donor underwent an early rejection at five to six days. 6. Skin homografts three weeks after freeze-dried bone homografts from the same donor had a mean survival time of twelve days, which was significantly longer than the mean survival time of l0·9 days in normal rats.
1. Coracoid transplantation for recurring dislocation of the shoulder is described. 2. In my experience of over thirty cases only once has true dislocation recurred after this operation. Recurrence was due to avulsion of the bone block. 3. Failure to repair the original detachment of the glenoid labrum is a frequent cause of recurrence of dislocation of the shoulder. An explanation is offered for this failure; namely that the injured labrum adheres to the deep surface of the subscapularis muscle instead of reattaching itself to bone. This reinforces Watson-Jones's advice that the original dislocation should be treated by complete immobilisation in full medial rotation for three weeks.
We believe that this technique has several advantages. After poliomyelitis recovery in the clavicular head of pectoralis major may exceed that in the sternal head; there may be considerable but incomplete recovery in both heads and it is then desirable to use all the active muscle available. Girls and women dislike conspicuous scars; the incisions used in this technique are unobtrusive when the arm is by the side.
We carried out limb lengthening in rabbits and then transplanted osteoblast-like cells derived from the tibial periosteum to the centres of distracted callus immediately after distraction had been terminated. Two weeks later the transaxial area ratio at the centre of the distracted callus and the bone mineral density (BMD) were significantly higher in the transplanted group, by 21% and 42%, respectively, than in the non-injected group or the group injected with physiological saline (p <
0.05). Callus BMD as a percentage of density in uninvolved bone was also significantly higher in the transplanted group (p <
0.05) than in the other two groups, by 27% and 20% in the second and fourth weeks, respectively (p <
0.05). Mechanically, the callus in the transplanted group tended to be stronger as shown by the three-point bending test although the difference in fracture strength was not statistically significant. Our results show that transplantation of osteoblast-like cells promotes maturity of the distracted callus as observed at the second and fourth weeks after lengthening. The method appears promising as a means of shortening the consolidation period of callus distraction and decreasing complications during limb lengthening with an external fixator.
1. A comparative study has been made of the major transplantation antigens present on the chondrocyte isolated from articular cartilage of the sheep and lymphocytes from the cartilage donors. 2. It has been shown that the chondrocyte possesses antigens of the major histocompatibility system in common with the lymphocyte. 3. In order to demonstrate the similarity between the antigen structure of the chondrocyte and the lymphocyte it was necessary to treat cartilage cells with papain after isolation in order to remove the matrix more completely. Failure to do this led to an apparent deficit of antigens on the chondrocyte. 4. It was found that lysis of cells by antibodies was slower when chondrocytes were the target cells than when lymphocytes were used. It is concluded that this is due to a protective role of remaining cartilage matrix.
1. Destructive changes in a knee joint, eventually requiring arthrodesis, are reported in a patient who had undergone renal transplantation. 2. The underlying pathology was avascular necrosis with separation of large osteochondral fragments. 3. The pathogenesis is discussed.
Surgical repair of posterosuperior rotator cuff
tears has a poorer outcome and a higher rate of failure compared
with repairs of supraspinatus tears. In this prospective cohort
study 28 consecutive patients with an irreparable posterosuperior
rotator cuff tear after failed conservative or surgical treatment
underwent teres major tendon transfer. Their mean age was 60 years
(48 to 71) and the mean follow-up was 25 months (12 to 80). The
mean active abduction improved from 79° (0° to 150°) pre-operatively
to 105° (20° to 180°) post-operatively (p = 0.011). The mean active
external rotation in 90° abduction improved from 25° (0° to 70°)
pre-operatively to 55° (0° to 90°) post-operatively (p <
0.001).
The mean Constant score improved from 43 (18 to 78) pre-operatively
to 65 (30 to 86) post-operatively (p <
0.001). The median post-operative
VAS (0 to 100) for pain decreased from 63 (0 to 96) pre-operatively to
5 (0 to 56) post-operatively (p <
0.001). In conclusion, teres major transfer effectively restores function
and relieves pain in patients with irreparable posterosuperior rotator
cuff tears and leads to an overall clinical improvement in a relatively
young and active patient group with limited treatment options. Cite this article:
We describe a new surgical technique for the
treatment of lacerations of the extensor tendon in zone I, which involves
a tenodesis using a length of palmaris longus tendon one-quarter
of its width. After exposing the dorsal aspect of the distal interphalangeal
joint and harvesting the tendon, a 1.5 mm drill bit is passed through
the insertion of the extensor tendon into the distal phalanx where
it penetrates through the skin of the pulp of the digit. The palmaris
longus tendon is threaded through the drill hole from dorsal to
ventral and the ventral end is tied in a simple knot and trimmed.
The palmaris longus tendon is then sutured to the extensor tendon
close to its insertion, and also at the middle of the middle phalanx. The operation was undertaken on 67 patients: 27 with an acute
injury and 40 patients with a chronic mallet deformity. One finger
(or the thumb) was involved in each patient. At a mean follow-up
of 12 months (6 to 18), 66 patients (98.5%) received excellent or
good results according to both the American Society for Surgery
of the Hand (ASSH) classification and Miller’s classification. Tenodesis using palmaris longus tendon after complete division
of an extensor tendon in zone 1 is a reliable form of treatment
for isolated acute or chronic ruptures.
We compared extrusion of the allograft after
medial and lateral meniscal allograft transplantation and examined
the correlation between the extent of extrusion and the clinical
outcome. A total of 73 lateral and 26 medial meniscus allografts
were evaluated by MRI at a mean of 32 months (24 to 59) in 99 patients
(67 men, 32 women) with a mean age of 35 years (21 to 52). The absolute
values and the proportional widths of extruded menisci as a percentage were
measured in coronal images that showed maximum extrusion. Functional
assessments were performed using Lysholm scores. The mean extrusion
was 4.7 mm (1.8 to 7.7) for lateral menisci and 2.9 mm (1.2 to 6.5)
for medial menisci (p <
0.001), and the mean percentage extrusions
were 52.0% (23.8% to 81.8%) and 31.2% (11.6% to 63.4%), respectively
(p <
0.001). Mean Lysholm scores increased significantly from
49.0 (10 to 83) pre-operatively to 86.6 (33 to 99) at final follow-up
for lateral menisci (p = 0.001) and from 50.9 (15 to 88) to 88.3
(32 to 100) for medial menisci (p <
0.001). The final mean Lysholm
scores were similar in the two groups (p = 0.312). Furthermore,
Lysholm scores were not found to be correlated with degree of extrusion
(p = 0.242). Thus, transplanted lateral menisci extrude more significantly
than transplanted medial menisci. However, the clinical outcome
after meniscal transplantation was not found to be adversely affected
by extrusion of the allograft.
We have developed a novel, two-layered, collagen matrix seeded with chondrocytes for repair of articular cartilage. It consists of a dense collagen layer which is in contact with bone and a porous matrix to support the seeded chondrocytes. The matrices were implanted in rabbit femoral trochleas for up to 24 weeks. The control groups received either a matrix without cells or no implant. The best histological repair was seen with cell-seeded implants. The permeability and glycosaminoglycan content of both implant groups were nearly normal, but were significantly less in tissue from empty defects. The type-II collagen content of the seeded implants was normal. For unseeded implants it was 74.3% of the normal and for empty defects only 20%. The current treatments for articular injury often result in a fibrous repair which deteriorates with time. This bilayer implant allowed sustained hyaline-like repair of articular defects during the entire six-month period of observation.