We have studied the case records of 16 patients with dislocations of the cervical spine who deteriorated neurologically during or after reduction. The dislocations were reduced by skull traction in four patients, by manipulation in four and by operation in seven. This complication was not related to age, sex, mechanism of injury, or the level and the type of dislocation. Fourteen patients made substantial recoveries, one made a partial recovery and one patient remained totally paralysed and died three months later. The causes and prevention of spinal-cord
We report the results of locked Seidel nailing for 30 fractures of the humerus. There were frequent technical difficulties at operation especially with the locking mechanisms. Protrusion of the nail above the greater tuberosity occurred in 12 cases, usually due to inadequate locking, and resulted in shoulder pain and poor function. Poor shoulder function was also seen in five patients with no nail protrusion, presumably because of local rotator cuff
Ischaemic preconditioning is a process by which exposure of a tissue to a short period of non-damaging ischaemic stress leads to resistance to the deleterious effects of a subsequent prolonged ischaemic stress. It has been extensively described in the heart, but few studies have examined the possibility that it can occur in skeletal muscle. We have used a rat model of ischaemia of one limb to examine this possibility. Exposure of the hind limb to a period of ischaemia of five minutes and reperfusion for five minutes significantly protected the tibialis anterior muscle against the structural
We studied the effects of high-dose irradiation on the mechanical properties and morphology of cortical bone in rabbits for 52 weeks after a single dose of 50 Gy of electron-beam to the tibia. After four weeks, the bending strength of the irradiated bone was unchanged, but at 12 weeks, the strength had decreased significantly. At 24 weeks after irradiation mean strength was less than half of controls but by 52 weeks there was a tendency toward recovery. Similar, synchronous changes of
Secondary sterilisation of allograft bone by gamma irradiation is common, but the conditions under which it is performed vary between tissue banks. Some do so at room temperature, others while the bone is frozen. Bone is made brittle by irradiation because of the destruction of collagen alpha chains, probably mediated by free radicals generated from water molecules. Freezing reduces the mobility of water molecules and may therefore decrease the production of free radicals. We found that bone irradiated at −78°C was less brittle and had less collagen
The surgical correction of scoliosis in adolescents involves considerable trauma to bone and muscle which, together with hypotensive anaesthesia, might be expected to compromise renal function. Our recent observation of acute renal failure in two such patients prompted a prospective study of renal function following 52 operations in 43 patients. Despite hypotension, blood loss, muscle
A retrospective study of 32 patients with primary tumours of the cauda equina is presented. Most of the patients were initially diagnosed as having prolapsed intervertebral discs and treated accordingly. The correct diagnosis was eventually made, usually after a long delay, and confirmed by myelography. Treatment consisted of laminectomy and excision of the tumour. Only one tumour was frankly malignant; all the remaining patients were relieved of their pain and the majority recovered completely. The exceptions were those patients with long-standing neurological deficits; this highlights the importance of early diagnosis and correct treatment before irreparable
The pattern of fracture-dislocation of the upper part of the sacrum is demonstrated in three patients. The fracture line followed the segmental form of the sacrum and was usually caused by a posterior force against the pelvis which had been locked by hip flexion and knee extension. Fractures of the lumbar transverse processes also occurred, presumably from avulsion by the quadratus lumborum muscle. The
1. Twelve trephine specimens of articular cartilage and subchondral bone taken from six fresh osteoarthritic femoral heads were incubated in a medium containing tritiated thymidine, and autoradiographs were prepared from serial sections five microns thick. 2. Scattered labelling of chondrocytes in sections from four of the six femoral heads was demonstrated. No more than four labelled cells were seen in any one section. About half were found in typical chondrocyte clusters. 3. The implications of this evidence of chondrocyte multiplication with regard to the repair of
1. A case of hypophosphatasia in a boy who sustained a fractured left femur is described. 2. The literature is reviewed, and the reported cases are found to fall into severe, moderately severe and mild forms. 3. The diagnostic features of the disease are the radiological picture, which resembles that of rickets, very low serum alkaline phosphatase, and excessive phosphoethanolamine excretion in the urine. 4. Other clinical features may be a failure to thrive in early infancy, premature loss of deciduous teeth, hypercalcaemia and renal
1. Thirteen cases are reported of nerve compression by a ganglion. At operation a connection between the ganglion and the neighbouring joint was established in many instances. 2. It is suggested that so-called ganglia of the nerve sheath and simple ganglia are anatomical varieties of the same entity. 3. The treatment of choice is excision of the ganglion. If this procedure is technically difficult, puncture is advisable. 4. Recovery of sensibility after operation was good. Motor recovery was poor when
The incidence of nerve injuries in primary shoulder dislocation and humeral neck fracture is uncertain. We made a prospective study of 101 patients, using clinical examination and extensive electrophysiological assessment when there was suspicion of nerve
An experimental model was established to investigate the possibility of repairing cervical nerve roots
Intramedullary rods manufactured from polyacetal were used to fix diaphyseal fractures in osteoporotic bone. They are pliable and can be introduced without further
Informed consent is a very important part of surgical treatment. In this paper, we report a number of legal judgements in spinal surgery where there was no criticism of the surgical procedure itself. The fault that was identified was a failure to inform the patient of alternatives to, and material risks of, surgery, or overemphasizing the benefits of surgery. In one case, there was a promise that a specific surgeon was to perform the operation, which did not ensue. All of the faults in these cases were faults purely of the consenting process. In many cases, the surgeon claimed to have explained certain risks to the patient but was unable to provide proof of doing so. We propose a checklist that, if followed, would ensure that the surgeon would take their patients through the relevant matters but also, crucially, would act as strong evidence in any future court proceedings that the appropriate discussions had taken place. Although this article focuses on spinal surgery, the principles and messages are applicable to the whole of orthopaedic surgery. Cite this article:
The place of the myo-electric prosthesis in below-elbow amputees has been reviewed. Forty-three patients were seen and all possessed both a myo-electric prosthesis and a standard artificial limb. Nearly half the patients used the newer device almost all the time at work and many of these wore it for the majority of their waking hours. Its use at work was mainly related to the patient's type of job and here in turn there was concern about
This paper describes seven patients who developed late vertebral deformity after flexion injuries of the cervical spine. In four the clinical and radiological features were subtle and because the patients walked into an emergency department the severity of the injury was not initially appreciated. Certain specific clinical and radiological features of flexion injury are described and emphasis is placed on the importance of correct management. A radiological tetrad is described which should alert the surgeon to the possibility of
1. There is an increasing prevalence in the evidence of prenatal extended knee postures in the legs of newborn, from normal births to breech deliveries and to babies with hip displacements. The extended knee postures are also commoner in female births. 2. Babies with reducible hip displacements appear to be born more often in summer as the result of winter conceptions. Spontaneous recovery is very high, with or without splintage. 3. Irreducible hip displacement does not respond to splintage during the first six months of life. Even with adductor tenotomy, there is a great risk of acetabular and femoral epiphysial
1. A series of experiments on the tensile strength of the anterior capsular mechanism have been performed. These show that in the young the weakest point is the glenoid labral attachment, whereas in the elderly calcification of tissues makes the capsule and subscapular tendon weaker. 2. It has been shown previously that glenoid labral detachment is the common injury in the young at the time of an acute dislocation, whereas capsular rupture and subscapularis tendon
1. A case is described of severe birth injury to the sternomastoid muscle in a breech-delivered two-day-old infant. The affected muscle showed widespread haemorrhage, fragmentation and necrosis of its fibres, and disruption and disorganisation of the endomysial sheaths. 2. Disruptive muscular trauma of this type is known to lead to florid fibroblastic proliferation with formation of a large mass of scar tissue. It is suggested that the "sternomastoid tumour" of infancy develops as a sequel to such trauma occurring during birth. 3. The theories of birth trauma and of ischaemia, in the etiology of the "sternomastoid tumour" of infancy and of congenital muscular torticollis, are not mutually exclusive but may be complementary, the circumstances causing the trauma also leading to ischaemic