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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 973 - 974
1 Nov 1993
Tolat V Carty H Klenerman L Hart C


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 3 | Pages 403 - 406
1 May 1987
Bell M Atkins R Sharrard W

We report nine cases of irreducible congenital dislocation of the knee which were treated by early operation with good results. All were resistant to conservative measures and operation was performed at an average age of nine months. The essential abnormality was a short quadriceps muscle together with subluxation of the hamstring muscles to lie anterior to the axis of knee flexion. The quadriceps tendon was lengthened by VY-plasty and in six cases additional length was gained by proximal mobilisation of the muscle. After operation all the patients were able to walk.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 5 | Pages 588 - 597
1 Nov 1983
Aglietti P Insall J Buzzi R Deschamps G

This is a prospective study of 105 knees in 91 patients with idiopathic osteonecrosis of the femoral condyles, with an average follow-up of five years in 101 knees. Forty-eight of the 75 patients in whom the body weight was studied were obese and four of the 33 patients in whom a densitometry study was done showed decreased bone density. Prognosis is unfavourable if the lesion is larger than five square centimetres and if its width is more than 40 per cent of that of the condyle. Of the 22 patients followed up after conservative treatment 80 per cent were satisfactory. Of the 11 knees treated by arthrotomy alone 55 per cent were satisfactory. Of the 31 knees treated by osteotomy (21 with associated arthrotomy) 87 per cent were satisfactory. Arthrotomy did not significantly improve the results of osteotomies. The ideal correction was to 10 degrees of valgus. Of the 37 knees treated with replacement 95 per cent were satisfactory, and the best results were obtained with the total-condylar prosthesis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 3 | Pages 285 - 293
1 Aug 1979
Mubarak S Carroll N

A review was conducted of the records of fifty-five children who were admitted to the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto between 1955 and 1975 with a diagnosis of Volkmann's contracture in fifty-eight limbs. Ten patients had been transferred to this hospital with established ischaemia after Bryant's traction for a fractured femur; all had a very poor outcome. Thirteen other cases of Volkmann's contracture affecting the superficial posterior compartment had been treated with a fixed Thomas' splint and a Bradford frame after fractures of the femoral shaft. Supracondylar fractures of the elbow resulting in Volkmann's contracture frequently had both an arterial injury and a compartment syndrome. Most of the fifty-five children reviewed here had not had early appropriate treatment. For the past twenty-one years the frequency of Volkmann's contracture has not declined in spite of many published reports on the compartment syndrome, and the hazards of supracondylar fractures and of Bryant's traction.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 4 | Pages 485 - 490
1 Nov 1975
Wise KS

One hundred normal fingers were dissected and arthrographs obtained by injection of a chromopaquegelatin mixture, allowing comparison between the radiographic and macroscopic configuration of the synovial capsule. Synovial recesses protruding from each side of every metacarpo-phalangeal joint were found in relation to the collateral ligaments and corresponding exactly with the site of radiological erosions. A group of bursae lying on the superficial aspect of collateral ligaments were also demonstrated. A rudimentary infra-articular meniscus was found. The results of examination of the insertions of the interossei showed differences from traditional descriptions.

The cause of rheumatoid deformity was suggested to be the rheumatoid process arising in the lateral recesses and lateral bursae, weakening the collateral ligaments, which give way in the directions of the deforming forces. These are derived from the long flexor tendons, which were shown to exert an ulnar and volar strain on the metacarpo-phalangeal joint of every finger during grip.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 1 | Pages 24 - 29
1 Feb 1975
Lloyd-Roberts GC Graham Apley A Owen R

The cause of pseudarthrosis of the clavicle is obscure. Right-sidedness is an almost constant feature. We have proposed that the lesion is sometimes due to pressure upon the developing clavicle by the subclavian artery which is normally at a higher level on the right side. This may be accentuated in the presence of cervical ribs or unduly elevated first ribs, both of which we have observed in association with pseudarthrosis. We have also noted pseudarthrosis on the left side in association with dextrocardia (when the relative positions of the subclavian arteries are reversed) and in the presence of a large left cervical rib.

We have speculated upon the nature of the clavicular defect in cranio-cleido dysostosis, in which disorder the first ribs are habitually elevated. A similar mechanism may be involved.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 3 | Pages 367 - 373
1 May 1989
Murrell G Francis M Howlett C

The fine structure of palmar fascia from patients with Dupuytren's contracture (DC) was compared with that from patients with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). In contrast to previous assumptions, the ultrastructure of fibroblasts both in vivo and in vitro from DC and CTS appeared identical, indicating that myofibroblasts are not specific to DC. The major differences between DC and CTS were: 1) a sixfold and fortyfold increase in fibroblast density in cord and nodular areas of DC compared with CTS; 2) a more disorganised pattern of collagen fibrils in DC; and 3) markedly narrowed microvessels surrounded by thickened, laminated basal laminae and proliferating fibroblasts in DC compared with CTS. To account for these morphological changes a hypothesis is presented which proposes that oxygen-free radicals cause pericytic necrosis and fibroblastic proliferation. This hypothesis provides a potential avenue for therapy of DC and other fibrotic conditions.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 3 | Pages 366 - 367
1 Aug 1977
Petrie P

In a family study in which thirty-four patients with osteochondritis dissecans and eighty-six of their first-degree relatives were examined clinically and radiologically, only one relative was found to have osteochondritis dissecans. No association with other forms of osteochondritis, endocrinological abnormalities or dwarfism was found.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 2 | Pages 283 - 287
1 Mar 1989
Tamura T

Neck injury of the whiplash type may lead to the cranial symptoms of the Barre-Lieou syndrome. Forty patients with this syndrome and 40 without it were investigated by a variety of imaging techniques. There was a clear correlation between root sleeve defects at C3/4 shown by special oblique myelographic views and cranial symptoms. Good results were obtained by anterior cervical discectomy and fusion at C3/4 in 21 cases. It is suggested that the syndrome may result from irritation of the sympathetic nervous supply at this level.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 4 | Pages 402 - 407
1 Nov 1977
Lloyd-Roberts G Bucknill T

The results of operation for traumatic anterior dislocation of the head of the radius in eight children have been reviewed. We are satisfied on the basis of the results obtained and the outcome in one untreated patient that operative reduction is fully justified, provided that the annular ligament is reconstructed and internal fixation employed. We have not seen unilateral congenital dislocation and doubt its existence. Secondary subluxation of the distal radio-ulnar joint has been noted in an untreated patient.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 53-B, Issue 1 | Pages 13 - 22
1 Feb 1971
Moore M

1. That viruses may be involved in the causation of human tumours has long been suspected but not yet proved. The discovery that osteogenic sarcoma can be induced by viral agents in mice and hamsters makes the proposition that human sarcomas may also have a viral origin basically tenable on presently available evidence. In order to distinguish between passengers and causative agents it will probably be necessary to demonstrate antigenic cross-reactivity in tumours of similar type collected from different geographical areas, and the oncogenicity in subhuman primates of extracts containing virus from human tumours. Such information is likely to become available in the next few years.

2. The demonstration of tumour-specific immune reactions in an increasing number of patients with various forms of neoplasm, including skeletal sarcomas, and the correlation of these reactions with the clinical status of the disease sustains the hope that eventually immunotherapy may contribute to the control of cancer in man.

3. Animal experiments have revealed that the potentiation of immune responses may lead to the elimination of small foci of neoplastic cells. The role of immunotherapy in the treatment of cancer may therefore be as an adjunct to surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy (Alexander 1968). Once the primary tumour has been removed it may be possible to employ immunotherapeutic measures to destroy the relatively few remaining cells that give rise to late metastases; this is particularly apposite to juvenile osteosarcoma.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 956 - 961
1 Nov 1993
Vrettos B Hoffman E

Of 44 patients (55 hips) with slipped upper femoral epiphysis treated from 1963 to 1989, 13 (14 hips) developed chondrolysis. Eight hips had chondrolysis at the time of presentation, all in female patients who were either coloured or black and who had moderate or severe slips. The other six hips had persistent pin penetration of the joint; in five of these the pin penetrated the anterosuperior quadrant of the head. Removal of penetrating pins resulted in improvement in pain in all six hips and in the range of movement in four. Chondrolysis did not develop in any of 11 hips with transient intraoperative pin penetration. In hips with chondrolysis maximum joint-space narrowing developed within the first year; improvement in joint space and range of movement continued for up to three years after maximal involvement. At an average follow-up of 13.3 years no patient had pain but five hips were stiff.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 1 | Pages 6 - 14
1 Feb 1978
Wynne-Davies R Gormley J

The aims of this survey were to establish the familial incidence of Perthes' disease, to note any associated developmental anomalies and to collect information on preceding trauma or synovitis, on the pregnancy and birth, and on various sociological factors. Height and weight measurements were obtained for 217 patients, and comparisons made with those of their parents, unaffected sibs and (local) controls. Results showed an extremely low frequency of Perthes' disease among relatives, with no obvious pattern of inheritance. As genetic factors were not apparent, environmental and sociological causes were sought. The disease occurred particularly in children who were third-born or later in the family, and had older than average parents. Many came from low-income families and one in ten had been a breech birth, shown other malposition or had had a version late in pregnancy. Many children were already undersized at the time of developing Perthes' disease and remained short than average throughout life. Neither their parents nor sibs were shorter than normal, indicating that the patients' short stature was not familial. The child who is going to develop Perthes' disease is already constitutionally and socially at a disadvantage, and during the perinatal period and the first few years of life is perhaps more susceptible to trauma than is a normal child.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 4 | Pages 444 - 447
1 Nov 1976
Newell R Durbin F

It is suggested that there is a group of cases of congenital angulation of tubular bones in which the lesion is a defect of ossification of the primary cartilaginous anlage and in which neurofibromatosis is not implicated. It appears that in this group the prognosis with regard to the resolution of deformity and the prevention of pseudarthrosis with conservative treatment or relatively simple surgical procedures is better than that in the neurofibromatous type.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 11_Supple_A | Pages 101 - 104
1 Nov 2014
Lombardi Jr AV Berend KR Adams JB

Previous studies of failure mechanisms leading to revision total knee replacement (TKR) performed between 1986 and 2000 determined that many failed early, with a disproportionate amount accounted for by infection and implant-associated factors including wear, loosening and instability. Since then, efforts have been made to improve implant performance and instruct surgeons in best practice. Recently our centre participated in a multi-centre evaluation of 844 revision TKRs from 2010 to 2011. The purpose was to report a detailed analysis of failure mechanisms over time and to see if failure modes have changed over the past 10 to 15 years. Aseptic loosening was the predominant mechanism of failure (31.2%), followed by instability (18.7%), infection (16.2%), polyethylene wear (10.0%), arthrofibrosis (6.9%) and malalignment (6.6%). The mean time to failure was 5.9 years (ten days to 31 years), 35.3% of all revisions occurred at less than two years, and 60.2% in the first five years. With improvements in implant and polyethylene manufacture, polyethylene wear is no longer a leading cause of failure. Early mechanisms of failure are primarily technical errors. In addition to improving implant longevity, industry and surgeons must work together to decrease these technical errors. All reports on failure of TKR contain patients with unexplained pain who not infrequently have unmet expectations. Surgeons must work to achieve realistic patient expectations pre-operatively, and therefore, improve patient satisfaction post-operatively.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B(11 Suppl A):101–4.