Ninety-eight fractures of the shaft of the femur were seen in one unit over the two years 1974 and 1975, and the results have been assessed in sixty-nine. Of these, thirty-eight were treated by skeletal traction in a Thomas's splint followed by skin traction, and thirty-one by skeletal traction followed by a cast-brace. The technique of application is described in some detail. The average time for application of the cast-brace was six weeks after the injury, the time in hospital eight weeks and the time till removal fifteen weeks. The patients selected for a cast-brace were in hospital for just over half the time of the others and their fractures on average united more quickly, though with some trouble from angulation of fractures of the uppermost third of the shaft. It is concluded that when used with all the judgment and skill it demands, the cast-brace method is a great advance in conservative treatment.
1. The results of treatment of fractures of the shaft of the femur in fifty patients aged sixty-five years and over seen over a twelve-year period are presented. 2. Half of the patients were treated by internal fixation and half by conservative methods. The mortality in the former group was three times that of the latter. 3. The length of hospital stay was only slightiy less after internal fixation because many patients in both groups had to remain in hospital because of social problems. 4. The indications for internal fixation of fractures of the shaft of the femur in elderly patients are discussed.
1. During the past twenty-five years there have been admitted to this orthopaedic service twelve children or adolescents having a close relative who previously or subsequently developed slipped upper femoral epiphysis. This represents an incidence of approximately 7 per cent. 2. There is some evidence that the incidence is considerably higher. 3. In addition to those with close relations also with slipped epiphysis, two patients had parents with osteoarthritis of the hip. 4. I believe, therefore, that in slipped upper femoral epiphysis there is evidence of a genetic defect. This is probably due to a recessive gene of low penetrance. The frequency in this region is high because the north-east of Scotland has very definite geographical boundaries and the rural, agricultural population, from which the majority of these cases were drawn, has formed until recently a stable community likely to show a greater than average incidence.
Simple pinning to fix the epiphysis in those patients in whom the position is acceptable is a valuable surgical procedure. It is safe and gives good results. It eliminates the danger of further displacement, promotes fusion of the epiphysial plate and allows the patient to return to full activity within one month, thus avoiding joint stiffness, muscle atrophy, osteoporosis and interference with growth at other sites. Fixation by small pins is preferable to the use of the trifin nail, the latter giving excessive trauma and predisposing to subtrochanteric fracture. Gentle replacement of the epiphysis, when loose, into an acceptable position is a valuable method of treatment. It is essential that replacement is not undertaken by force. The problem of major displacement of the epiphysis which cannot be so replaced is unsolved. Conservative treatment in this group is useless and harmful. Intra-articular osteotomy can give good results in most cases but is risky and may cause stiffening of the hip. Subtrochanteric osteotomy does not give a good anatomical result but in most cases the function of the hip is satisfactory. Slipping of the upper femoral epiphysis, however slight, should be regarded as a surgical emergency.
1. A series of eighty-one hips with slipped upper femoral epiphysis in sixty-three patients is reviewed. 2. The importance of early diagnosis is emphasised. 3. Conservative treatment is condemned. 4. In attempting reduction violent manipulation and strong traction must be avoided. 5. In cases of slight displacement pinning in the position of displacement gives the best results. 6. Three or four small pins are recommended for fixation. 7. When the amount of slip is 50 per cent or more of the diameter of the head gentle manipulation should be tried and, if successful, followed by fixation with three or four pins. 8. The hip with an irreducible slip of 50 per cent or more should be treated by pertrochanteric or subtrochanteric osteotomy.
1. One hundred and seventy-three hips in 138 patients have been examined and studied in reference to the type of treatment received. 2. Shepherd's method of assessing the results of arthroplasty operations has been adapted to this series. 3. Satisfactory results were found in 77·9 per cent of all patients. 4. The value of straight longitudinal traction is questioned. Medial rotation appears to be an essential step in the reduction of the deformity. 5. Manipulation was found to be a relatively safe and effective method of reducing the deformity in patients seen soon after an acute episode, and should be reserved for them. 6. Complications were common after nailing operations, and included subtrochanteric fracture in three cases. 7. Avascular necrosis was the commonest cause of a poor result. The two types of avascular necrosis are discussed. 8. Avascular necrosis was found in 37 per cent of cases in which a manipulation was followed by a nailing operation. 9. Avascular necrosis was not found in any case in which a manipulation was combined with the use of Moore's pins, but such cases were kept under observation for a shorter time. 10. Avascular necrosis was found in 38·1 per cent of cases of cervical osteotomy.
The December 2023 Children’s orthopaedics Roundup. 360. looks at: A comprehensive nonoperative treatment protocol for developmental dysplasia of the hip in infants; How common are refractures in childhood?;
Aims. Osteoporosis can determine surgical strategy for total hip arthroplasty (THA), and perioperative fracture risk. The aims of this study were to use hip CT to measure
The use of extendible distal femoral replacements is a relatively new treatment alternative for malignant bone tumours in growing individuals. Although their appearance was widely appreciated, questions about functional practicality and longevity remain unclear. With longer follow-up, advantages of immediate functional restoration and beneficial psychological aspects seem to be overshadowed by an increase in complications such as aseptic loosening, infection or prosthetic failure. We have reviewed 18 children with such tumours who were treated between 1983 and 1990 by custom-made Stanmore extendible distal femoral replacements. Four died from metastatic disease within 2.5 years of operation and two required amputation for local recurrence or chronic infection. The remaining 12 patients were followed for a mean of 8.7 years (6 to 13.2). A mean total lengthening of 5.2 cm was achieved, requiring, on average, 4.3 operations. Using the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society rating score the functional result at review was, on average, 77% of the expected normal function, with seven patients achieving ≥ 80%. Revision of the prosthesis was required in ten patients, in six for aseptic loosening, at a mean of 6.2 years after the initial procedure.
We have reviewed retrospectively 80 patients who were treated for traumatic fractures of the femur with a Grosse-Kempf nail to assess the incidence and causes of persisting pain in the proximal thigh. At a mean of 21 months after operation 33 patients had residual pain severe enough to interfere with their lifestyle or mobility. This was in the region of the scar on the greater trochanter in three-quarters of the patients. Only four showed no radiological abnormality. There was nonunion of the fracture in two, Paget’s disease in one, breakage of the nail in two and prominence of the proximal locking screw in five, although we found no correlation between prominence of the nail and pain. There was a strong relationship between pain and heterotopic ossification at the proximal end of the implant; this was present in 64% of the patients with pain as compared with those without pain (p <
0.001, Mann-Whitney U test). Of the 80 patients, 27 had the implant removed after 18 months, 17 of them because of pain. In six of these 17, the pain was not relieved. Prominence of the nail proximally was not associated with pain, but protuberance of laterally-based proximal locking screws caused problems. We found a strong association between heterotopic bone formation and pain, but it is uncertain whether this is the true cause or merely an indication of some other factor such as traumatic damage to the glutei during insertion of the nail. Removal of the implant does not always cure such pain.
Aims. Uncemented implants are now commonly used at reimplantation of a two-stage revision total hip arthoplasty (THA) following periprosthetic joint infection (PJI). However, there is a paucity of data on the performance of the most commonly used uncemented
We retrieved 159 femoral heads at revision surgery to determine changes in surface configuration. Macroscopic wear of the head was observed in three bipolar hip prostheses as a result of three-body wear. There was a considerable change in surface roughness in the internal articulation of bipolar hip prostheses. Roughness in alumina heads was almost the same as that in new cobalt-chromium heads. The annual linear wear rate of polyethylene cups with alumina heads was less than that of cups with cobalt-chromium alloy heads. Polyethylene wear was increased in the prostheses which had increased roughness of the head.
Aims. Patient dissatisfaction is not uncommon following primary total knee arthroplasty. One proposed method to alleviate this is by improving knee kinematics. Therefore, we aimed to answer the following research question: are there significant differences in knee kinematics based on the design of the tibial insert (cruciate-retaining (CR), ultra-congruent (UC), or medial congruent (MC))?. Methods. Overall, 15 cadaveric knee joints were examined with a CR implant with three different tibial inserts (CR, UC, and MC) using an established knee joint simulator. The effects on coronal alignment, medial and lateral
We describe a method of closed, unlocked nailing for femoral fractures using ultrasound instead of an image intensifier. Radiography was used only to confirm that the guide wire had been passed into the intramedullary canal of both fragments. The method succeeded in 26 of 30 cases. The failures all occurred in fractures which could not be reduced within 20 minutes. The operating time in those nailed successfully with ultrasound control was not different from the time for 30 control cases using conventional methods with an image intensifier.