We report a prospective study of 198 cases of subcapital fracture of the femur treated by closed reduction and fixation with a sliding compression screw-plate. This was done without regard to the patient's age or the Garden stage of the fracture. Early weight-bearing was encouraged. Of the displaced fractures 23% failed in the first year because of non-union or infection. Of the fractures which united 27% had developed
1. Thirteen cases of traumatic separation of the upper femoral epiphysis have been studied. Four were previously reported and nine new cases are analysed. 2. This is a rare injury occurring in young children and is due to severe violence. 3. Separation occurred at the epiphysial plate, and severe posterior displacement was frequent. The fracture line does not penetrate the epiphysis. 4. Premature fusion,
1. Two children suffering from Gaucher's disease, who developed changes in the femoral head typical of Perthes' disease, are reported. Similar changes have been recorded in the literature in seventeen children under the age of fifteen years. 2. The possible factors giving rise to the bone changes are discussed and it is considered that they result from
The results of the Ferguson medial approach for open reduction of developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) were reviewed for 49 hips with a follow-up of more than 48 months. The mean age at operation was 12.3 months (6 to 23). The mean length of clinical and radiological follow-up was 82 months (48 to 148). Three redislocations occurred. Group I
Hip fractures in patients < 60 years old currently account for only 3% to 4% of all hip fractures in England, but this proportion is increasing. Little is known about the longer-term patient-reported outcomes in this potentially more active population. The primary aim is to examine patient-reported outcomes following isolated hip fracture in patients aged < 60 years. The secondary aim is to determine an association between outcomes and different types of fracture pattern and/or treatment implants. All hip fracture patients aged 18 to 60 years admitted to a single centre over a 15-year period were used to identify the study group. Fracture pattern (undisplaced intracapsular, displaced intracapsular, and extracapsular) and type of operation (multiple cannulated hip screws, angular stable fixation, hemiarthroplasty, and total hip replacement) were recorded. The primary outcome measures were the Oxford Hip Score (OHS), the EuroQol five-dimension questionnaire (EQ-5D-3L), and EQ-visual analogue scale (VAS) scores. Preinjury scores were recorded by patient recall and postinjury scores were collected at a mean of 57 months (9 to 118) postinjury. Ethics approval was obtained prior to study commencement.Aims
Methods
The Denis Browne abduction harness was used in the management of 127 abnormal hips in 104 children at Queen Mary's Hospital for Children from 1966 to 1980, both as the initial treatment for unstable hips recognised soon after birth, and for children presenting later and whose hips first required reduction by gradual abduction in traction. The incidence of significant
Fifty-six patients with ununited intracapsular fractures of the femoral neck were treated by internal fixation and muscle-pedicle bone grafting. All had some absorption of the femoral neck, and many had
Aseptic loosening of the tibial component is a frequent cause of failure in primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Management options include an isolated tibial revision or full component revision. A full component revision is frequently selected by surgeons unfamiliar with the existing implant or who simply wish to “start again”. This option adds morbidity compared with an isolated tibial revision. While isolated tibial revision has a lower morbidity, it is technically more challenging due to difficulties with exposure and maintaining prosthetic stability. This study was designed to compare these two reconstructive options. Patients undergoing revision TKA for isolated aseptic tibial loosening between 2012 and 2017 were identified. Those with revision implants or revised for infection, instability, osteolysis, or femoral component loosening were excluded. A total of 164 patients were included; 88 had an isolated tibial revision and 76 had revision of both components despite only having a loose tibial component. The demographics and clinical and radiological outcomes were recorded.Aims
Methods
1. Bone changes in the haemoglobinopathies are caused by either (a) chronic haemolysis with marrow hyperplasia, or (b) infarction, when Hb S is present in the red cells in amounts sufficient to allow sickling (and therefore vascular occlusion) in vivo. 2. Marrow hyperplasia produces osteoporosis, widening of the medulla, and thinning of the cortex; it may lead to spontaneous fractures and disturbances of growth. Enlargement of the foramina of the nutrient arteries may be seen especially in the phalanges. Infarcts leading to
An experimental method is described which permits observations on the early stages of repair after acute displacement of the upper femoral epiphysis. Because the epiphysis is intra-articular, displacement brings about
It has been shown that raised intracapsular pressure causes
The purpose of this investigation was to determine the relationship between height, weight, and sex with implant size in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) using a multivariate linear regression model and a Bayesian model. A retrospective review of an institutional registry was performed of primary TKAs performed between January 2005 and December 2016. Patient demographics including patient age, sex, height, weight, and body mass index (BMI) were obtained from registry and medical record review. In total, 8,100 primary TKAs were included. The mean age was 67.3 years (SD 9.5) with a mean BMI of 30.4 kg/m2 (SD 6.3). The TKAs were randomly split into a training cohort (n = 4,022) and a testing cohort (n = 4,078). A multivariate linear regression model was created on the training cohort and then applied to the testing cohort . A Bayesian model was created based on the frequencies of implant sizes in the training cohort. The model was then applied to the testing cohort to determine the accuracy of the model at 1%, 5%, and 10% tolerance of inaccuracy.Aims
Methods
Over a 20-year period we treated 29 patients (31 dislocated hips) by non-operative reduction after nine months of age, using horizontal traction. They were followed up for a mean of 11.7 years, and 12 hips required secondary extra-articular surgery. The clinical result was excellent in 25 hips, good in four and fair in two. Of the 29 hips for which detailed radiographs were available, 18 achieved Severin grade I, nine grade II and two grade III. There were no major complications and, in particular, no cases of
We report a series of 50 patients under 70 years of age who had an ununited femoral neck fracture treated by a Pauwels abduction osteotomy. At an average follow-up of 7.1 years, seven patients had required prosthetic replacement and 37 others were reviewed in detail. In these patients the Harris hip score averaged 91. Twenty-two hips showed radiographic evidence of avascular femoral head necrosis, but only three of these had been replaced. For active patients with non-union of a femoral neck fracture, Pauwels osteotomy provides a high proportion of good results even in the presence of
Splitting fractures of the humeral head are rare; part of the humeral head dislocates and the unfractured part remains attached to the shaft. We report eight cases in young patients. In five the diagnosis was made at presentation: three had minimal internal fixation using a superior subacromial approach, one had a closed reduction and one a primary prosthetic replacement. All five patients regained excellent function with no
1. A collected series of forty-seven traumatic dislocations of the hip in children is reported and reviewed in detail. 2. All were simple hip dislocations, and no child was included in whom there was any other injury to the affected joint. 3. All were posterior dislocations. 4. No anatomical predisposition was observed. 5. Significant complications occurred in fourteen children:
1. Nine out of ten patients who undergo McMurray osteotomy may expect lasting relief of pain. Seventy-five per cent should have a satisfactory functional result. It is rare for a patient to be made worse. 2. Osteoarthritis of the hip and ununited fracture of the femoral neck are good reasons for operation;
1. Two unrelated families with a genetically determined arthritis-like syndrome of the joints of the hand and wrist are described. 2. The condition begins before puberty, is relatively painless and is not functionally disabling. The condition resembles that described by Thiemann and appears to fall into the group of