Haemophilic arthropathy is characterised by iron deposits in synovial tissues. We investigated the suggestion that iron plays an important role in synovial changes. We obtained synovial tissue from six patients with haemophilia during arthroplasty, finding that brown haemosideritic tissue was often adjacent to tissue with a macroscopically normal appearance in the same joint. Samples from both types of synovial tissue were analysed histologically and biochemically to determine catabolic activity. Macroscopically haemosideritic synovium showed a significantly higher inflammatory activity than that with a normal appearance. Cultures of abnormal synovial tissue gave a significantly enhanced production of IL-1, IL-6 and TNFα compared with cultures of synovial tissue with a normal appearance. In addition, the supernatant fluids from the cultures showed greater catabolic activity from haemosideritic tissue, as determined by the inhibition of the synthesis of
Radiographs of 155 Indian children were examined to identify the acetabular changes which occur in Perthes' disease. These changes included osteoporosis of the acetabular roof, irregularity of contour, premature fusion of the triradiate cartilage, hypertrophy of
Six cases of osteochondritis dissecans patellae have been studied in five patients in an attempt to clarify the aetiology and prognosis. Assessment of the results of treatment was performed using a standard protocol. The thirty-four previous case reports in the literature are reviewed. In four of the five patients symptoms began after flexing the knee under load and three showed patellar subluxation on tangential radiographs. Thus, repetitive shearing stress on the patellar surface is thought to be an important aetiological factor. The indication for operation is a loose osteochondral fragment either wholly or partly detached from the articular surface of the patella. Vertical excision of the affected area of
1. Prosthetic acetabular cups of the Charnley and McKee-Farrar designs were cemented into cadaveric pelves using different procedures for preparing the acetabulum. 2. The torsional moments needed to loosen these cups were measured. 3. The torsional moments so measured were found to be from about four to more than twenty times higher than the frictional moments measured in independent tests on the two designs of prosthesis. 4. It is argued that late looseness of the acetabular component after total hip replacement, in the absence of infection, seems most likely to be due to thermal damage to the bone occurring at the time of polymerisation of the cement, and to subsequent bone resorption. 5. Surgical preparation of the acetabulum should include removal of all the
1. Diametric growth and organisation of the epiphysial cartilage plate have been studied by microradiography of human bone and autoradiography of the epiphysial plate in growing rabbits, using sulphur. 35. These investigations were supplemented by a radiographic study of four patients with dyschondroplasia in whom the progress of the characteristic epiphysial defects were traced during several years' growth. 2. A perichondrial sheath of bone, at the junction of the epiphysial plate with the metaphysis, was demonstrated by microradiography of the distal end of the human femur. Its relationship to epiphysial growth is discussed. 3. Autoradiography, to determine the direction of the cellular proliferation between the epiphysial plate and the overlying perichondrium, demonstrated the appearance of new cartilage cells at the periphery of the plate over a period of six days. 4. The evidence presented strongly favours the postulate that the transverse diameter of the epiphysial cartilage plate increases by appositional growth from the overlying perichondrium and that the same source is responsible for lateral extension of the
1. The semilunar cartilages are part of the rotator mechanism of the knee joint. 2. Movement of the weight-bearing knee comprises synchronous lateral rotation of the tibia with extension and medial rotation of the tibia with flexion. 3. When this synchrony is disturbed, injuries to the semilunar cartilages result. 4. Damage to the anterior two-thirds of the medial cartilage blocks lateral rotation of the tibia, with consequent physical signs that are pathognomonic of the retracted and the bowstring cartilage, which are the most common types of injury. 5. Each type of cartilage injury produces its own pattern of erosion of
Infection of human cartilage with HIV in vivo has not previously been reported. Specimens of
We carried out radial MRI in 30 hips with moderate osteoarthritis and in ten normal hips. On a scout view containing the entire acetabular rim, 12 vertical radial slices were set at 15° intervals. Different appearances were observed in different parts of the joint. In the weight-bearing portion, from 45° anterosuperior to 45° posterosuperior, ‘attenuation’ (n = 16) and ‘disappearance’ (n = 25) were observed as abnormalities of the labrum with ‘capsular stripping’ (n = 29) and ‘extraosseous high signal lesion’ (n = 27) as capsular abnormalities, seen more often in the anterosuperior portion. In all 12 planes there were osteophytes on the acetabular edge (n = 24), femoral head (n = 22) and/or at the central acetabulum (n = 6), a bone cyst on the acetabulum (n = 18) and/or the femoral head (n = 9), irregularity of the
We determined the outcome of 56 ‘Oxford’ unicompartmental replacements performed for anteromedial osteoarthritis of the knee between 1982 and 1987. Of these, 24 were in patients who had died without revision, one was lost to follow-up and two had been revised. Of the remaining 29 knees, 26 were examined clinically and radiologically, two were only examined clinically and one patient was contacted by telephone. The mean age of the patients was 80.3 years. At a mean follow-up of 11.4 years (10 to 14) the measurements of the knee score, range of movement and degree of deformity were not significantly different from those made one to two years after operation, except that the range of flexion had improved. Comparison of fluoroscopically-controlled radiographs at a similar interval of time showed no change in the appearance of the lateral compartments. The retained
1. A systematic collection of the clinical findings in fifty patients with pyrophosphate synovitis,among some 300 patients with obscure disorder of the knee, has been made over a period of eighteen months. The numbers of men and women were equal, the mean age being seventy years (range thirty-seven to ninety), and the mean age at the onset of symptoms fifty-nine years. 2. A difference in the clinical picture between the sexes was found. In men an acute synovitis predominated, in women chronic joint complaints. 3. A high incidence of accompanying disease was found, but none had a significant relationship to the arthropathy, although the high frequency (20 per cent) of synovitis following an acute severe illness of some other kind was striking. 4. No specific radiological sign except for calcifications in
1. The uptake of S. 35. labelled sodium sulphate has been studied autoradiographically in the intervertebral disc of the young rabbit. 2. The sojourn of the isotope in the tissues includes an intracellular phase of approximately twenty-four hours, followed by an extracellular phase. 3. The cells exhibiting by far the greatest affinity for the sulphate ion are the peripheral groups of cells of the nucleus pulposus, while the chondrocyte-like cells of the cartilaginous segment of the annulus fibrosus are also fairly active. The central cells of the nucleus and the fibroblasts of the outer one-third of the annulus have a much lower uptake. 4. By analogy with similar studies on hyaline cartilage, and on the basis of correlation between the alcinophilia of the tissues and the concentration of the label, both before and after hyalase digestion of the tissue, it is considered that in the young rabbit disc, as in
We studied 40 patients in whom the patella was not severely deformed and who were undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) for osteoarthritis by one surgeon using one type of prosthesis. They were randomly allocated either to have the patella retained or resurfaced with a cemented, all-polyethylene component regardless of the state of the patellar
The division of osteoarthritis into primary and secondary varieties implies that these are aetiologically distinct entities, the former being due to some intrinsic defect of cartilage and the latter resulting from previous articular damage. This traditional concept is questioned and the hypothesis is advanced that osteoarthritis is always secondary to some underlying abnormality of the joint. A detailed clinical, radiographic and morbid anatomical study of 327 cases of osteoarthritis of the hip is presented. In all but twenty-seven some predisposing abnormality of the joint was diagnosed: 107 (33%) were associated with major pathology such as Perthes' disease or epiphysiolysis; minor acetabular dysplasia was present in sixty-seven (20%), with a male: female ratio of 1:10; minimal femoral head tilt was demonstrated in fifty-nine (18%), the male: female ratio being 14:1; and in forty-three (13%) there were features suggesting an underlying inflammatory arthritis. On the basis of this study a new classification is proposed and osteoarthritis of the hip is divided into three pathogenetic groups: 1) failure of essentially normal cartilage subjected to abnormal or incongruous loading for long periods; 2) damaged or defective cartilage failing under normal conditions of loading; 3) break-up of
Experiments on white mice were undertaken to determine the reaction of bone to the intramedullary introduction of the virus of tick-borne encephalitis. The following conclusions were drawn. 1. The tick-borne encephalitis virus S47, when introduced intraosteally in white mice, provokes osteitis. 2. Inflammation may lead to acute necrosis of bone, preceded by marked medullary oedema and subsequent proliferation, or it may take a milder form with haemorrhagic effusion into the marrow tissue and subsequent hyperplasia of connective tissue. 3. Damage to the epiphysial and
Dynamic muscle-tendon substitution for acute anterior cruciate deficiency in the dog was studied using the semimembranosus muscle-tendon. Nineteen mongrel dogs each had a semimembranosus transfer in one knee; as a control, the anterior cruciate ligament and the semimembranosus were released in the opposite knee. No postoperative immobilisation was used. The anterior drawer sign was assessed before and after operation and when the dogs were killed five months later. Dogs were excluded from the study if they developed infections or contractures of the hind legs. At five months, 11 dogs were available for study. The operated knees were examined histologically and evaluated using a reproducible index of arthritis based on: the macroscopic discoloration of the
Autogenous bone graft which has been either autoclaved or irradiated is commonly used in oriental countries as an alternative to allograft. We started to use the technique of extracorporeal irradiation of the resected specimen and reimplantation (ECIR) in 1991. There was, however, a high incidence of fracture of the irradiated bone and loss of
Forty-eight men and three women were reviewed an average of thirty-one months after pes anserinus transposition for chronic anteromedial rotational instability of the knee. Their ages ranged from eighteen to forty-two years (average twenty-five years). All but four of the injuries occurred during sport. The interval between injury and operation averaged thirty months. During this time twenty-three patients had had other operations of which eighteen were for excision of menisci. A further sixteen patients required excision of one or both menisci at the time of pes anserinus transposition. After operation large haematomata had to be expressed from four wounds. One patient had a pulmonary embolism All made a complete recovery. Worthwhile improvement of stability during activity was found in forty-two of the fifty-one knees. Pre-existing degeneration of
Cell therapies hold significant promise for the treatment of injured or diseased musculoskeletal tissues. However, despite advances in research, there is growing concern about the increasing number of clinical centres around the world that are making unwarranted claims or are performing risky biological procedures. Such providers have been known to recommend, prescribe, or deliver so called ‘stem cell’ preparations without sufficient data to support their true content and efficacy. In this annotation, we outline the current environment of stem cell-based treatments and the strategies of marketing directly to consumers. We also outline the difficulties in the regulation of these clinics and make recommendations for best practice and the identification and reporting of illegitimate providers. Cite this article: