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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 1 | Pages 2 - 13
1 Feb 1968
Solomon L

1. Senile osteoporosis is one of the common causes of morbidity in old people. Its distribution in European and American populations has been deduced from epidemiological studies of its major complications, such as fractures of the vertebrae and the femoral neck. Although there has been some evidence that different population groups differ in their susceptibility to this condition, no demographic study of its prevalence in the white and Bantu races has previously been made. 2. The present paper describes an epidemiological study of femoral neck fractures in the Bantu population of Johannesburg, covering the years 1957-63. The cases were analysed by age and sex, the type of trauma and the level of the fracture. The number of fractures was related to the population at risk; the fracture incidence was expressed both as an age-specific rate and as a standardised rate and compared with fracture rates in European populations. It was found that the fracture rate in the elderly Bantu is less than one-tenth of that in Western European populations, and that males and females are affected equally. It was concluded that senile or post-menopausal osteoporosis is much less pronounced in the Bantu than in white populations. 3. The relationship of these findings to endocrine changes, calcium balance and racial factors is discussed. It is suggested that senile osteoporosis is not caused by a simple calcium deficiency but may be related to an imbalance between calcium intake, absorption and excretion, or a failure of the complex mechanism which normally controls this balance. Whatever the immediate cause, however, race plays an important part in determining the onset and distribution of the condition


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 8, Issue 11 | Pages 509 - 517
1 Nov 2019
Kang K Koh Y Park K Choi C Jung M Shin J Kim S

Objectives

The aim of this study was to investigate the biomechanical effect of the anterolateral ligament (ALL), anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), or both ALL and ACL on kinematics under dynamic loading conditions using dynamic simulation subject-specific knee models.

Methods

Five subject-specific musculoskeletal models were validated with computationally predicted muscle activation, electromyography data, and previous experimental data to analyze effects of the ALL and ACL on knee kinematics under gait and squat loading conditions.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 3 | Pages 31 - 33
1 Jun 2019


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 3 | Pages 279 - 286
1 Aug 1976
D'Arcy J Devas M

The case histories of 361 subcapital fractures of the femoral neck in 354 patients treated by primary replacement with the cemented Thompson prosthesis were reviewed, and 156 survivors were seen at follow-up. The average age was eighty-one years. Three hundred and thirty fractures occurred in women and thirty-one in men. The antero-lateral approach to the hip was used at all operations because it allows immediate and unrestricted mobilisation after operation. It is considered that this method is the best treatment in the rehabilitation of elderly patients after high femoral neck fractures, because of its low morbidity and high success rate in returning the geriatric orthopaedic patient to independence. The results after an average of just over three years were available for 161 hips in 156 patients studied at follow-up. Of these, 132 (82 per cent) were satisfactory. Most of the unsatisfactory results were in patients under seventy-five years of age. Out of the whole group of 361 hips treated the important early complications were wound infections in seventeen hips 4-7 per cent), all of which resolved, and dislocation in seven hips (2 per cent). Forty-six patients (12-9 per cent) died during the first four weeks after operation, their average age being eighty-five. One hundred and seventy-one patients (47-4 per cent) were discharged from hospital within under four weeks of the operation. Acetabular erosion and loosening are shown to be the important later complications. Three patients had late sepsis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 2 | Pages 236 - 252
1 May 1960
Powell HDW

Cases are reported of two men who sustained bilateral hip injuries while undergoing convulsive therapy and of one woman who sustained bilateral hip injuries during a uraemic convulsion. A further twenty-three previously unreported cases are analysed, sixteen of which were of simultaneous bilateral femoral neck fractures and five of which were simultaneous bilateral central dislocations of the hip. One other patient sustained his injuries in an epileptic fit. A review of the literature has revealed another thirty-five cases of bilateral hip injuries, most of them caused by convulsive therapy, but a few by accident, disease of the femoral neck, or epilepsy. One case is included of a rare double injury, a femoral neck fracture on one side and a central dislocation on the other. I have found no previous reference to this combined injury. Double hip injuries are very rare in relation to the large numbers of patients receiving convulsion therapy, but the change from pharmacological to electrical methods has not prevented their occurrence and at least fifteen are known to have occurred during the last six years. A wide age range is represented, and many fractures of convulsive origin have occurred in fit, well nourished, adult men. Only a few have been found in more elderly and possibly osteoporotic patients. All the "convulsive " injuries were sustained during unmodified treatment, and mention is made of the differences of opinion among psychiatrists about the use of anaesthesia and of relaxant drugs in convulsion therapy. These are the most severe injuries complicating convulsion therapy, and the most difficult for the orthopaedic surgeon to treat


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 1 | Pages 95 - 105
1 Feb 1948
Dobson J

1. Fifty cases of arthrodesis of the hip joint in tuberculous arthritis are analysed; in forty cases the late end-result has been ascertained two or more years after operation. 2. The indications for arthrodesis are discussed. The operation should not be performed when disease is active; it should not be undertaken before the age of twelve to thirteen years; it is not advisable in elderly patients; it may be contra-indicated when there are multiple foci of infection. Subject to these limitations every patient with unsound ankylosis after adequate conservative treatment should be treated by arthrodesis; painful fibrous ankylosis and late onset of deformity are definite indications. 3. Three types of operation have been used: intra-articular arthrodesis; extra-articular ilio-femoral arthrodesis; combined intra- and extra-articular arthrodesis. Extra-articular ilio-femoral arthrodesis is preferred, deformity being first corrected by traction or osteotomy. 4. Post-operation complications were few; the mortality rate was low (2 per cent.). 5. There was bone ankylosis with solid incorporation of the graft in 87·5 per cent., failure of union of the graft (to the trochanter) in 10 per cent., and destruction of the graft in 2·5 per cent. 6. Late end-results show full working capacity in 87·5 per cent. of patients, part working capacity in 2·5 per cent. and inability to work in 7·5 per cent. The writer wishes to express his thanks to Professor Harry Platt and Professor T. P.. McMurray for criticism and advice in the preparation of this paper, and to Dr F. C. S. Bradbury, Central Consultant Tuberculosis Officer of the Lancashire County Council, for permission to publish these cases


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 4 | Pages 470 - 477
1 Apr 2019
Fjeld OR Grøvle L Helgeland J Småstuen MC Solberg TK Zwart J Grotle M

Aims

The aims of this study were to determine the rates of surgical complications, reoperations, and readmissions following herniated lumbar disc surgery, and to investigate the impact of sociodemographic factors and comorbidity on the rate of such unfavourable events.

Patients and Methods

This was a longitudinal observation study. Data from herniated lumbar disc operations were retrieved from a large medical database using a combination of procedure and diagnosis codes from all public hospitals in Norway from 1999 to 2013. The impact of age, gender, geographical affiliation, education, civil status, income, and comorbidity on unfavourable events were analyzed by logistic regression.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 8, Issue 10 | Pages 481 - 488
1 Oct 2019
Nathan K Lu LY Lin T Pajarinen J Jämsen E Huang J Romero-Lopez M Maruyama M Kohno Y Yao Z Goodman SB

Objectives

Up to 10% of fractures result in undesirable outcomes, for which female sex is a risk factor. Cellular sex differences have been implicated in these different healing processes. Better understanding of the mechanisms underlying bone healing and sex differences in this process is key to improved clinical outcomes. This study utilized a macrophage–mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) coculture system to determine: 1) the precise timing of proinflammatory (M1) to anti-inflammatory (M2) macrophage transition for optimal bone formation; and 2) how such immunomodulation was affected by male versus female cocultures.

Methods

A primary murine macrophage-MSC coculture system was used to demonstrate the optimal transition time from M1 to M2 (polarized from M1 with interleukin (IL)-4) macrophages to maximize matrix mineralization in male and female MSCs. Outcome variables included Alizarin Red staining, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity, and osteocalcin protein secretion.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 7, Issue 5 | Pages 28 - 30
1 Oct 2018


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1447 - 1458
1 Nov 2019
Chatziagorou G Lindahl H Kärrholm J

Aims

We investigated patient characteristics and outcomes of Vancouver type B periprosthetic fractures treated with femoral component revision and/or osteosynthesis.

Patients and Methods

The study utilized data from the Swedish Hip Arthroplasty Register (SHAR) and information from patient records. We included all primary total hip arthroplasties (THAs) performed in Sweden since 1979, and undergoing further surgery due to Vancouver type B periprosthetic femoral fracture between 2001 and 2011. The primary outcome measure was any further reoperation between 2001 and 2013. Cross-referencing with the National Patient Register was performed in two stages, in order to identify all surgical procedures not recorded on the SHAR.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 3 | Pages 560 - 573
1 Aug 1965
Sevitt S Thompson RG

1. At necropsy the arterial distribution within the head and neck of the femur was investigated by arteriographic injection in fifty-seven uninjured hips of mostly elderly subjects. 2. Before injection all vessels to the head except for one or more particular groups were divided. 3. The superior retinacular arteries were found to be the most important arterial supply to the head. Through the widely distributed branches of their lateral epiphysial vessels (superior capital) they supplied the superior, medial, central and usually the lateral parts of the head: through anastomoses they could also supply the anterior and posterior segments, the subfovea and the inferior sector, which receive separate contributions. Sometimes the inferior or the lateral connections were defective. 4. The arteries in the ligamentum teres were either absent or unimportant for the head in most subjects. Either the vessels in the ligament never reached the head or they supplied only a limited subfoveal zone. In only one out of sixteen specimens was the whole head injected through the vessels of the ligamentum teres. 5. The inferior retinacular arteries were found to be of subsidiary importance and generally supplied a variable infero-lateral part of the head, particularly posteriorly. In a small number there was an anastomotic supply to other parts of the head, but only in two out of sixteen specimens was nearly all the head injected through these vessels. 6. The regular anastomotic supply from the superior retinacular arteries to the subfovea and to the inferior part of the head was in curious contrast to the infrequent anastomotic filling of the lateral epiphysial arteries from the inferior retinacular or ligamentum teres arteries. 7. Vessels within the femoral neck sometimes supplied the lateral part of the head but never the medial three-quarters. 8. The neck of the femur received important branches from the superior retinacular arteries but only in a small number (15 per cent) was part of it entirely dependent on this supply


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 44-B, Issue 3 | Pages 602 - 613
1 Aug 1962
Early PF

1. Surveys of a working community, of a group of elderly people, and of an urban population show an incidence of Dupuytren's contracture among men varying from 0·1 per cent in the age group fifteen to twenty-four, to 18·1 per cent in those aged seventy-five and over; and among women from 0·5 per cent in the age group forty-five to fifty-four, to 9 per cent over seventy-five. It is estimated that in the population aged fifteen and over in Lancashire and Cheshire there will be 4·2 per cent of the men and 1·4 per cent of the women with some degree of palmar contracture. 2. There appears to be no relationship between the type of occupation and the incidence or severity of contracture in men, except that among those engaged in light manual work the proportion of mildly affected hands is higher, and of bilateral contracture lower, than among either non-manual or heavy manual workers. 3. Evidence is provided that rheumatoid arthritis, past polyarthritis, osteoarthritis, cervical spondylosis and Paget's disease occur no more often in those with Dupuytren's contracture than in other members of the community. 4. Examination of the patients in an epileptic colony confirms a strong association between Dupuytren's contracture and epilepsy. Knuckle-pads, plantar nodules and periarthritis of the shoulder are all more frequent in epileptic than in non-epileptic patients with Dupuytren's contracture. Epileptics also show a higher proportion with bilateral contractures and a greater tendency to a symmetrical pattern of contracture in the two hands. A strong constitutional factor, probably genetic, thus operates in persons with both diseases. Nevertheless, the frequency of a positive family history of contracture is lower in the epileptic cases, and reasons for this are discussed. 5. From the limited material available in the literature there would appear to be an inverse relationship between the population of certain countries and the prevalence in them of Dupuytren's contracture. The possible significance of this is briefly discussed


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 2 | Pages 33 - 35
1 Apr 2019


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 1 | Pages 83 - 91
1 Jan 2019
Whitehouse MR Berstock JR Kelly MB Gregson CL Judge A Sayers A Chesser TJ

Aims

The aim of this study was to investigate the association between the type of operation used to treat a trochanteric fracture of the hip and 30-day mortality.

Patients and Methods

Data on 82 990 patients from the National Hip Fracture Database were analyzed using generalized linear models with incremental case-mix adjustment for patient, non-surgical and surgical characteristics, and socioeconomic factors.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 5 | Pages 512 - 521
1 May 2019
Carter TH Duckworth AD White TO

Abstract

The medial malleolus, once believed to be the primary stabilizer of the ankle, has been the topic of conflicting clinical and biomechanical data for many decades. Despite the relevant surgical anatomy being understood for almost 40 years, the optimal treatment of medial malleolar fractures remains unclear, whether the injury occurs in isolation or as part of an unstable bi- or trimalleolar fracture configuration. Traditional teaching recommends open reduction and fixation of medial malleolar fractures that are part of an unstable injury. However, there is recent evidence to suggest that nonoperative management of well-reduced fractures may result in equivalent outcomes, but without the morbidity associated with surgery. This review gives an update on the relevant anatomy and classification systems for medial malleolar fractures and an overview of the current literature regarding their management, including surgical approaches and the choice of implants.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B:512–521.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1050 - 1057
1 Sep 2019
Lampropoulou-Adamidou K Hartofilakidis G

Aims

To our knowledge, no study has compared the long-term results of cemented and hybrid total hip arthroplasty (THA) in patients with osteoarthritis (OA) secondary to congenital hip disease (CHD). This is a demanding procedure that may require special techniques and implants. Our aim was to compare the long-term outcome of cemented low-friction arthroplasty (LFA) and hybrid THA performed by one surgeon.

Patients and Methods

Between January 1989 and December 1997, 58 hips (44 patients; one man, 43 woman; mean age 56.6 years (25 to 77)) with OA secondary to CHD were treated with a cemented Charnley LFA (group A), and 55 hips (39 patients; two men, 37 women; mean age 49.1 years (27 to 70)) were treated with a hybrid THA (group B), by the senior author (GH). The clinical outcome and survivorship were compared.


Objectives

Activation of the leptin pathway is closely correlated with human knee cartilage degeneration. However, the role of the long form of the leptin receptor (Ob-Rb) in cartilage degeneration needs further study. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of increasing the expression of Ob-Rb on chondrocytes using a lentiviral vector containing Ob-Rb.

Methods

The medial and lateral cartilage samples of the tibial plateau from 12 osteoarthritis (OA) patients were collected. Ob-Rb messenger RNA (mRNA) was detected in these samples. The Ob-Rb-overexpressing chondrocytes and controls were treated with different doses of leptin for two days. The activation of the p53/p21 pathway and the number of senescence-associated β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal)-positive cells were evaluated. The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signalling pathway and autophagy were detected after the chondrocytes were treated with a high dose of leptin.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 4 | Pages 16 - 19
1 Aug 2019


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 7, Issue 4 | Pages 31 - 33
1 Aug 2018


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 7_Supple_C | Pages 22 - 27
1 Jul 2019
Kalbian IL Tan TL Rondon AJ Bonaddio VA Klement MR Foltz C Lonner JH

Aims

Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) provides improved early functional outcomes and less postoperative morbidity and pain compared with total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Opioid prescribing has increased in the last two decades, and recently states in the USA have developed online Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs to prevent overprescribing of controlled substances. This study evaluates differences in opioid requirements between patients undergoing TKA and UKA.

Patients and Methods

We retrospectively reviewed 676 consecutive TKAs and 241 UKAs. Opioid prescriptions in morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs), sedatives, benzodiazepines, and stimulants were collected from State Controlled Substance Monitoring websites six months before and nine months after the initial procedures. Bivariate and multivariate analysis were performed for patients who had a second prescription and continued use.