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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 3 | Pages 541 - 544
1 Aug 1974
Page RE

1. An enterogenous cyst lying in the cauda equina opposite the third lumbar vertebra, and associated with spina bifida occulta of the fifth lumbar vertebra and spondylolisthesis of the fifth lumbar on the first sacral vertebra, is described in a man aged thirty-five suffering from chronic low back pain and sciatica. 2. Current embryological theories concerning the formation of intraspinal enterogenous cysts from primitive gut cells are further substantiated by the features of this case


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 40-B, Issue 1 | Pages 6 - 15
1 Feb 1958
Nicholson OR

1. Eleven cases of tuberculosis of the pubis are described. 2. The disease is often of insidious onset, and symptoms vary from vague discomfort to incapacitating pain in the region of the symphysis and the groin. 3. Abscess formation is common and was present in nine of the eleven patients when they first attended. 4. The lesion has a good prognosis and responds well to simple curettage. 5. In this series operation, without bone grafting, has not been followed by pelvic instability or back pain


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 5 | Pages 859 - 862
1 Sep 1991
Andersen J Rostgaard-Christensen E

We reviewed 26 patients with progressive spinal kyphosis due to anterior fusion between the vertebrae. No patient had back pain or any neurological defect. The kyphosis appeared to be progressive until the fusion had included all of the disc. Progression was faster during the adolescent growth-spurt. Kyphosis increased with the number of discs involved, from one to six, and the extent of fusion within each disc. In six of the nine cases treated by spinal bracing, progression of the kyphosis was arrested


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 1 | Pages 142 - 143
1 Jan 1986
Weatherley C Prickett C O'Brien J

Persistent back pain in the presence of an intact posterior fusion is commonly seen and is often regarded as being psychogenic in origin. This paper discusses five patients, all of whom were chronically disabled by such pain; all five had a confirmed posterior and/or lateral fusion. In each case lateral discography identified the disc within the fused segment as the source of symptoms and pain relief was obtained with an anterior interbody fusion. This source of pain should be considered as a possibility in similar cases of failed back surgery


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 1 | Pages 45 - 52
1 Feb 1977
McCulloch J

A prospective study of 480 patients who underwent enzymatic dissolution of the nucleus pulposus with chymopapain is reported. Seventy per cent of patients with the clincial criteria for a disc herniation had a favourable response to chemonucleolysis. The commonest cause of failure was persistent back pain. In patients with sequestered discs or lateral recess stenosis surgical intervention was not made more difficult by chemonucleolysis. Those with a previous operation, spinal stenosis or psychogenic components to the disability had very poor results. Complications were few and easily managed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 3 | Pages 606 - 618
1 Aug 1968
Schatzker J Pennal GF

1. The syndrome of spinal stenosis is due to compression of the cauda equina from structural narrowing of the lumbar spinal canal. 2. Patients with this syndrome present symptoms of cauda equina claudication or of unremitting bizarre back pain and sciatica. 3. The compression of the cauda equina is always posterior and postero-lateral and is caused by narrowing of the lateral recesses and of the dorso-ventral diameter of the spinal canal. 4. The diagnosis can be made only by myelography. The only form of successful relief of the nerve root compression in spinal stenosis is adequate lateral and longitudinal decompression


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 3 | Pages 398 - 402
1 May 1993
Hardcastle P

Fast bowling in the game of cricket requires repetitive spinal extension, lateral deviation, lumbar flexion and thoracodorsal rotation. Back pain is common, and it has been shown that pars interarticularis defects had occurred in over 50% of a group of teenage fast bowlers. Many of these defects will heal, but some cause chronic pain which prevents bowling, although other activities may be painless. We report the successful results of local screw fusion of the pars interarticularis defects in ten bowlers, and recommend this method for this small group of sportsmen


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 3 | Pages 481 - 486
1 May 1991
Tregonning G Transfeldt E McCulloch J Macnab I Nachemson A

We reviewed two comparable groups of patients who had been treated for lumbar disc herniation by chymopapain chemonucleolysis (145) or conventional surgical discectomy (91). They were reviewed 10 years after treatment by questionnaire, followed by a personal interview by an independent observer. The results of the surgically treated groups were slightly better than those treated with chymopapain. In particular, there was significantly better early relief of leg and low back pain, and fewer patients needed a second procedure. Complications were few in both groups


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 4 | Pages 677 - 680
1 Aug 1989
Summers B Eisenstein S

Chronic pain at the donor site was reported by 25% of 290 patients who had undergone anterior lumbar spine fusion for low back pain. Donor site pain has characteristic clinical features, may be severely disabling and is stubbornly resistant to treatment. The highest prevalence was in patients who had a tricortical full thickness graft taken through a separate incision overlying the iliac crest. Patients with a clinically unsatisfactory result from the spine fusion also had a significantly higher prevalence of donor site pain


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 1 | Pages 48 - 52
1 Jan 1997
Grevitt M Khazim R Webb J Mulholland R Shepperd J

The Short Form-36 (SF-36) health questionnaire has been put forward as a general measure of outcome in health care and has been evaluated in several recent studies in the UK. We report its use in three groups of patients after spinal operations and have compared it with the Oswestry and Low Back Pain disability scales. There was a significant correlation between all variables of the SF-36 and the low-back scores. The mental-health items had the weakest correlation. Our study shows that the SF-36 questionnaire is valid and has internal consistency when applied to these patients


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 5 | Pages 846 - 854
3 May 2021
Clement ND Scott CEH Hamilton DF MacDonald D Howie CR

Aims

The aim of this study was to identify the minimal clinically important difference (MCID), minimal important change (MIC), minimal detectable change (MDC), and patient-acceptable symptom state (PASS) threshold in the Forgotten Joint Score (FJS) according to patient satisfaction six months following total knee arthroplasty (TKA).

Methods

During a one-year period 484 patients underwent a primary TKA and completed preoperative and six-month FJS and OKS. At six months patients were asked, “How satisfied are you with your operated knee?” Their response was recorded as: very satisfied, satisfied, neutral, dissatisfied, or very dissatisfied. The difference between patients recording neutral (n = 44) and satisfied (n = 153) was used to define the MCID. MIC for a cohort was defined as the change in the FJS for those patients declaring their outcome as satisfied, whereas receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was used to determine the MIC for an individual and the PASS threshold. Distribution-based methodology was used to calculate the MDC.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 3 | Pages 421 - 425
1 May 1992
Hardcastle P Annear P Foster D Chakera T McCormick C Khangure M Burnett A

The action of fast bowling in the game of cricket is known to cause injuries to the lumbar spine. We studied a group of 16- to 18-year-old fast bowlers, selected for special training in Western Australia. All 24 had MR scans of the spine, 22 had radiographs and CT scans; in 20 the bowling technique was analysed biomechanically. There was a high incidence of back pain and this was always associated with a radiological abnormality. Pars interarticularis defects were diagnosed in 54% and intervertebral disc degeneration in 63%. Bowling actions which involved counter-rotation were associated with a higher incidence of both injuries


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 7 | Pages 949 - 953
1 Sep 2001
Jolles BM Porchet F Theumann N

We carried out a retrospective review of 155 patients with lumbar spinal stenosis who had been treated surgically and followed up regularly: 77 were evaluated at a mean of 6.5 years (5 to 8) after surgery by two independent observers. The outcome was assessed using the scoring system of Roland and Morris, and the rating system of Prolo, Oklund and Butcher. Instability was determined according to the criteria described by White and Panjabi. A significant decrease in low back pain and disability was seen. An excellent or good outcome was noted in 79% of patients; 9% showed secondary radiological instability. Surgical decompression is a safe and efficient procedure. In the absence of preoperative radiological evidence of instability, fusion is not required


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 4 | Pages 626 - 629
1 Jul 1995
Grevitt M McLaren A Shackleford I Mulholland R

We treated 137 patients with symptomatic lumbar disc prolapse by automated percutaneous lumbar discectomy (APLD). Seventeen (12%) required further operation. At a mean follow-up of 55 months, the success rate was 45%. Of those who had APLD alone, 52% were graded as either excellent or good. In this group, 76% were employed, and the mean Oswestry score was 28.2%. One-third of those patients initially rated as successful had deterioration in symptoms and increased disability from back pain. The Short Form 36 health survey questionnaire revealed that these patients had a chronic ill-health profile


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 10, Issue 2 | Pages 40 - 43
1 Apr 2021


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1030 - 1035
1 Sep 2002
Diedrich O von Strempel A Schloz M Schmitt O Kraft CN

Of 42 patients with resolvingscoliosis, 34 were followed up for more than 25 infantile idiopathicyears. Twenty had been primarily treated in a plaster bed and 14 by physiotherapy. The mean angle of the curve at presentation was 17° and at follow-up it was 5°. No patient had significant progression of the scoliosis during the growth spurt. When adults few had back pain or an increased disability score and there was no interference with work or social activities. The rib-vertebra angle difference proved to be an essential radiological sign when distinguishing resolving from progressive infantile idiopathic scoliosis. There was no advantage of plaster over physiotherapy with regard to either the time to resolution or the functional outcome. Treatment of resolving infantile idiopathic scoliosis in a plaster bed is therefore now outdated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 4 | Pages 524 - 528
1 Jul 1993
Cavanagh S Stevens J Johnson

We used gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed MRI to investigate 67 patients with persistent pain after lumbar discectomy. Twenty-five patients had reoperations for lesions diagnosed in this way. Eleven were for recurrent disc prolapse at the same level and sciatica was relieved by all but one. Five operations were for prolapse at an adjacent level and all were successful. The diagnosis of sepsis was less precise, but extension of tissue enhancement into the operated disc space was found to be significant. Only three patients had evidence of arachnoiditis which suggests that this condition has been too often diagnosed as a cause of persisting low back pain


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 2 | Pages 267 - 271
1 Mar 1988
Colhoun E McCall I Williams L Cassar Pullicino V

In a prospective study we attempted to define the role of lumbar discography in the investigation of patients with low back pain with or without non-dermatomal pain in the lower limb. The records of 195 patients were studied at least two years after a technically successful operation. Of 137 patients in whom discography had revealed disc disease and provoked symptoms, 89% derived significant and sustained clinical benefit from operation. Of 25 patients whose discs showed morphological abnormality but had no provocation of symptoms on discography only 52% had clinical success. These findings support the continued use of lumbar discography for the investigation of this particular group of patients


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 1 | Pages 3 - 7
1 Jan 1987
Eisenstein S Parry C

We describe a lumbar facet syndrome in which disabling symptoms are associated with normal or near-normal plain radiographs. Local spinal fusion relieved symptoms in 12 patients; the excised facet joint surfaces showed some of the histological changes seen in chondromalacia patellae and in osteoarthritis of other large joints. The most frequent change was focal full-thickness cartilage necrosis or loss of cartilage with exposure of subchondral bone, but osteophyte formation was remarkably absent in all specimens. We suggest that there are both clinical and histological similarities between the facet arthrosis syndrome and chondromalacia patellae. Facet arthrosis may be a relatively important cause of intractable back pain in young and middle-aged adults


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1137 - 1140
1 Nov 2001
Otani K Konno S Kikuchi S

Transitional vertebrae (TV) may be one of the risk factors for lumbar disc herniation. It is not clear, however, whether the presence of TV can affect the development of nerve-root symptoms. Our aim was to clarify this relationship. A total of 501 patients with lumbar degenerative disease and nerve-root symptoms was studied in respect of their level and the presence of TV. As a control group, 508 patients without low back pain or nerve-root symptoms were studied to establish the incidence of TV. In patients with disc herniation, the incidence was statistically higher and the mean age lower in patients with TV than in those without. In most patients, the symptomatic disc level was just above the TV. Similarly, in those with stenosis of the spinal canal without spondylolisthesis, the symptomatic disc level was most commonly just above the TV