Thirty-seven patients treated for os odontoideum are reviewed. In 20 patients the treatment was conservative and in 17 consisted of occipitocervical or atlanto-axial fusion. Two patients died after the operation and another, who lived abroad, was lost to follow-up. The remaining 34 patients were followed up for an average of eight years: 19 improved, 14 were unchanged and one deteriorated. In the subgroup of 25 patients without cord signs, there were no significant differences between the two modes of treatment. Analysis of the radiological features of the upper cervical spine in 21 patients revealed a minimal sagittal diameter of less than 13 millimetres to be associated with a high risk of permanent cord damage. There was no correlation with the degree of
A randomly selected sample of 3494 children evenly representing a total population of 37 391 schoolchildren aged between eleven and twelve was screened for idiopathic scoliosis by the bending test. Ten per cent of the children showed clinical evidence of scoliosis and 6.4 per cent had positive radiological findings. Small curves were equally distributed between the two sexes, while large ones were more common in girls. Children with fair hair and blue eyes showed a higher percentage of positive findings than children with a dark complexion. A group of 112 children with curves between 7 and 16 degrees were followed up for an average of nineteen months. The pattern and evolution of these curves showed their close relationship to established scoliosis. Potential factors of
The results obtained in a consecutive series of thirty-seven Pemberton operations for congenital dislocation or subluxation of the hip are reported. Over the period under review, 1967 to 1973, it was the only type of acetabuloplasty employed at Winford. Unless the mandatory concentric reduction could be obtained with ease, preliminary open reduction was favoured, especially in cases of primary care. Femoral rotation osteotomy was added for marked anteversion. The programme was designed to be complete inside fourteen weeks, and was so for eighteen hips. Secondary acetabuloplasty was performed on hips with
A multi-centre clinical trial of ICLH (Freeman-Swanson) arthroplasty has been in progress since 1971. In this paper the results up to two years after operation are reported in seventy-one knees displaying at least 30 degrees of fixed flexion, 25 degrees of valgus or 20 degrees of varus, before operation. It has been found that knees displaying 70 degrees of fixed flexion, 70 degrees of valgus, 30 degrees of varus or 50 degrees of valgus/varus
The significance of cobalt as a cause of symptoms after McKee hip arthroplasty is discussed. Seven patients are described in whom such arthroplasties became unsatisfactory after periods varying from nine months to four years. Six of these patients were cobalt-positive but nickel-and chrome-negative on patch testing. Macroscopic and histological necrosis of bone, muscle and joint capsule around the prostheses was found in five patients whose hips were explored. The symptoms were progressive pain, a feeling of
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
One hundred cases of Lambrinudi's arthrodesis are reviewed. The shortest follow-up was one year. and the longest twenty-seven years. Thirty-seven per cent were successful. Nineteen per cent were failures; many of these were associated with faulty technique, and one method of operation which gives good results is described. Success is likely if there is a balance of power between the dorsiflexors and plantarflexors of the ankle, especially if there is some fixed equinus before operation. Success is less likely when the operation is done for a flail foot. In such circumstances arthrodesis of the ankle may have to be considered subsequently for
Posterior cervical wiring is commonly performed for patients with spinal
We have described a method of anatomical reconstruction of the lateral ligaments of the ankles with
We examined whether somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were detectable after direct electrical stimulation of injured, reconstructed and normal anterior cruciate ligaments (ACL) during arthroscopy under general anaesthesia. We investigated the position sense of the knee before and after reconstruction and the correlation between the SEP and
A family history of shoulder instability in first-degree relatives was found in 24 of 100 patients who had been operated on for recurrent anterior shoulder instability. The patients with and without a family history were similar in respect of sex ratio, age at first dislocation and age at operation. The initial dislocation was non-traumatic in 22% of the patients with and in 13% of those without a positive family history (p = 0.3). Postoperative recurrence of
We reviewed 55 patients with mid-lumbar myelomeningocele (L3 and L4) first seen over a 17-year period from 1970 to 1986 and followed up for an average of ten years. We assessed a number of factors which might affect hip stability and ability to walk, recording the natural history of clinical and radiological hip deformity. Two-thirds of the hips had become dislocated or subluxed by the end of the first year of life, involving 86% of hips in patients with an L3 level and 45% of those with an L4 level. All the hips that developed
We have studied the intervertebral discs adjacent to fractured vertebral bodies using MRI in 63 patients at a minimum of 18 months after injury. There were 75 thoracolumbar fractures of which 26 were treated conservatively and 37 by posterior reduction and fusion with an AO internal fixator. We identified six different types of disc using criteria based on the morphology and the intensity of the MRI signal. The inter- and intraobserver variability of this system was good. Most of the discs showed predominantly morphological changes with no variation in signal intensity. Some disc types were associated with progressive kyphosis in patients treated conservatively. In those managed by operation, recurrent kyphosis appeared to result from creeping of the disc in the central depression of the bony endplate rather than from disc degeneration. Changes in the disc space after posterior fixation should not be seen as a form of chronic
We have reviewed 32 patients with rheumatoid disease of the cervical spine who underwent a total of 40 operations aimed at correcting
The Blauth prosthesis is a hinged total knee replacement. We have evaluated 422 consecutive primary total knee arthroplasties using this design in 330 patients with a maximum follow-up of 20 years (mean 6). The mean age of the patients at the time of operation was 70 years (29 to 87). Using endpoints of infection, removal because of aseptic loosening, removal for any cause, and the worst case as definitions of failure, the cumulative rates of survival at 20 years were 93.6%, 96.0%, 94.4% and 86.8%, respectively. The cumulative rate of survival of the patients themselves was 14.4% (24% in patients with osteoarthritis and 9% in these with rheumatoid arthritis) after 20 years. Our survivorship analysis shows that hinged knee prostheses, when they are biomechanically well designed, can yield a satisfactory long-term outcome, similar to those of the best prostheses of the resurfacing type. Hinged knee prostheses continue to be of value in patients with severe deformity or
To study the effect of ligament injuries and surgical repair we investigated the three-dimensional kinematics of the ankle joint complex and the talocrural and the subtalar joints in seven fresh-frozen lower legs before and after sectioning and reconstruction of the ligaments. A foot movement simulator produced controlled torque in one plane of movement while allowing unconstrained movement in the remainder. After testing the intact joint the measurements were repeated after simulation of ligament injuries by cutting the anterior talofibular and calcaneofibular ligaments. The tests were repeated after the Evans, Watson-Jones and Chrisman-Snook tenodeses. The range of movement (ROM) was measured using two goniometer systems which determined the relative movement between the tibia and talus (talocrural ROM) and between the talus and calcaneus (subtalar ROM). Ligament lesions led to increased inversion and internal rotation, predominantly in the talocrural joint. The reconstruction procedures reduced the movement in the ankle joint complex by reducing subtalar movement to a non-physiological level but did not correct the
Eighty-three Guepar valgus-hinge prostheses and 30 prostheses with collinear femoral and the tibial components were inserted in 97 patients at Vancouver General Hospital between March 1975 and May 1978. One hundred and nine arthroplasties were reviewed between January 1979 and April 1980, after an average follow-up of 19 months. It was found that the amount of bone resected made arthrodesis difficult, that there was a very high incidence of patellar
The results of treatment of injuries of the thoracic and thoraco-lumbar spine with neurological involvement have been reviewed in a retrospective study of 115 patients, of whom eighty-nine received conservative and twenty-six surgical treatment. Operation was reserved, in general, for patients with irreducible dislocations and incomplete neurological lesions, open reduction and internal fixation being the commonest procedure. Only three patients required a delayed spinal fusion for suspected
We treated 31 intra-articular fractures of the distal radius by arthroscopically-assisted reduction and percutaneous fixation with Kirschner (K-) wires. Tears of the triangular fibrocartilage (58%), scapholunate (85%) and lunotriquetral (61%)