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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 2 | Pages 333 - 335
1 Mar 1999
Palmer SH Gibbons CLMH Athanasou NA

We analysed the histological findings in 1146 osteoarthritic femoral heads which would have been considered suitable for bone-bank donation to determine whether pathological lesions, other than osteoarthritis, were present. We found that 91 femoral heads (8%) showed evidence of disease. The most common conditions noted were chondrocalcinosis (63 cases), avascular necrosis (13), osteomas (6) and malignant tumours (one case of low-grade chondrosarcoma and two of well-differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma). There were two with metabolic bone disease (Paget’s disease and hyperparathyroid bone disease) and four with inflammatory (rheumatoid-like) arthritis. Our findings indicate that occult pathological conditions are common and it is recommended that histological examination of this regularly used source of bone allograft should be included as part of the screening protocol for bone-bank collection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 4 | Pages 599 - 601
1 Aug 1989
Yamano Y

The design and use of a prong plate for the treatment of displaced fractures of the femoral neck is described. The prongs hold the femoral head, and the plate is screwed to the anterior cortex of the femoral neck and trochanteric region. The new plate has been used in 32 patients with Garden stage III or IV fractures and 29 had a good result. Bony union was seen within 11 weeks in all patients in whom bleeding of the femoral head was noted at operation, but was much delayed in patients without bleeding. Late segmental aseptic necrosis was seen in four patients after follow-up of at least two years, and successfully treated. The prong plate allows accurate reduction, impaction and strong rigid fixation with less disturbance of the intramedullary blood flow than other fixation methods


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 2 | Pages 252 - 257
1 Mar 2002
Bar-On E Weigl D Parvari R Katz K Weitz R Steinberg T

We reviewed 13 patients with congenital insensitivity to pain. A quantitative sweat test was carried out in five and an intradermal histamine test in ten. DNA examination showed specific mutations in four patients. There were three clinical presentations: type A, in which multiple infections occurred (five patients); type B, with fractures, growth disturbances and avascular necrosis (three patients); and type C, with Charcot arthropathies and joint dislocations, as well as fractures and infections (five patients, four with mental retardation). Patient education, shoeware and periods of non-weight-bearing are important in the prevention and early treatment of decubitus ulcers. The differentiation between fractures and infections should be based on aspiration and cultures to prevent unnecessary surgery. Established infections should be treated by wide surgical debridement. Deformities can be managed by corrective osteotomies, and shortening by shoe raises or epiphysiodesis. Joint dislocations are best treated conservatively


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 6 | Pages 965 - 968
1 Nov 1991
Hope P Williamson D Coates C Cole W

A prospective randomised clinical trial was undertaken to compare biodegradable polyglycolic acid pins with standard Kirschner wires used to fix displaced elbow fractures in children. Twenty-four children were enrolled in the trial; 14 had fractures of the lateral condyle of the humerus, eight of the medial epicondyle and two had olecranon fractures. Eleven fractures were fixed with Kirschner wires and 13 with polyglycolic acid pins. Fracture union with full function occurred in all cases within six months. Kirschner wires caused problems including infection in three cases, soft-tissue ossification in one and they required removal under general anaesthesia in nine cases. No such complications occurred with polyglycolic acid pins but one patient in this group developed avascular necrosis and premature fusion of the medial epicondyle


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 2 | Pages 291 - 296
1 May 1974
Kerboul M Thomine J Postel M D'Aubigné RM

1. The surgical treatment of idiopathic aseptic necrosis of the femoral head has been reviewed in the light of experience gained from 240 hips operated upon. 2. When pain is not severe and the necrosis of bone as seen in serial radiographs is not rapidly progressive, simple observation and palliative medical treatment are indicated. 3. When pain disables the patient and collapse of the head is progressive, operation is indicated. If radiographs show necrosis limited to the anterior part of the head and sparing an arc of at least 20 degrees of the lateral part, either an osteotomy bringing the shaft into adduction and flexion or an "adjusted cup" arthroplasty is indicated, with a preference for the latter because it gives better results in a shorter time. 4. If at arthrotomy the necrosis appears to involve the posterior slope of the head, prosthetic replacement, preferably total, should be undertaken


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 5 | Pages 744 - 749
1 Sep 1993
Kershaw C Ware H Pattinson R Fixsen J

We report a review of 33 hips (32 patients) which had required repeat open reduction for congenital dislocation of the hip. They were followed up for a mean of 76 months (36 to 132). Factors predisposing to failure of the initial open reduction were simultaneous femoral or pelvic osteotomy, inadequate inferior capsular release, and inadequate capsulorrhaphy. Avascular necrosis had developed in more than half the hips, usually before the final open reduction. At review, 11 of the hips (one-third) were in Severin grade 3 or worse; five had significant symptoms and only ten were asymptomatic and radiographically normal. Once redisplacement has occurred after primary open reduction, attempts to reduce the head by closed means or by pelvic or femoral osteotomy are usually unsuccessful and a further open reduction is necessary


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 5 | Pages 695 - 700
1 Sep 1992
Poul J Bajerova J Sommernitz M Straka M Pokorny M Wong F

In this prospective study, 35,550 neonates were examined shortly after birth by a team of orthopaedic surgeons. They diagnosed 775 unstable or dislocated hips in 656 babies; there were two teratological dislocations. Treatment was first with a Frejka pillow and, if this failed to give a normal hip, a Pavlik harness at three months. Early clinical examination did not identify 21 infants who were found to have subluxation or dislocation of the hip at the three-month review. The number of missed cases declined during the study, however, reflecting the increasing experience of the examiners. One case of avascular necrosis occurred in the group treated from birth and one in the late-diagnosed group. Open reduction was necessary only in the two teratological dislocations. Experienced examiners are needed for accurate clinical diagnosis; and treatment should be started before the baby is discharged from the maternity ward


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 6 | Pages 950 - 954
1 Nov 1991
Raaymakers E Marti R

In a prospective study, 170 impacted femoral neck fractures were treated by early mobilisation and weight-bearing. The overall mortality at one year was 16%. In the 167 patients who were followed up until fracture healing or secondary instability, 143 fractures (86%) united. Instability occurred only in patients over 70 years of age, and in younger patients with a short life expectancy. Stepwise logistic regression analysis indicated that poor general health and old age (over 70 years) were risk factors. None of the other variables, such as the Garden index, Pauwels' type, and time to full weight-bearing had any influence on the development of secondary instability. Delayed operation after secondary instability caused no increase in mortality, nonunion or avascular necrosis. Functional treatment of all patients with impacted femoral neck fractures seems therefore to be justified


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 1 | Pages 64 - 71
1 Jan 2020
Tsuda Y Fujiwara T Stevenson JD Parry MC Tillman R Abudu A

Aims

The purpose of this study was to report the long-term results of extendable endoprostheses of the humerus in children after the resection of a bone sarcoma.

Methods

A total of 35 consecutive patients treated with extendable endoprosthetic replacement of the humerus in children were included. There were 17 boys and 18 girls in the series with a median age at the time of initial surgery of nine years (interquartile range (IQR) 7 to 11).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 2 | Pages 194 - 197
1 May 1981
Offierski C

Thirty-three children with traumatic dislocation of the hip who had been treated at the Hospital for Sick Children between 1960 and 1977 were reviewed. The amount of trauma causing dislocation of the hip in younger children was less than that for older children. The most frequent complication was soft-tissue interposition which usually required a posterior arthrotomy to clear the interposed tissue. Less frequent complications included avascular necrosis, redislocation of the hip and an irreducible hip. Nineteen children were reviewed with an average follow-up time of 10 years. Clinical examination indicated that 84 per cent of these hips were normal but the radiographs showed that 47 per cent of the dislocated hips had a coxa magna of two millimetres or more. There was no correlation between the development of coxa magna and the clinical result


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 1 | Pages 16 - 28
1 Feb 1961
McDougall A

1. Fracture of the neck of the femur in childhood and its complications are discussed. 2. The high incidence of these complications is not generally appreciated–in this series of twenty-four patients only eight achieved normal hip joints. 3. The complications are due to the arrangement of the blood supply to the head and neck. Avascular necrosis is unavoidable in a high proportion, and is not directly related to any particular method of treatment. 4. Extreme care and gentleness in handling the injured limb will help to reduce the incidence of deformities; internal fixation is not suitable for the very young as it may predispose to necrosis or may damage the epiphysis. In older children it can be used with care. 5. Where growth is still taking place in the limb the retention of the angle between neck and shaft is most important, as this will prevent coxa vara and progressive shortening with the consequent unsightly Trendelenburg limp


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 3 | Pages 626 - 632
1 Aug 1960
Bobechko WP Harris WR

1. Experimental avascular necrosis of the femoral head was produced in rabbits and the histological and radiographic changes were compared. 2. Avascular bone which was not re-ossified or altered in any way showed no change in density to x-rays. 3. Areas of avascular bone which were being repaired by the formation of appositional new bone showed an absolute increase in density in the radiographs. This is apparently due to simple increase in bulk of bone to be penetrated by the x-ray beam. On this basis, increasing density in radiographs of bone suspected of being dead is a sign of increasing re-ossification rather than of increasing necrosis. 4. Re-ossification of dead bone occurred rapidly in the absence of simultaneous resorption of necrotic trabeculae. It is thus suggested that the term "creeping substitution" is misleading and does not reflect accurately the histological findings, at least as they occur in rabbits


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 4 | Pages 39 - 42
1 Aug 2019


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 2 | Pages 274 - 277
1 Mar 2001
Drescher W Schneider T Becker C Hobolth J Rüther W Hansen ES Bünger C

Treatment with corticosteroids is a risk factor for non-traumatic avascular necrosis of the femoral head, but the pathological mechanism is poorly understood. Short-term treatment with high doses of methylprednisolone is used in severe neurotrauma and after kidney and heart transplantation. We investigated the effect of such treatment on the pattern of perfusion of the femoral head and of bone in general in the pig. We allocated 15 immature pigs to treatment with high-dose methylprednisolone (20 mg/kg per day intramuscularly for three days, followed by 10 mg/kg intramuscularly for a further 11 days) and 15 to a control group. Perfusion of the systematically subdivided femoral head, proximal femur, acetabulum, humerus, and soft tissues was determined by the microsphere technique. Blood flow in bone was severely reduced in the steroid-treated group. The reduction of flow affected all the segments and the entire epiphysis of the femoral head. No changes in flow were found in non-osseous tissue. Short-term treatment with high-dose methylprednisolone causes reduction of osseous blood flow which may be the pathogenetic factor in the early stage of steroid-induced osteonecrosis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 2 | Pages 241 - 245
1 Mar 1991
Baksi D

Sixty-one patients with 68 osteonecrotic femoral heads, at different stages of development, were treated surgically; their average age was 36 years. Necrosis followed a fracture in 43 hips and traumatic dislocation in three. It was idiopathic in 14, cortisone-induced in seven and associated with gout in one. The operation of multiple drilling, curettage of the necrotic bone and muscle pedicle bone grafting was performed in all. Cheilectomy of the superolateral part of the femoral head and adductor tenotomy were added in cases of advanced necrosis. Of the several types of muscle pedicle used, tensor fasciae latae anteriorly and quadratus femoris posteriorly were preferred. Full weight-bearing was not permitted for five to six months. The follow-up period varied from three to 12 years. Hip pain was regularly relieved and abduction and rotation of the joints were improved. Those with post-traumatic or idiopathic necrosis did better than those with cortisone-induced necrosis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 2 | Pages 244 - 253
1 May 1981
Chacha P Ahmed M Daruwalla J

Failure of union of the tibia with a large defect is difficult to treat, especially in the presence of sepsis and adherent scars. Conventional methods of fixation and bone grafting are not easily applicable. Experiments on Macaca monkeys showed that a vascularised pedicle graft of the shaft of the ipsilateral fibula could be fixed across a defect in the tibia and remain viable, even if it was isolated from surrounding soft tissues. Transfer of part of the shaft of the ipsilateral fibula on a vascular and muscle pedicle was carried out in 11 patients with large tibial defects and sepsis. There was one failure because of severe infection, but the other 10 patients gained sound union in about four months. The tibia was then protected by a caliper for the 18 months of full reconstitution. The bone infection healed and there was no evidence of avascular necrosis. Although the salvaged limbs were scarred, stiff and ugly, none of the patients suffered from pain, recurrent oedema or persistent infection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 52-B, Issue 1 | Pages 36 - 48
1 Feb 1970
Kenwright J Taylor RG

1. Fifty-eight major injuries in the region of the talus were reviewed regarding treatment, incidence of complications and long-term results. 2. The prognosis for simple fractures of the head, neck or body was good, as was that for dislocations of the midtarsal and peritalar joints. 3. The prognosis for fracture-dislocations of the neck and body was better than has been frequently reported. It was related to the degree of initial trauma. A good result occurs only if accurate reduction is effected and maintained. Fixation with a Kirschner wire is a useful method of maintaining the reduction after unstable fracture-dislocations. 4. Avascular necrosis occurred only in the more severe injuries and its incidence was related to the degree of initial displacement. The late results were better than have been previously described. The condition is best treated conservatively by protection from weight-bearing until revascularisation is well advanced. 5. A case with an unusual pattern of fracture of the neck of the talus is described following a plantar-flexion inversion injury


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1035 - 1040
1 Sep 2004
Upadhyay A Jain P Mishra P Maini L Gautum VK Dhaon BK

We have compared the results and complications after closed and open reduction with internal fixation in young adults with displaced intracapsular fractures (Garden grades III and IV) of the neck of the femur. We also studied the risk factors which influenced nonunion and the development of avascular necrosis (AVN). A total of 102 patients aged between 15 and 50 years was randomised to receive either closed or open reduction. Both groups were compared for age, gender, time to surgery and posterior comminution as well as for union and complications. Using univariate and multivariate analysis the factors influencing nonunion and AVN were assessed. Of the 102 patients, 92 were available for review. There was no significant difference between the groups in terms of union (p = 0.93) and AVN at two years (p = 0.85). Posterior comminution, poor reduction and improper placement of the screws were the major factors contributing to nonunion. The overall incidence of AVN was 16.3% (15 of 92 patients) and it was not influenced by these factors. A delay of more than 48 hours before surgery did not influence the rate of union or the development of AVN when compared with operation within 48 hours of injury


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 4 | Pages 545 - 547
1 May 2000
Danielsson LG

In a prospective study conducted between 1990 and 1997, 24 101 newborn infants were examined for neonatal instability of the hip and classified by the ethnic origin of their parents. In 63% their mother and father were of Swedish extraction and in 24% they were born in a foreign country. Those of foreign extraction were split into ethnic and geographical subgroups. Although the incidence of treated (dislocatable-unstable) hips was greater in Swedes (7.6‰), than in other geographical groups (5.8‰) it was not significantly different (p = 0.065). A total of 12.7‰ were referred from the neonatal ward to the orthopaedic clinic with suspected dislocatable or unstable hips; 6.8‰ were treated (5.4‰ dislocatable, 1.4‰ unstable), but 5.9‰ were not treated since their ultrasound examination was normal. Two hips were diagnosed late and one case of mild avascular necrosis was found. Examination by dynamic ultrasound decreased the number of treated cases by 5.9‰ but was not an absolute guarantee of diagnosis


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1272 - 1279
1 Oct 2019
Nowak LL Hall J McKee MD Schemitsch EH

Aims

To compare complication-related reoperation rates following primary arthroplasty for proximal humerus fractures (PHFs) versus secondary arthroplasty for failed open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF).

Patients and Methods

We identified patients aged 50 years and over, who sustained a PHF between 2004 and 2015, from linkable datasets. We used intervention codes to identify patients treated with initial ORIF or arthroplasty, and those treated with ORIF who returned for revision arthroplasty within two years. We used multilevel logistic regression to compare reoperations between groups.