Between November 1994 and June 1999, 35 patients referred to our Problem Fracture Service with chronic diaphyseal
Osteomyelitis is a rare manifestation of cat-scratch disease in patients who do not have AIDS. The clinical presentation and non-specific subacute course of the disease make diagnosis difficult. We present a child with
We present three children with primary subacute epiphyseal and metaepiphyseal
Chronic recurrent multifocal
We have reviewed 60 patients with primary bone infections; 21 of these (35%) had subacute
We have developed a new drug delivery system using porous apatite-wollastonite glass ceramic (A-W GC) to treat
Thirty-four neonates with
We present the case of an 83-year-old man who developed quadriparesis and respiratory embarrassment following
We describe our medium-term results for the management of chronic
Objective . A clinical investigation into a new bone void filler is giving
first data on systemic and local exposure to the anti-infective
substance after implantation. Method . A total of 20 patients with post-traumatic/post-operative bone
infections were enrolled in this open-label, prospective study.
After radical surgical debridement, the bone cavity was filled with
this material. The 21-day hospitalisation phase included determination
of gentamicin concentrations in plasma, urine and wound exudate, assessment
of wound healing, infection parameters, implant resorption, laboratory
parameters, and adverse event monitoring. The follow-up period was
six months. . Results . Systemic exposure to gentamicin after implantation was very low
as local gentamicin concentrations were measured in wound exudate
after six to ten hours. There were no signs of infectious complication
throughout the clinical phase. Four patients had recurrent infections
several weeks to months after implantation. The outcome was deemed successful
by remission of infection in 16 (80%) of these problematic long-term
treated patients. Safety laboratory measurements did not indicate
nephrotoxic or hepatotoxic effects. . Conclusions . Local application of calcium sulphate/carbonate bone void filler
comprising gentamicin revealed sufficient active local levels of
the antibiotic by simultaneous significant low systemic exposure
in patients with mostly chronic
Melioidosis is an uncommon infection caused by a Gram-negative bacillus, Pseudomonas pseudomallei. Only a few case reports of orthopaedic infection have been published in English, and most were of isolated septic arthritis or secondary to melioidosis of another organ. We have reviewed ten patients with localised melioidotic
Four infants between 2 and 13 weeks of age developed vertebral
The current standard recommendation for antibiotic therapy in the management of chronic
The diagnosis of acute
In four children with primary subacute
We present a retrospective study of 27 patients treated by callus distraction using a unilateral external fixator of our own design for nonunion with bone loss and shortening of the femur caused by suppurative
We reviewed 275 cases and calculated the prevalence of bacteriologically or radiologically confirmed acute haematogenous
The treatment of chronic
An unusual form of chronic