Abstract
1. The technique of compression-arthrodesis of the knee joint is described.
2. Fifteen consecutive cases are reported in which clinical union was detected at the first inspection from twelve days to six weeks after operation. By this method the total period of disability is reduced to three months.
3. Three mechanical factors which might be responsible for this very early clinical union are examined: compression is believed to be the main factor, although fixation is also important.
4. A fallacy is exposed in the use of bone grafts for arthrodesis of the knee; the graft is less osteogenic than the substance of the bones which form the joint, and it provides inefficient internal fixation.
5. A theory is suggested that compression, even in the presence of slight movement, acts by producing a fixed "hinge" without shearing movement; at this point a bridgehead of flexible osteoid tissue is established in which ossification inevitably takes place despite slight bending movement.
6. A second theory is suggested that high compression forces stimulate early union by liberating bone salts at points of maximum pressure through the action of osteoclasts, and that the local excess of bone salts is redeposited under cellular activity within a range of a few millimetres where there is no pressure.