The development of tibiofemoral angle in children has shown ethnic
variations. However this data is unavailable for our population. We measured the tibiofemoral angle (TFA) and intercondylar and
intermalleolar distances in 360 children aged between two and 18
years, dividing them into six interrupted age group intervals: two
to three years; five to six years; eight to nine years; 11 to 12
years; 14 to 15Â years; and 17 to 18 years. Each age group comprised
30 boys and 30 girls. Other variables recorded included standing
height, sitting height, weight, thigh length, leg length and length
of the lower limb.Objectives
Methods
Introduction. It is recommended that the ankle be held in dorsiflexion at the time of placement of syndesmosis screw. We assessed the validity of this recommendation. Materials and methods. A two-part roentgenographic and computerised analysis of distal tibiofibular syndesmosis. The first part involved recruitment of 30 healthy adult volunteers. The second part involved 15 ankle fractures with syndesmotic injury requiring syndesmosis screw placement. In the first part individuals maximally dorsiflexed and plantarflexed their ankles in a specialised jig for standardisation. Mortice views were taken and
Introduction This study aims to improve knee arthroplasty prosthetic alignment by determining if an algorithm based on establishing the most prominent points on the medial and lateral malleolion 3D CT scans can be used to establish the true center of the ankle joint. Methods Axial, coronal and sagittal multi-planar reconstructions were generated on 20 ankles. Two observers independently identified the most prominent medial and lateral malleolar points, in the coronal plane, and the highest talar dome point, in the sagittal plane. Ratios were calculated comparing total
Osteoarticular infections in paediatric population are primarily hematogenous in origin, although cases secondary to penetrating trauma, surgery or contiguous site are also reported. Despite being rare, numerous studies report infection relapse rates around 5 %. Osteomyelitis complications in children include septic arthritis, osteonecrosis of the bone segment, impaired growth. 7 years old male patient presented with history of traffic injury in January 2004. He sustained closed diaphyseal fracture of the right femur initially treated by elastic osteosynthesis. Four years after traffic injury he was diagnosed at our Institution of chronic femoral Osteomyelitis with positive cultures for methicillin sensible Staphylococcus aureus, requiring multiple surgical debridements and systemic antibiotic therapy. Five years follow- up the patient developed valgus deformity of his right knee (mechanical axis 11° genu valgum) with limb length discrepancy of 15 mm,