We report a review of 33 hips (32 patients) which had required repeat open reduction for congenital dislocation of the hip. They were followed up for a mean of 76 months (36 to 132). Factors predisposing to failure of the initial open reduction were simultaneous femoral or pelvic osteotomy, inadequate inferior capsular release, and inadequate capsulorrhaphy. Avascular necrosis had developed in more than half the hips, usually before the final open reduction. At review, 11 of the hips (one-third) were in Severin grade 3 or worse; five had significant symptoms and only ten were asymptomatic and radiographically normal. Once redisplacement has occurred after primary open reduction, attempts to reduce the
We have studied the influence of weight-bearing on the measurement of wear of the polyethylene acetabular component in total hip arthroplasty using two techniques. The measured vertical wear was significantly greater when radiographs were taken weight-bearing rather than with the patient supine (p = 0.001, method 1; p = 0.007, method 2). Calculations of rates of linear wear of the acetabular component were significantly underestimated (p <
0.05) when radiographs were taken supine. There are two reasons for this. First, a change in pelvic orientation when bearing weight ensures that the thinnest polyethylene is brought into relief, and secondly, the
We have assessed the long-term results of 292 cemented total hip replacements which were performed for developmental dysplasia of the hip in 206 patients. The mean age of the patients at operation was 42.6 years (15.9 to 79.5) and most (202) were women. The severity of dysplasia was graded according to both the Crowe and the Hartofilakidis classifications. A 22.25-mm Charnley
Roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis was used to measure the migration of 24 cemented femoral components implanted during revision for mechanical loosening. All hips were examined one week, four months and one year after surgery; 14 hips were also examined after two years. Twenty-one components subsided 0.2 to 5.5 mm during the observation period; in 17 of these, subsidence occurred within four months of surgery. In 16 hips the prosthetic
We have examined the effect of the Wagner spherical acetabular osteotomy on preserving the joint in 38 hips with a mean follow-up of 17 years. At the time of the initial operation, 55% of patients had clinical symptoms and 30 joints showed minimal or absent radiological signs of osteoarthritis. At follow-up, 54% of patients had a good functional result. The osteotomy improved the mean centre-edge angle from −3° to +15°, the mean anterior centre-edge angle to 23° and the acetabular
We performed a prospective study using MRI in 16 consecutive infants with a mean age of 5.2 months (2.7 to 8.7) who had shown inadequate recovery from an obstetric lesion of the brachial plexus in the first three months of life, in order to identify early secondary deformities of the shoulder. Shoulders were analysed according to a standardised MRI protocol. Measurements were made of the appearance of the glenoid, glenoid version and the position of the humeral
We examined macroscopically and microscopically 55 cadaver rotator-cuff tendons attached to their humeral
In a retrospective study we compared the results of 31 Wilson and 31 Hohmann osteotomies of the first metatarsal in the treatment of hallux valgus. There were no differences between the two operations in terms of patient satisfaction, pain relief, appearance, footwear and walking ability. First metatarsal shortening was the same after both operations, and the degree of shortening was unrelated to either the clinical or the pedobarographic findings. Although the long-term radiographic changes after the Hohmann osteotomy were more worrying, the pedobarographic patterns tended to be worse after the Wilson osteotomy. There were no poor results and the numbers of feet with the same final grade were identical in each group. However, there was abnormal loading of the lateral metatarsal
We report the clinical results of glenoid osteotomy in patients
with atraumatic posteroinferior instability associated with glenoid
dysplasia. The study reports results in 211 patients (249 shoulders) with
atraumatic posteroinferior instability. The patients comprised 63
men and 148 women with a mean age of 20 years. The posteroinferior
glenoid surface was elevated by osteotomy at the scapular neck.
A body spica was applied to maintain the arm perpendicular to the
glenoid for two weeks postoperatively. Clinical results were evaluated
using the Rowe score and Japan Shoulder Society Shoulder Instability
Score (JSS-SIS); bone union, osteoarthrosis, and articular congruity
were examined on plain radiographs.Aims
Patients and Methods
Perthes' disease involving the whole of the femoral head in 36 children was treated by innominate osteotomy. Radiographs of all cases were reviewed to see the effect of the osteotomy on the shape, the degree of acetabular cover and any subluxation of the diseased femoral head. All femoral heads which were circular before operation remained so, and over half of the previously deformed
Disruption of the major ligaments of the knee was seen in six young men, five parachutists and a house painter, after what we have termed abduction-traction injury. This unusual complaint results from the application of a sudden block to the ankle while falling
Seventy children who had suffered from Perthes' disease were reviewed clinically and radiologically three to eight years from the onset of the condition in order to determine retrospectively the most satisfactory method of assessing the prognosis and the correlation between the clinical and radiological result. In younger children the femoral head was more likely to be spherical at the conclusion of the pathological process but not necessarily of normal proportions nor normally covered by the acetabulum. The prognosis was significantly poorer for girls than for boys. Clinical factors were not an aid to prognosis in the individual cases, but overall there was a close correlation between the clinical and the radiological end-results. The most reliable radiological factors indicating the prognosis were the extent of uncovering of the femoral head, the Catterall grouping, the presence of calcification lateral to the outer limit of the acetabulum and lateral displacement of the femoral head, as measured by comparing the
1. Synovitis was induced in the hip joints of fifty-six rabbits by the intra-articular injection of surgical talc. The opposite hip joint and eleven suitable"sham" operations served as controls. 2. The results in the hips injected with talc were as follows. Widening of the medial joint space and sometimes acetabular changes were seen; enlargement of the femoral head and neck in two planes was found, with, in most cases, flattening of the superior aspect of the
1. Four cases of true congenital vertical talus are described; in three of the four cases there were other major deformities of the skeleton. All were treated by open operation; the operation sacrificed part of the substance of the navicular bone, which was placed between the forepart of the calcaneus and the
1. The technique of arthrography in congenital displacement of the hip is described. No complications have been encountered in a series of over 200 examinations. The interpretation of the arthrographs is discussed. 2. It is suggested that the abnormal hips may be classified in three degrees: 1) Primary instability; 2) partial displacement without interposition of soft tissue; 3) complete displacement with interposition of soft tissue between
1. Fracture of the neck of the femur in childhood and its complications are discussed. 2. The high incidence of these complications is not generally appreciated–in this series of twenty-four patients only eight achieved normal hip joints. 3. The complications are due to the arrangement of the blood supply to the
1. Attention is drawn to that type of rigid congenital flat foot in which the talus lies vertically instead of horizontally. 2. This deformity is rare, but if not treated successfully leads to an ugly, painful foot in adolescence. 3. The experience of five patients forms the basis of the present preliminary account. One adolescent and two young children under the age of five were treated unsuccessfully by both conservative and operative measures. More recently in two children with bilateral deformity open operation has been successful in restoring the shape of the foot. 4. The operation is essentially a reduction of a subluxation at the talo-navicular and subtalar joints. It entails freeing the
1. Six cases of posterior dislocation of the shoulder are described. 2. In four cases the diagnosis was made on clinical grounds. 3. The important clinical signs are the adducted and medially rotated position of the arm, a hard mass posteriorly below the acromion representing the displaced humeral
We report the results in 33 patients who had nerve grafting of the axillary or the suprascapular nerve or of both. There were 32 men and one woman; their mean age was 21 years and the average interval between injury and operation was three months. At a mean follow-up of 27 months, the deltoid had recovered to M3 or better in 23 of 30 patients (77%) and the infraspinatus in 18 of 25 patients (72%). Shoulder elevation had reached 120° or more in 27 patients (82%), with external rotation of 30° or more in 27 (82%). Twenty-six patients (79%) could reach to the top of their