The pathogenesis of Perthes' disease has been related to increased intra-articular pressure secondary to a joint effusion. The pressure within the hip in different positions was measured in eight children with transient synovitis and four with the synovial stage of Perthes' disease. In the position of comfort for the hip this pressure was always less than the arteriolar blood pressure and in a supine position it did not exceed the systolic blood pressure. However, in extension with medial rotation the intra-articular pressure always became several times the systolic blood pressure. This high pressure was also recorded in the stable lateral position which occurs normally during sleep. It is concluded that in the presence of a synovial effusion in the hip, a position of extension and medial rotation causes an increase in intra-articular pressure which may compromise the blood supply to the capital
We have compared, in rabbits, two techniques of limb lengthening by distraction of the epiphyseal plate using a unilateral external fixation frame. In all cases, 14 mm of symmetrical lengthening without deviation was achieved. With rapid distraction at rates of 1 mm per day (distractional epiphyseolysis) separation of the
The acute childhood diseases haematogenous staphylococcal osteomyelitis and septic arthritis were studied concurrently using avian models which closely resemble the human diseases. Ultrastructural studies during the initial stages of bone and joint infection showed that adherence of bacteria to cartilage, bacterial proliferation, cartilage destruction and subsequent bacterial spread along the vascular channels within cartilage were common to both disease processes. Histological studies revealed that transphyseal blood vessels were present in the growing chickens and were a likely explanation for the frequency of the concurrence of acute osteomyelitis and adjacent joint infection following intravenous injection of bacteria. Transphyseal vessels provide a direct connection between the growth plate (physis) and epiphyseal cartilage supplying a route for bacteria to spread from an osteomyelitic focus in the metaphysis to the
Subtrochanteric osteotomy has been reported to interrupt the destructive phase of coxa plana and speed up the rate of healing. The aim of this investigation was to test the validity of these statements. The material comprised twenty-five patients treated by osteotomy and thirty-three patients treated by support in a Thomas's splint. For every patient the extent of the radiological changes was estimated and plotted against time as a percentage of the normal epiphysial volume. The graph so obtained represents the rate of destruction and re-ossification, as well as the maximum involvement of 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 head; there was thickening of the joint cartilage and sometimes deformity of the capital
1. Two boys complaining of pain in the ankle were shown to have centres of separate ossification for the medial malleoli. These were present bilaterally, but discomfort was unilateral. 2. In one, followed for fifteen months, the extra centre became wholly incorporated into the normal lower tibial
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 head and neck. Avascular necrosis is unavoidable in a high proportion, and is not directly related to any particular method of treatment. 4. Extreme care and gentleness in handling the injured limb will help to reduce the incidence of deformities; internal fixation is not suitable for the very young as it may predispose to necrosis or may damage the
Slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) is one of the most common hip diseases of adolescence that can cause marked disability, yet there is little robust evidence to guide treatment. Fundamental aspects of the disease, such as frequency, are unknown and consequently the desire of clinicians to undertake robust intervention studies is somewhat prohibited by a lack of fundamental knowledge. The study is an anonymized nationwide comprehensive cohort study with nested consented within the mechanism of the British Orthopaedic Surgery Surveillance (BOSS) Study. All relevant hospitals treating SCFE in England, Scotland, and Wales will contribute anonymized case details. Potential missing cases will be cross-checked against two independent external sources of data (the national administrative data and independent trainee data). Patients will be invited to enrich the data collected by supplementing anonymized case data with patient-reported outcome measures. In line with recommendations of the IDEAL Collaboration, the study will primarily seek to determine incidence, describe case mix and variations in surgical interventions, and explore the relationships between baseline factors (patients and types of interventions) and two-year outcomes.Aims
Methods
Children who present late with hip dislocation may require femoral osteotomy after reduction, to correct valgus and anteversion deformity of the femoral neck. After these procedures proximal femoral growth is unpredictable. We have studied proximal femoral growth in 40 children who had been treated by femoral osteotomy. Preoperatively, the mean femoral neck-shaft angle was 5° greater on the affected side than on the contralateral side. Postoperatively, it was 28° less. There was progressive recorrection; after five years the angle was not significantly different from that on the contralateral side. In our series 70% of the capital epiphyses became abnormally shaped, taking the appearance of a ‘jockey’s cap’. All the growth plates became angulated but this corrected with time. Correction of the neck-shaft angle probably results from the more normal mechanical environment provided by reduction. The abnormal radiographic appearance of the
Treatment with corticosteroids is a risk factor for non-traumatic avascular necrosis of the femoral head, but the pathological mechanism is poorly understood. Short-term treatment with high doses of methylprednisolone is used in severe neurotrauma and after kidney and heart transplantation. We investigated the effect of such treatment on the pattern of perfusion of the femoral head and of bone in general in the pig. We allocated 15 immature pigs to treatment with high-dose methylprednisolone (20 mg/kg per day intramuscularly for three days, followed by 10 mg/kg intramuscularly for a further 11 days) and 15 to a control group. Perfusion of the systematically subdivided femoral head, proximal femur, acetabulum, humerus, and soft tissues was determined by the microsphere technique. Blood flow in bone was severely reduced in the steroid-treated group. The reduction of flow affected all the segments and the entire
Angular deformities of the distal radius of 15 sheep were induced by asymmetrical epiphysial distraction. Eleven sheep were between 10 and 20 weeks old; four were older than 24 weeks. Gradual distraction on the medial side of the limb caused partial separation of the
The condition known as delta phalanx (or longitudinally bracketed epiphysis) is a rare congenital anomaly first described in 1964. The deformity consists of a triangular bone with an
1. The duration of Legg-Perthes' disease seems somewhat shortened by abduction weightbearing plaster treatnlent. The average age of onset of our sixty patients at the start of this treatment was seven years nine months. The patients were treated in abduction plasters for an average of nineteen months. 2. The contour of the femoral head in relation to the acetabulum is better preserved than after our previous methods of treatment. We have evaluated our cases by the method of Mose, by the epiphysial index of Eyre-Brook and the epiphysial quotient of Sjovall, and by the centre/edge angle of Wiberg. 3. There was no undue influence on the growing
1. During the past twenty-five years there have been admitted to this orthopaedic service twelve children or adolescents having a close relative who previously or subsequently developed slipped upper femoral epiphysis. This represents an incidence of approximately 7 per cent. 2. There is some evidence that the incidence is considerably higher. 3. In addition to those with close relations also with slipped
1. Two cases of an unrecognised congenital defect of the humeral head are described and the cause is discussed. 2. Only six cases with similar radiographic appearances could be collected from the literature. In most of these cases other skeletal deformities were present, whereas in those now reported only the shoulder was affected. 3. Examination of radiographs suggests that the main deformity consists of lack of development of the capital
1. The arterial supply of the upper end of the femur has been studied in twenty-four children and twenty adults. 2. The arterial system was demonstrated by injection of radio-opaque material, with Spalteholz' method of clarification, and histological section of the neck and ligamentum teres. 3. The upper end of the femur is supplied by the nutrient artery of the shaft, the retinacular vessels of the capsule, and the foveolar artery of the ligamentum teres. 4. The retinacular vessels consist of three separate groups: postero-superior, posteroinferior, and anterior. These vessels are the chief supply to the
We performed superselective angiography in 28 hips in 25 patients with Perthes’ disease in order to study the blood supply of the lateral epiphyseal arteries (LEAs). Interruption of the LEAs at their origin was observed in 19 hips (68%). Revascularisation in the form of numerous small arteries was seen in ten out of 11 hips in the initial stage of Perthes’ disease, in seven of eight in the fragmentation stage and in five of nine in the healing stage. Penetration of mature arteries into the depths of the
A protocol for the treatment of subacute haematogenous osteomyelitis has been used and evaluated in 71 children. A group of 26 children with a radiologically "aggressive" lesion had biopsy followed by antibiotics and immobilisation for six weeks. A group of 45 children with 48 cavities in the metaphysis or the
Valgus deformity of the hindfoot can occur at the subtalar joint, the ankle joint, or at both sites. In children suffering from spina bifida, the ankle is often the main site of deformity. Thirty-five ankles with valgus deformity of the hindfoot were studied in 23 children with spina bifida. A radiological triad was observed in all patients: shortening of the fibula, lateral wedging of the distal tibial
Coxa valga may sometimes occur as a complication of varus osteotomy for congenital dislocation of the hip. Six such cases are described with a minimum follow-up of nine years. In three cases the varus osteotomy had been performed on only one side; in one case it was done on both sides and coxa valga developed bilaterally; and in two further bilateral cases coxa valga developed on one side only. In each case the coxa valga was sub-capital. Detailed radiographic analysis included measurements of neck-shaft angle, acetabular angle and C.E. angle. The epiphysis-shaft angle is described; it is an index of the constant tendency of the capital