Two patients with acute
Thirty patients with non-tuberculous pyogenic
In the neonate, Group B beta-haemolytic streptococcal
1. Attention is drawn to the danger of avascular necrosis developing in the capital femoral epiphysis as a complication of
1. Three cases of
The localisation of acute haematogenous pyogenic
We present three young men who sustained closed diaphyseal fracture of the tibia and later developed severe osteocutaneous necrosis induced by heat during intramedullary reaming. They all had a narrow medullary cavity and in all a tourniquet had been used. Each developed a pretibial cutaneous blister soon after operation. In the following month severe
In our practice sequestration of the shafts of long bones in children because of acute
1. Three cases of metaphysial fractures in infants are described. Obstetrical trauma was probably responsible in two cases, and in the third case direct injury was admitted by the parents. 2. These fractures are associated with bone destruction and periosteal new bone formation in the metaphyses. They are important because they can be confused with syphilis, tuberculosis, scurvy,
1. Five cases of Salmonella
1. The insertion of skull calipers is not generally known to be associated with any morbidity or mortality. 2. In the past six years the details of three fatal complications have been collected: there was one case each of cerebral abscess, subdural abscess and extradural abscess. 3. Brief notes of eleven other similar cases, five of cerebral abscess and six of
Condensing osteitis of the clavicle was first described as a disease entity in 1974. There is painful localised swelling of the clavicle of undetermined origin, with increased radio-density, but an infective aetiology has not been excluded by previous authors. We report three children with the clinical and radiological findings of 'condensing osteitis'. Two of them had raised levels of antistaphylolysin titres and all responded to antibiotic therapy. We conclude that condensing osteitis is due to low-grade staphylococcal
Six different conditions of non-infective bone and joint pathology have been seen amongst 67 patients with diabetic neuropathy. The characteristics of each are described. Not all the conditions require treatment but they should be differentiated from
1. In chronic
1. The literature on acute
Primary subacute haematogenous
Gentamicin incorporated in beads of polymethylmethacrylate has been shown capable of being released over a period of several months in concentrations sufficiently high to control most pathogens. The therapeutic efficacy of such beads has been demonstrated in a model of
1. A series of 102 cancellous strip grafts for delayed union of long bone fractures has been reviewed. 2. Half of the initial injuries were open. 3. Half of the fractures were butterfly or segmental lesions or were comminuted. 4. After strip grafting 84 per cent of the fractures were united within sixteen weeks, and only four took longer than twenty weeks. 5. Complete failure of union occurred in only one case, a tibial fracture complicated by low-grade pyocyaneus
We reviewed 52 cases of