1. Two cases of
We treated a patient with extensive
1. Three patients suffering from
1. A case of
1 . Two cases of
1. A case of flake fracture of the talus progressing to
Two cases of idiopathic avascular necrosis of the scaphoid are reported and it is suggested that the aetiology could be the same as that recently described for Keinboeck's disease by Beckenbaugh et al. (1980). The condition described in this paper is a different entity from that described by Preiser (1910), which was probably not an
Twenty-two knees with
Spinal osteochondrosis, previously known as Scheuermann's disease and spinal
1. Recurrent dislocation of the elbow is caused primarily by collateral ligament laxity with secondary damage to the capitulum and head of radius. 2. The pathological changes resemble those of recurrent dislocation of the shoulder. 3. Subluxation or instability of the radial head is often associated with capsular ossification and deserves wider recognition because it may be confused with
1. An account is given of a family in which five members in three generations were affected by
Thirty patients with
1. One hundred patients with
We reviewed 13 cases of
1. The etiology of hallux rigidus has been studied by an examination of ten adolescent and four adult patients. 2. Although
Thirty-five cases of
1. The record is presented of an attempt to treat
A case of
Experimental injuries of cartilage and bone were produced by applying shear force to the articular surfaces of the lateral femoral condyles of six-month-old pigs under various loading conditions. The lesions were divided into two groups, 'open' or 'closed', depending on the presence of a crack on the articular surface. Each was further divided into four types according to the depth of penetrating injury: (1) splitting of uncalcified cartilage; (2) splitting at the subchondral plate; (3) subchondral fracture; and (4) intra-articular fracture. When shear force was applied at high speed but with low energy, the articular cartilage surface was the first to crack. At low speed and low energy, splits occurred in the deeper layers first. As the energy increased, both loading conditions eventually resulted in similar open lesions. Experimentally produced shear injuries are useful models for clinical osteochondral fracture,