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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 3 | Pages 364 - 368
1 Apr 2002
Schuman L Struijs PAA van Dijk CN

We reviewed 38 patients who had been treated for anosteochondral defect of the talus by arthroscopic curettage and drilling. The indication for surgical treatment was persistent symptoms after conservative treatment for at least six months. A total of 22 patients had received primary surgical treatment (primary group) and 16 had had failed previous surgery (revision group). The mean follow-up was 4.8 years (2 to 11). Good or excellent results, as assessed by the Ogilvie-Harris score, were found in 86% in the primary group and in 75% in the revision group. Two further procedures were required, one in each group. Radiological degenerative changes were seen in one ankle in the revision group after ten years. Arthroscopic curettage and drilling are recommended for both primary and revision treatment of an osteochondral defect of the talus


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1259 - 1263
1 Sep 2005
Steinlechner CWB Mkandawire NC

The management of chronic osteomyelitis requires the excision of necrotic and infected material followed by the prolonged administration of antibiotics. Sequestrectomy may be required before an involucrum has formed, resulting in a longitudinal bone defect. This can be difficult to fill. Vascularised grafts are complicated by a high rate of recurrent infection and thrombosis. We have managed defects of long bones in children after sequestrectomy by the use of non-vascularised fibular grafts harvested subperiosteally and held by an intramedullary Kirschner wire. Eight children underwent this procedure. In six the tibia was involved and in one each the humerus and radius. One patient was lost to follow-up. Six grafts united at both ends within 12 weeks. The seventh developed an infected nonunion distally which united after further debridement. One patient required a further sequestrectomy which did not compromise union. We have found this to be a straightforward technique with reliable results and were able to salvage the limb in all the seven patients who were reviewed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 2 | Pages 320 - 325
1 Feb 2010
Wang G Yang H Li M Lu S Chen X Cai X

In a rabbit model we investigated the efficacy of a silk fibroin/hydroxyapatite (SF/HA) composite on the repair of a segmental bone defect. Four types of porous SF/HA composites (SF/HA-1, SF/HA-2, SF/HA-3, SF/HA-4) with different material ratios, pore sizes, porosity and additives were implanted subcutaneously into Sprague-Dawley rats to observe biodegradation. SF/HA-3, which had characteristics more suitable for a bone substitite based on strength and resorption was selected as a scaffold and co-cultured with rabbit bone-marrow stromal cells (BMSCs). A segmental bone defect was created in the rabbit radius. The animals were randomised into group 1 (SF/HA-3 combined with BMSCs implanted into the bone defect), group 2 (SF/HA implanted alone) and group 3 (nothing implanted). They were killed at four, eight and 12 weeks for visual, radiological and histological study. The bone defects had complete union for group 1 and partial union in group 2, 12 weeks after operation. There was no formation of new bone in group 3. We conclude that SF/HA-3 combined with BMSCs supports bone healing and offers potential as a bone-graft substitute


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1215 - 1221
1 Sep 2010
Sakai T Ohzono K Nishii T Miki H Takao M Sugano N

The long-term results of grafting with hydroxyapatite granules for acetabular deficiency in revision total hip replacement are not well known. We have evaluated the results of revision using a modular cup with hydroxyapatite grafting for Paprosky type 2 and 3 acetabular defects at a minimum of ten years’ follow-up. We retrospectively reviewed 49 acetabular revisions at a mean of 135 months (120 to 178). There was one type 2B, ten 2C, 28 3A and ten 3B hips. With loosening as the endpoint, the survival rate was 74.2% (95% confidence interval 58.3 to 90.1). Radiologically, four of the type 3A hips (14%) and six of the type 3B hips (60%) showed aseptic loosening with collapse of the hydroxyapatite layer, whereas no loosening occurred in type 2 hips. There was consolidation of the hydroxyapatite layer in 33 hips (66%). Loosening was detected in nine of 29 hips (31%) without cement and in one of 20 hips (5%) with cement (p = 0.03, Fisher’s exact probability test). The linear wear and annual wear rate did not correlate with loosening. These results suggest that the long-term results of hydroxyapatite grafting with cement for type 2 and 3A hips are encouraging


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 91-B, Issue 2 | Pages 234 - 239
1 Feb 2009
Puri A Subin BS Agarwal MG

We evaluated the results of fibular centralisation as a stand alone technique to reconstruct defects that occurred after resection of tumours involving the tibial diaphysis and distal metaphysis. Between January 2003 and December 2006, 15 patients underwent excision of tumours of the tibial diaphysis or distal metaphysis and reconstruction by fibular centralisation. Their mean age was 17 years (7 to 40). Two patients were excluded; one died from the complications of chemotherapy and a second needed a below-knee amputation for a recurrent giant-cell tumour. A total of 13 patients were reviewed after a mean follow-up of 29 months (16 to 48). Only 16 of 26 host graft junctions united primarily. Ten junctions in ten patients needed one or more further procedure before union was achieved. At final follow-up 12 of the 13 patients had fully united grafts; 11 walked without aids. The mean time to union at the junctions that united was 12 months (3 to 36). The mean Musculoskeletal Tumor Society Score was 24.7 (16 to 30). Fibular centralisation is a durable reconstruction for defects of the tibial diaphysis and distal metaphysis with an acceptable functional outcome. Stable osteosynthesis is the key to successful union. Additional bone grafting is recommended for patients who need postoperative radiotherapy


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 4 | Pages 635 - 642
1 Aug 1986
Nilsson O Urist M Dawson E Schmalzried T Finerman G

In dogs, resection of a length of the ulna equal to twice the diameter of the mid-shaft leaves a defect which consistently fails to unite. In response to an implant of 100 mg of bovine bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), the defect becomes filled by callus consisting of fibrocartilage, cartilage and woven bone within four weeks. The cartilage is resorbed and replaced by new bone in four to eight weeks. Woven bone is then resorbed, colonised by bone marrow cells and remodelled into lamellar bone. Union of the defect is produced by 12 weeks. Control defects filled with autogeneic cortical bone chips unite after the same period. In regeneration induced by bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) and in repair enhanced by bone graft, union depends upon the proliferation of cells within and around the bone ends. Our working hypothesis is that BMP induces the differentiation of perivascular connective tissue cells into chondroblasts and osteoprogenitor cells and thereby augments the process of bone regeneration from the cells already present in the endosteum and periosteum


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 2 | Pages 195 - 199
1 Mar 2004
Patel JV Masonis JL Guerin J Bourne RB Rorabeck CH

We report the five- to-ten year results of Anderson Orthopaedic Research Institute type-2 bone defects treated with modular metal augments in revision knee surgery. A total of 102 revision knee arthroplasties in patients with type-2 defects treated with augments and stems were prospectively studied. Seven patients (seven knees) had incomplete follow-up and 15 patients (16 knees) died with the arthroplasty in situ. The mean follow-up of the 79 remaining knees was 7 ± 2 years (5 to 11). The presence of non-progressive radiolucent lines around the augment in 14% of knees was not associated with poorer knee scores, the range of movement, survival of the component or the type of insert which was used (p > 0.05). The survival of the components was 92 ± 0.03% at 11 years (95% CI, 10.3 to 11.2). We recommend the use of modular augmentation devices to treat type-2 defects in revision knee surgery


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 1 | Pages 126 - 134
1 Jan 2004
Clarke SA Brooks RA Lee PT Rushton N

Synthetic bone substitutes provide an alternative to autograft but do not give equivalent clinical results. Their performance may be enhanced by adding osteogenic growth factors. In this study, TGFβ1 was absorbed on to a carrier of β tricalcium phosphate and Gelfoam® and used to fill a defect around a tibial implant in a rat model of revision arthoplasty. We added 0.0, 0.02 μg, 0.1 μg or 1.0 μg of TGFβ1 to the carrier and then implanted it around an hydroxyapatite-coated stainless-steel pin in the proximal tibia of rats. The tibiae were harvested at three, six or 26 weeks and the amount of bone formation and ceramic resorption were assessed. TGFβ1 had no effect on the amount of bone in the defect, the amount of fluorescent label incorporated or the rate of mineral apposition. The growth factor did not significantly affect the amount of β TCP remaining in the tissue at any of the time points


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 91-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1555 - 1560
1 Dec 2009
Lingaraj K Teo YH Bergman N

We investigated the early results of modular porous metal components used in 23 acetabular reconstructions associated with major bone loss. The series included seven men and 15 women with a mean age of 67 years (38 to 81), who had undergone a mean of two previous revisions (1 to 7). Based on Paprosky’s classification, there were 17 type 3A and six type 3B defects. Pelvic discontinuity was noted in one case. Augments were used in 21 hips to support the shell and an acetabular component-cage construct was implanted in one case. At a mean follow-up of 41 months (24 to 62), 22 components remained well fixed. Two patients required rerevision of the liners for prosthetic joint instability. Clinically, the mean Harris Hip Score improved from 43.0 pre-operatively (14 to 86) to 75.7 post-operatively (53 to 100). The mean pre-operative Merle d’Aubigné score was 8.2 (3 to 15) and improved to a mean of 13.7 (11 to 18) post-operatively. These short-term results suggest that modular porous metal components are a viable option in the reconstruction of Paprosky type 3 acetabular defects. More data are needed to determine whether the system yields greater long-term success than more traditional methods, such as reconstruction cages and structural allografts


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 4 | Pages 710 - 718
1 Jul 1999
Geesink RGT Hoefnagels NHM Bulstra SK

We performed a prospective, randomised double-blind study in 24 patients undergoing high tibial osteotomy to evaluate the effectiveness of human recombinant osteogenic protein (OP-1) on a collagen type-I carrier in a critically-sized fibular defect. The study had two phases, each evaluated by clinical, radiological and DEXA methods during the first postoperative year. The first concerned the validation of the model of the fibular defect, using positive (demineralised bone) and negative (untreated) controls. The second phase concerned the osteogenic potential of OP-1 on collagen type-I ν collagen type-I alone. The results of the first phase established the critically-sized nature of the defect. In the untreated group no bony changes were observed while, in the demineralised bone group, formation of new bone was visible from six weeks onwards. The results of the second phase showed no significant formation of new bone in the presence of collagen alone, while in the OP-1 group, all patients except one showed formation of new bone from six weeks onwards. This proved the osteogenic activity of OP-1 in a validated critically-sized human defect


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 2 | Pages 237 - 244
1 Mar 2002
Gautier E Kolker D Jakob RP

We reviewed retrospectively 11 patients who had been treated surgically by open autologous osteochondral grafting for symptomatic chondral or osteochondral defects of the dome of the talus between 1996 and 1999. The mean ages of the eight men and three women were 34.2 and 25.9 years, respectively, with a mean time to follow-up of 24 months. The results of functional outcome were prospectively obtained using the MODEMS AAOS foot and ankle follow-up questionnaire, the AOFAS ankle-hindfoot scale and the Hannover scores for the ankle. The grafts were harvested from the ipsilateral knee. Good to excellent results were obtained for the ankle without adverse effects on the knee. We believe that autologous osteochondral grafting should be considered for the patient with a symptomatic osteochondral defect of the talus


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 2 | Pages 223 - 230
1 Mar 2003
Bentley G Biant LC Carrington RWJ Akmal M Goldberg A Williams AM Skinner JA Pringle J

Autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) and mosaicplasty are both claimed to be successful for the repair of defects of the articular cartilage of the knee but there has been no comparative study of the two methods. A total of 100 patients with a mean age of 31.3 years (16 to 49) and with a symptomatic lesion of the articular cartilage in the knee which was suitable for cartilage repair was randomised to undergo either ACI or mosaicplasty; 58 patients had ACI and 42 mosaicplasty. Most lesions were post-traumatic and the mean size of the defect was 4.66 cm. 2. The mean duration of symptoms was 7.2 years and the mean number of previous operations, excluding arthroscopy, was 1.5. The mean follow-up was 19 months (12 to 26). Functional assessment using the modified Cincinatti and Stanmore scores and objective clinical assessment showed that 88% had excellent or good results after ACI compared with 69% after mosaicplasty. Arthroscopy at one year demonstrated excellent or good repairs in 82% after ACI and in 34% after mosaicplasty. All five patellar mosaicplasties failed. Our prospective, randomised, clinical trial has shown significant superiority of ACI over mosaicplasty for the repair of articular defects in the knee. The results for ACI are comparable with those in other studies, but those for mosaicplasty suggest that its continued use is of dubious value


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 1 | Pages 105 - 110
1 Jan 1992
Beaver R Mahomed M Backstein D Davis A Zukor D Gross A

Fresh osteochondral allografts were used to repair post-traumatic osteoarticular defects in 92 knees. At the time of grafting, varus or valgus deformities were corrected by upper tibial or supracondylar femoral osteotomies. A survivorship analysis was performed in which failure was defined as the need for a revision operation or the persistence of the pre-operative symptoms. There was a 75% success rate at five years, 64% at ten years and 63% at 14 years. The failure rate was higher for bipolar grafts than for unipolar and the results in patients over the age of 60 years were poor. The outcome did not depend on the sex of the patient and the results of allografts in the medial and lateral compartments of the knee were similar. Careful patient selection, correction of joint malalignment by osteotomy, and rigid fixation of the graft are all mandatory requirements for success. We recommend this method for the treatment of post-traumatic osteochondral defects in the knees of relatively young and active patients


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 5 | Pages 862 - 865
1 Sep 1990
Malghem J Maldague B Claus D Clapuyt P

Asymptomatic cyst-like cortical defects appearing after fractures in children have been occasionally reported. Typically, these defects appear during fracture consolidation, within the newly formed subperiosteal bone, proximal to the fracture line, do not enlarge, and progressively disappear. We have previously shown a fatty density on CT scan within the early cortical defect. We now present two additional cases in which early CT scans appeared to confirm that these transient cortical defects may consist of fat, and probably result from the inclusion of medullary fat within the subperiosteal haematoma


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 33-B, Issue 3 | Pages 420 - 429
1 Aug 1951
Jackson WP

Three elderly sibling dwarfs are reported from a large and otherwise normal family. Their condition is an unusual and irregular form of cartilaginous defect, combined with club-feet, and bearing some resemblance to the Morquio type. A brief consideration of the literature of the generahised developmental bony syndromes shows confusion of thought and nomenclature. A plea is therefore made for simplification and a rational and simple grouping of these conditions is attempted. It seems particularly desirable that many confusing names for particular syndromes should be scrapped (for example, dyschondroplasia, chondro-osteodystrophy), although quite evidently the terms achondroplasia and osteogenesis imperfecta must remain because of their long-standing and general usage. Incidentally I have suggested elsewhere (Jackson 1951) that the name cleido-cranial dysostosis should be dropped, because it tends to lead the investigator away from the clinically more important lesions in the teeth and the cartilage bones of the pelvis and legs. It seems reasonable to confine the nomenclature of these various syndromes to the names used in the above classification, or something on those lines


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 2 | Pages 289 - 294
1 Mar 2001
Im G Kim D Shin J Hyun C Cho W

In 16 mature New Zealand white rabbits mesenchymal stem cells were aspirated from the bone marrow, cultured in monolayer and implanted on to a full-thickness osteochondral defect artificially made on the patellar groove of the same rabbit. A further 13 rabbits served as a control group. The rabbits were killed after 14 weeks. Healing of the defect was investigated histologically using haematoxylin and eosin and Safranin-O staining and with immunohistochemical staining for type-II collagen. We also used a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to detect mRNA of type-I and type-II collagen. The semiquantitative histological scores were significantly higher in the experimental group than in the control group (p < 0.05). In the experimental group immunohistochemical staining on newly formed cartilage was more intense for type-II collagen in the matrix and RT-PCR from regenerated cartilage detected mRNA for type-II collagen in mature chondrocytes. These findings suggest that repair of cartilage defects can be enhanced by the implantation of cultured mesenchymal stem cells


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 2 | Pages 244 - 253
1 May 1981
Chacha P Ahmed M Daruwalla J

Failure of union of the tibia with a large defect is difficult to treat, especially in the presence of sepsis and adherent scars. Conventional methods of fixation and bone grafting are not easily applicable. Experiments on Macaca monkeys showed that a vascularised pedicle graft of the shaft of the ipsilateral fibula could be fixed across a defect in the tibia and remain viable, even if it was isolated from surrounding soft tissues. Transfer of part of the shaft of the ipsilateral fibula on a vascular and muscle pedicle was carried out in 11 patients with large tibial defects and sepsis. There was one failure because of severe infection, but the other 10 patients gained sound union in about four months. The tibia was then protected by a caliper for the 18 months of full reconstitution. The bone infection healed and there was no evidence of avascular necrosis. Although the salvaged limbs were scarred, stiff and ugly, none of the patients suffered from pain, recurrent oedema or persistent infection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 1 | Pages 144 - 150
1 Jan 1998
Hunziker EB Kapfinger E Müller ME

Lesions within the articular cartilage layer of synovial joints do not heal spontaneously. Some repair cells may appear, but their failure to become established may be related to problems of adhesion to proteoglycan-rich surfaces. We therefore investigated whether controlled enzymatic degradation of surface proteoglycan molecules to a depth of about 1 μm, using chondroitinase ABC, would improve coverage by repair cells. We created superficial lesions (1.0 × 0.2 × 5 mm) in the articular cartilage of mature rabbit knees and treated the surfaces with 1 U/ml of chondroitinase ABC for four minutes. The defects were studied by histomorphometry and electron microscopy at one, three and six months. At one month, untreated lesions were covered to a mean extent of 28% by repair cells; this was enhanced to a mean of 53% after enzyme treatment. By three months, the mean coverage of both control and chondroitinase-ABC-treated defects had diminished dramatically to 0.2% and 13%, respectively, but at six months both untreated and treated lesions had a similar coverage of about 30%, not significantly different from that achieved in untreated knees at one month. These findings suggest that, with time, chondrocytes near the surface of the defect may compensate for the loss of proteoglycans produced by enzyme treatment, thereby restoring the inhibitory properties of the matrix as regards cell adhesion. This supposition was confirmed by electron microscopy. Our results have an important bearing on attempts made to induce healing responses by transplanting chondrogenic cells or by applying growth factors


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1097 - 1100
1 Aug 2008
Tsuchihara T Nemoto K Arino H Amako M Murakami H Yoshizumi Y

Most injuries to the femoral nerve are iatrogenic in origin and occur during resection of large retroperitoneal tumours. When the defect is considerable a nerve graft is mandatory to avoid tension across the suture line. We describe two cases of iatrogenic femoral nerve injury which recovered well after reconstruction with long sural nerve grafts. The probable reasons for success were that we performed the grafting soon after the injury, the patients were not too old, the nerve repairs were reinforced with fibrin glue and electrical stimulation of the quadriceps was administered to prevent muscle atrophy. Good functional results may be obtained if these conditions are satisfied even if the length of a nerve graft is more than 10 cm


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 1 | Pages 77 - 81
1 Feb 1979
Fowles J Lehoux J Zlitni M Kassab M Nolan B

The management of twenty-one children with a defect of the tibial shaft due to acute haematogenous osteomyelitis is described. Half the defects were due to removal of the sequestrum before the involucrum had formed. Only four patients, all under ten years of age, had spontaneous regeneration of the shaft. Eleven children had a posterior tibiofibular graft and six had a transfer of the ipsilateral fibular diaphysis. The results of operation were superior to those of spontaneous regeneration. All the grafts united and the children returned home to lead normal lives. Shortening was only a problem when growth plates or adjacent joints had been damaged. We now leave the sequestrum for up to one year after the onset of infection. If the involucrum fails to form we reconstruct the tibia as soon as possible after sequestrectomy