The management of
The
1. The management of severe kyphosis of the lumbar spine in association with myelomeningocele is discussed. 2. Neonatal
Of 55 patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy offered surgical stabilisation of the spine, 32 accepted and 23 refused. We compared both groups pre-operatively and at six-month intervals in respect of survival, forced vital capacity, peak expiratory flow rate and severity of scoliosis. In the nonoperated patients, the forced vital capacity deteriorated by a mean of 8% per annum; in the operated group it remained static for 36 months and diminished slightly thereafter.
Subluxation of the hip is common in patients with intermediate
Two cases of lateral meningocele and
1. Compression forces are mainly absorbed by the vertebral body. The nucleus pulposus, being liquid, is incompressible. The tense annulus bulges very little. On compression the vertebral end-plate bulges and blood is forced out of the cancellous bone of the vertebral body into the perivertebral sinuses. This appears to be the normal energy-dissipating mechanism on compression. 2. The normal disc is very resistant to compression. The nucleus pulposus does not alter in shape or position on compression or flexion. It plays no active part in producing a disc prolapse. On compression the vertebral body always breaks before the normal disc gives way. The vertebral end-plate bulges and then breaks, leading to a vertical fracture. If the nucleus pulposus has lost its turgor there is abnormal mobility between the vertebral bodies. On very gentle compression or flexion movement the annulus protrudes on the concave aspectānot on the convex side as has been supposed. 3. Disc prolapse consists primarily of annulus; it occurs only if the nucleus pulposus has lost its turgor. It then occurs very easily as the annulus now bulges like a flat tyre. 4. I have never succeeded in producing rupture of normal
The effect of hypobaric
High-pressure injection injuries occur infrequently but are usually work-related and involve the non-dominant hand. The neck is a very rare site for such an injury. We describe the management of a 36-year-old man with a high-pressure grease-gun injection injury to his neck causing a cervical
We evaluated the efficacy of Escherichia
coli-derived recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2
(E-BMP-2) in a mini-pig model of
1. The syndrome of
We reviewed 212 consecutive patients with adolescent
idiopathic scoliosis who underwent posterior
Bone-marrow transplantation has increased the survival of patients with mucopolysaccharidosis-I. We describe the
We studied MR images of the spine in a consecutive series of 100 patients with acute compression of the
Diurnal changes in the loads acting on the spine affect the water content and height of the intervertebral discs. We have reviewed the effects of these changes on
Forty-eight patients with achondroplasia and 24 with hypochondroplasia have been reviewed in order to clarify the differences between the two disorders and establish the height, body proportions and other clinical and radiological variations within each group. Some of the "classical" findings in achondroplasia are not always present, and hypochondroplasia at its most severe is indistinguishable from achondroplasia at its least severe. The frequency of
A dural tear is a common but troublesome complication of endoscopic
Teratomas in the