This study tests the biomechanical properties of adjacent locked
plate constructs in a femur model using Sawbones. Previous studies
have described biomechanical behaviour related to inter-device distances.
We hypothesise that a smaller lateral inter-plate distance will
result in a biomechanically stronger construct, and that addition
of an anterior plate will increase the overall strength of the construct. Sawbones were plated laterally with two large-fragment locking
compression plates with inter-plate distances of 10 mm or 1 mm.
Small-fragment locking compression plates of 7-hole, 9-hole, and
11-hole sizes were placed anteriorly to span the inter-plate distance.
Four-point bend loading was applied, and the moment required to
displace the constructs by 10 mm was recorded.Objectives
Methods
1. The case of a girl aged sixteen years who avulsed the iliacus muscle from the ilium during a gymnastic exercise is reported. 2. The lesion was complicated by paralysis of the
1. The results of thirty-five acutely slipped upper
Bone mineral density (BMD) around the
We carried out a histological study of a proximally hydroxyapatite (HA)-coated
We have studied damage to the tibial articular surface after replacement of the
We have compared prospectively the incidence of loosening of 20
We reviewed 78
We analysed revised Mathys isoelastic polyacetal
The accuracy of templates used for the preoperative planning of the fixation of intramedullary fractures depends on radiological magnification. To study the accuracy of these templates, we randomly selected 100
We describe the development and early clinical application of a ported, proximally-cemented titanium stem for cemented total hip arthroplasty. PMMA bone cement is delivered to the proximal femur under pressure after the stem has been positioned within the
An analysis of the cement mantle obtained with the Exeter impaction allografting system at one centre showed that it was either deficient or absent in almost 47% of Gruen zones. We therefore examined the mantle obtained using this system at another hospital and compared the results with those from the CPT and Harris Precoat Systems at other centres. The surgical indications for the procedure and the patient details were broadly similar in all four hospitals. There was some variation in the frequency of use of cortical strut allografts, cerclage wires and wire mesh to supplement the impaction allograft. Analysis of the cement mantles showed that when uncertain Gruen zones were excluded, the incidence of zones with areas of absence or deficiency of the cement was 47% and 50%, respectively, for the two centres using the Exeter system, 21% for the CPT system and 18% for the Harris Precoat system. We measured the difference in size between the proximal allograft impactors and the definitive prosthesis for each system. The Exeter system impactors are shorter than the definitive prosthesis and taper sharply so that the cavity created is inadequate, especially distally. The CPT proximal impactors are considerably longer than the definitive prosthesis and are designed to give a mantle of approximately 2 mm medially and laterally and 1.5 mm anteriorly and posteriorly. The Harris Precoat proximal impactors allow for a mantle with a circumference of 0.75 mm in the smaller sizes and 1 mm in the larger. Many reports link the longevity of a cemented implant to the adequacy of the cement mantle. For this reason,
We report the initial results of an ongoing randomised, prospective study on migration of the Exeter and Elite Plus
In patients with traumatic brain injury and fractures
of long bones, it is often clinically observed that the rate of bone
healing and extent of callus formation are increased. However, the
evidence has been unconvincing and an association between such an
injury and enhanced fracture healing remains unclear. We performed
a retrospective cohort study of 74 young adult patients with a mean
age of 24.2 years (16 to 40) who sustained a
We studied the migration of 58 cemented Hinek
We studied the tapered interface between the head and the neck of 139 modular
We reviewed retrospectively the outcome of the treatment by impaction grafting of periprosthetic femoral fractures around loose stems in 106 patients with Vancouver type-B2 and type-B3 fractures. Eighty-nine patients had a cemented revision with impaction grafting and a long or short stem. The remaining 17 had cemented revision without impaction grafting. Fractures treated by impaction grafting and a long stem were more than five times likely to unite than those treated by impaction grafting and a short stem (odds ratio = 5.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.54 to 19.6; p = 0.009). Furthermore, those with impaction grafting and a long stem were significantly more likely to unite than those with a long stem without impaction grafting (odds ratio = 4.07, 95% CI 1.10 to 15.0; p = 0.035). There was also a trend towards a higher rate of union in those treated by impaction grafting than in those without (odds ratio = 2.69, 95% CI 0.86 to 8.45; p = 0.090). Impaction grafting is being increasingly widely used for the restoration of
The measurement of bone mineral density in defined areas around metal implants has improved with the development of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. We used this technique to compare the bone mineral density adjacent to metal cementless
We reviewed prospectively cemented stem revision in 106 patients with severe
We report an unusual complication of late dislocation of a total hip replacement. The