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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 5 | Pages 557 - 568
1 Nov 1983
Gillespie R Torode I

Sixty-nine patients with congenital abnormality of the femur were reviewed. Their manifestation of femoral dysplasia ranged from an intact femur approximately 60 per cent of the length of the normal leg to a subtotal absence of the femur in which only the femoral condyles remained, often with a congenital fusion of the knee joint. Two groups were defined: Group I consisted of those with congenital hypoplastic femur in which the hip and knee could be made functional and where, in some patients at least, leg equalisation was possible; Group II consisted of those with true proximal focal femoral deficiency where the hip joint was never normal and the knee joint was always useless. The patients in each group were examined and evaluated with respect to clinical signs, surgical procedures performed, and prosthetic requirements and function. A protocol of treatment for both groups is suggested


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 2 | Pages 134 - 139
1 Mar 1983
Jones S Edgar M Ransford A Thomas N

An electrophysiological system for monitoring the spinal cord during operations for scoliosis is described. During the development of the technique the recording of cortical somatosensory evoked potentials from the scalp and spinal somatosensory evoked potentials from the laminae or spines was superseded by the positioning of recording electrodes in the epidural space cephalad to the area to be fused. All recordings were made in response to stimulation of the posterior tibial nerve at the knee. Results in 138 patients are presented and the findings in three patients who exhibited neurological deficits after operation are described. It is concluded that spinal somatosensory evoked potentials are sensitive to minor spinal cord impairment, possible due to ischaemia, and that these changes may be reversed when the cause is quickly remedied. The monitoring system interferes minimally with anaesthetic and surgical procedures and is now performed as a routine


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 52-B, Issue 2 | Pages 302 - 307
1 May 1970
Rowling DE

1. The treatment of twenty-nine consecutive patients suffering from chronic osteomyelitis is reviewed. With the advent of an antibiotic, Fucidin, which has the ability to penetrate in significant amounts into tissues carrying a poor blood supply, a more limited surgical procedure has become possible. 2. A successful outcome, as judged by primary healing, was achieved in 86 per cent of patients treated with a combination of surgery and Fucidin with penicillin. This compares favourably with the results achieved in a previous series in which more radical surgery was undertaken. 3. Although Fucidin has advanced the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis, it is still essential to use surgery as well. 4. Fucidin caused no toxic effects despite an average total dose of seventy to eighty grammes. Resistance of the staphylococcus developed in vitro in one patient, without affecting a satisfactory clinical outcome


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 2 | Pages 239 - 245
1 Feb 2020
Nogaro M Abram SGF Alvand A Bottomley N Jackson WFM Price A

Aims

Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) surgery in children and the adolescent population has increased steadily over recent years. We used a national database to look at trends in ACL reconstruction and rates of serious complications, growth disturbance, and revision surgery, over 20 years.

Methods

All hospital episodes for patients undergoing ACL reconstruction, under the age of 20 years, between 1 April 1997 and 31 March 2017, were extracted by procedure code from the national Hospital Episode Statistics (HES). Population standardized rates of intervention were determined by age group and year of treatment. Subsequent rates of serious complications including reoperation for infection, growth disturbance (osteotomy, epiphysiodesis), revision reconstruction, and/or contralateral ACL reconstruction rates were determined.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 3 | Pages 273 - 275
1 Mar 2020
Ahmed SS Haddad FS


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 2 | Pages 177 - 185
1 Feb 2020
Lim CY Liu X He F Liang H Yang Y Ji T Yang R Guo W

Aims

To investigate the benefits of denosumab in combination with nerve-sparing surgery for treatment of sacral giant cell tumours (GCTs).

Methods

This is a retrospective cohort study of patients with GCT who presented between January 2011 and July 2017. Intralesional curettage was performed and patients treated from 2015 to 2017 also received denosumab therapy. The patients were divided into three groups: Cohort 1: control group (n = 36); cohort 2: adjuvant denosumab group (n = 9); and cohort 3: neo- and adjuvant-denosumab group (n = 17).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 3 | Pages 392 - 397
1 May 1999
Tennant S Kinmont C Lamb G Gedroyc W Hunt DM

Conventional methods of imaging in the investigation of developmental dysplasia of the hip all have disadvantages, either in definition or in exposure to radiation. We describe a new open-configuration MR scanner which is unique in that it allows anaesthesia and access to the patient within the imaging volume for surgical procedures and application of casts. We performed 13 scans in eight anaesthetised infants. Dynamic imaging revealed two dislocated hips which were then visualised during reduction. Hip spicas were applied without removing the patient from the scanner. In one hip, an adductor tenotomy was carried out. In all patients, stressing the hips during dynamic imaging allowed an assessment of stability. This was particularly useful in two hips in which an analysis of stability in different positions facilitated the planning of femoral osteotomies. This method of imaging provides new and important information. It has great potential in the investigation of developmental dysplasia of the hip and, with ultrasound, may allow management without the need for radiography


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 2 | Pages 211 - 215
1 Mar 1991
Simonis R Shirali H Mayou B

We describe 11 patients with congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia treated by a free vascularised fibular graft (FVFG) and followed up from 10 to 64 months (mean 38). Bony union was achieved in nine of the 11 cases: two failures required amputation. The mean time for union in the successful cases was five months. Nine of the 11 patients had had an average of four surgical procedures before the FVFG, so the graft was a salvage procedure for which the only alternative was amputation. FVFG is recommended as a primary procedure for the treatment of congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia if there is a large tibial defect (over 3 cm) or shortening of more than 5 cm. The primary use of this operation is not advised for cases in which standard orthopaedic procedures are expected to succeed. For a small defect with a favourable prognosis (Boyd and Sage 1958), we recommend conventional bone grafting, intramedullary nailing and electrical stimulation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 1 | Pages 23 - 26
1 Jan 1988
Ziv I Zeligowski A Mosheiff R Lowe J Wexler M Segal D

Split-thickness skin excision can be used as a one-stage procedure for the accurate diagnosis of flap viability and the immediate treatment of friction-avulsion injuries in severe open fractures. After cleaning the wound, the avulsed flap is temporarily sutured back to its original bed and a split thickness graft is taken from it and meshed to a 1:3 ratio. Surface dermal capillary bleeding then serves as an indicator of viability, clearly displaying a line for the excision of devascularized skin and correlating well with a concomitant fluorescein test. The wounds are re-opened and, after fixation of the fracture, the viable part of the flap is returned to its original bed and the remaining defects are covered with the meshed graft. We have treated 16 patients with extensive degloving injuries in this way, 15 needing only the single surgical procedure. All retained flaps survived, no other donor sites were needed and the split-thickness grafts took with 90% to 100% success


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 4 | Pages 492 - 496
1 Nov 1980
Landi A Copeland S Parry C Jones S

In 15 patients who underwent open exploration of the brachial plexus, the somatosensory evoked potentials and nerve action potentials recorded at the time of operation were useful as guides to the most appropriate surgical procedure, and also in predicting the outcome in certain lesions. In three patients the apparent normality of the upper trunk of the plexus was concealing a more proximal lesion which was irrecoverable. The presence of a somatosensory evoked potential showed functional continuity in three patients in whom the C7 root was clinically involved and who recovered after operation. In five patients proximal stumps of ruptured C5 roots showed functional central continuity; this indicated their suitability for grafting. These patients recovered except one who suffered from co-existing disease. The electrophysiological studies also confirmed the clinical diagnosis of avulsion of the C8 and T1 roots and therefore prevented unnecessary dissection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 190 - 196
1 Mar 1997
Lee DY Choi IH Chung CY Cho T Lee JC

We classified fixed pelvic obliquity in patients after poliomyelitis into two major types according to the level of the pelvis relative to the short leg. Each type was then divided into four subtypes according to the direction and severity of the scoliosis. In 46 patients with type-I deformity the pelvis was lower and in nine with type II it was higher on the short-leg side. Subtype-A deformity was a straight spine with a compensatory angulation at the lower lumbar level, mainly at L4-L5, subtype B was a mild scoliosis with the convexity to the short-leg side, subtype C was a mild scoliosis with the convexity opposite the short-leg side, and subtype D was a moderate to severe paralytic scoliosis with the convexity to the short-leg side in type I and to the opposite side in type II. A combination of surgical procedures improved the obliquity in most patients. These included lumbodorsal fasciotomy, abductor fasciotomy and stabilisation of the hip by triple innominate osteotomy with or without transiliac lengthening. In patients with type ID or type IID appropriate spinal fusion was usually necessary


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 6 | Pages 820 - 823
1 Aug 2000
Salmon J Stanley JK Trail IA

A vascular necrosis of the lunate, first described by Kienböck, can be treated either conservatively or by various surgical procedures. We compared the results of 18 conservatively treated patients, all of whom had stage-2 or stage-3 disease, with those of 15 who underwent a radial shortening procedure. We evaluated pain, range of movement, grip strength and functional disability, and determined the progression of the disease by assessing radiologically carpal height, the width and flattening of the lunate, the radioscaphoid angle, the pattern of the fracture and sclerosis and cysts. The mean follow-up was for 3.6 years (1.5 to 9). Patients treated by radial shortening had less pain and better grip strength than those managed conservatively. In some patients with stage-3 disease treated conservatively there was rapid deterioration to carpal collapse. Although radial shortening did not reverse or prevent carpal collapse, it slowed down the process in patients with stage-3 disease. We recommend a radial shortening procedure for patients with severe pain and radiological signs of progressive carpal collapse


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 2 | Pages 300 - 304
1 Mar 2002
Nötzli HP Siebenrock KA Hempfing A Ramseier LE Ganz R

We used laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) with a high energy (20 mW) laser to measure perfusion of the femoral head intraoperatively in 32 hips. The surgical procedure was joint debridement requiring dislocation or subluxation of the hip. The laser probe was placed within the anterosuperior quadrant of the femoral head. Blood flow was monitored in specific positions of the hip before and after dislocation or subluxation. With the femoral head reduced, external rotation, both in extension and flexion, caused a reduction of blood flow. During subluxation or dislocation, it was impaired when the posterosuperior femoral neck was allowed to rest on the posterior acetabular rim. A pulsatile signal returned when the hip was reduced, or was taken out of extreme positions when dislocated. After the final reduction, the signal amplitudes were first slightly lower (12%) compared with the initial value but tended to be restored to the initial levels within 30 minutes. Most of the changes in the signal can be explained by compromise of the extraosseous branches of the medial femoral circumflex artery and are reversible. Our study shows that LDF provides proof for the clinical observation that perfusion of the femoral head is maintained after dislocation if specific surgical precautions are followed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 1 | Pages 84 - 88
1 Jan 1990
Karray S Zlitni M Fowles J Zouari O Slimane N Kassab M Rosset P

We report the management of two children and 11 adults with paraplegia secondary to vertebral hydatidosis. Destruction of pedicles, posterior vertebral elements and discs as well as the vertebral bodies was common and all six patients with thoracic disease had involvement of adjacent ribs. The 13 patients had a total of 42 major surgical procedures; two patients died from postoperative complications and four from complications of the disease and paraplegia. All eight patients initially treated by laminectomy or anterior decompression alone relapsed within two years and seven required further surgery. Circumferential decompression and grafting gave the best results, six of nine patients being in remission an average of three years and six months later. The prognosis for such patients is poor; remission is the aim, rather than cure. Anthelminthic drugs may improve the prognosis, but radical surgery is likely to remain the keystone of treatment in the foreseeable future


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 3 | Pages 436 - 439
1 Apr 2003
Nogler M Lass-Flörl C Wimmer C Mayr E Bach C Ogon M

Instruments used in surgery which rotate or vibrate at a high frequency can produce potentially contaminated aerosols. Such tools are in use in cemented hip revision arthroplasties. We aimed to measure the extent of the environmental and body contamination caused by an ultrasound device and a high-speed cutter. On a human cadaver we carried out a complete surgical procedure including draping and simulated blood flow contaminated with Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 12600). After cemented total hip arthroplasty, we undertook repeated extractions of cement using either an ultrasound device or a high-speed cutter. Surveillance cultures detected any environmental and body contamination of the surgical team. Environmental contamination was present in an area of 6 x 8 m for both devices. The concentration of contamination was lower for the ultrasound device. Both the ultrasound and the high-speed cutter contaminated all members of the surgical team. The devices tested produced aerosols which covered the whole operating theatre and all personnel present during the procedure. In contaminated and infected patients, infectious agents may be present in these aerosols. We therefore recommend the introduction of effective measures to control infection and thorough disinfection of the operating theatre after such procedures


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 1 | Pages 10 - 16
1 Feb 1949
Barnes R

1. Sixty-three traction injuries of the brachial plexus in adults are reviewed. Most of the patients were seen at regular intervals for more than three years after injury. 2. The mechanism of injury is described. Forcible separation of the head and shoulder is the essential factor, but the type of lesion is determined by the position of the upper limb at the time of the accident. 3. In traction injuries the main damage is intraneural, and the lesions are of considerable extent. Extraneural scarring is a conspicuous feature of old injuries, but it does not cause any damage to uninjured parts of the plexus. 4. The prognosis of each type of lesion of the plexus is discussed. Satisfactory recovery occurs in most lesions of the upper three roots. Degenerative lesions of the whole plexus never recover completely. Cases with Horner's syndrome always have severe residual paralysis. 5. Conservative treatment is advocated for traction injuries of the plexus and evidence is cited against early or late operations on the plexus. Reconstructive surgical procedures are sometimes indicated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 4 | Pages 541 - 544
1 May 2000
Cottalorda J Gautheron V Metton G Charmet E Chavrier Y

Our aim in this retrospective study was to analyse the value of serial corrective casts in the management of toe-walking in children aged less than six years with cerebral palsy. A total of 20 children (10 hemiplegic and 10 diplegic) had elongation of the triceps surae by serial casting at a mean age of four years and one month. The mean passive dorsiflexion of the foot with the knee in extension was 3° (−10 to +5) and 12° (0 to +15) with the knee in flexion. After removal of the cast passive dorsiflexion was 20° (+10 to +30) with the knee in extension, and 28° (+10 to +35) with the knee in flexion. At a mean follow-up of 3.08 years (2.08 to 4.92), passive dorsiflexion was 9° (−10 to +20) with the knee in extension and 18° (0 to +30) with the knee in flexion. Serial corrective casts are useful for the treatment of equinus in young children as the procedure is simple and the results are at least equal to those of other non-operative techniques. It is a safe alternative to surgical procedures especially in young children. If the equinus recurs operation can be undertaken on a tendon which is not scarred


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 6 | Pages 809 - 817
1 Aug 2003
Halliday BR English HW Timperley AJ Gie GA Ling RSM

We report the results of cancellous femoral impaction grafting with cement in revision hip arthroplasty in all patients from one centre who had undergone surgery more than five years previously. A total of 32 surgeons undertook femoral impaction grafting in 207 patients (226 hips). There were no deaths attributable to the revision surgery; 33 patients with 35 functioning hips died with less than five years’ follow-up. One patient was lost to follow-up. Two hips (1%) developed early postoperative infection. Of the 12 stems which underwent a further surgical procedure for aseptic failure, ten were for femoral fracture and two for loosening. Survivorship with any further femoral operation as the endpoint was 90.5% (confidence intervals, 82 to 98) and using femoral reoperation for symptomatic aseptic loosening as the endpoint, the survivorship was 99.1% (confidence intervals, 96 to 100) at 10 to 11 years. As a consequence of the experience in this series, we have modified our technique with an increased use of longer stems with impacted allograft. Long stems are indicated when the host bone around the tip of a short stem is compromised, in patients with major loss of bone stock, or when a femoral fracture occurs


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 2 | Pages 280 - 288
1 May 1960
Newman PH

Simple pinning to fix the epiphysis in those patients in whom the position is acceptable is a valuable surgical procedure. It is safe and gives good results. It eliminates the danger of further displacement, promotes fusion of the epiphysial plate and allows the patient to return to full activity within one month, thus avoiding joint stiffness, muscle atrophy, osteoporosis and interference with growth at other sites. Fixation by small pins is preferable to the use of the trifin nail, the latter giving excessive trauma and predisposing to subtrochanteric fracture. Gentle replacement of the epiphysis, when loose, into an acceptable position is a valuable method of treatment. It is essential that replacement is not undertaken by force. The problem of major displacement of the epiphysis which cannot be so replaced is unsolved. Conservative treatment in this group is useless and harmful. Intra-articular osteotomy can give good results in most cases but is risky and may cause stiffening of the hip. Subtrochanteric osteotomy does not give a good anatomical result but in most cases the function of the hip is satisfactory. Slipping of the upper femoral epiphysis, however slight, should be regarded as a surgical emergency


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 3 | Pages 352 - 359
1 Mar 2020
Yanik EL Colditz GA Wright RW Saccone NL Evanoff BA Jain NB Dale AM Keener JD

Aims

Few risk factors for rotator cuff disease (RCD) and corresponding treatment have been firmly established. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between numerous risk factors and the incidence of surgery for RCD in a large cohort.

Methods

A population-based cohort of people aged between 40 and 69 years in the UK (the UK Biobank) was studied. People who underwent surgery for RCD were identified through a link with NHS inpatient records covering a mean of eight years after enrolment. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression was used to calculate hazard ratios (HRs) as estimates of associations with surgery for RCD accounting for confounders. The risk factors which were considered included age, sex, race, education, Townsend deprivation index, body mass index (BMI), occupational demands, and exposure to smoking.