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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 5 | Pages 754 - 759
1 Nov 1984
Downes E Watson J

The development of the iron-cored electromagnet as a stimulator of bony union is described. In a clinical trial extending over eight years, 80 patients were treated for various forms of failed union. Their results are presented, as well as tentative conclusions regarding the indications and efficiency of the method. The latest, fully-portable apparatus is described.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 4 | Pages 465 - 470
1 Nov 1980
de Haas W Watson J Morrison D

A non-invasive method of electrical stimulation of healing in ununited fractures of the tibia by pulsed magnetic fileds has been evaluated. In a series of 17 patients all but two of the fractures united within 4 to 10 months, with an average time of just under six months. The method is sufficiently promising to merit further clinical investigation.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 4 | Pages 544 - 546
1 Nov 1978
Watson M

Twenty-three patients with a severe refractory painful arc syndrome have been treated by excision of the outer end of the clavicle and division of the coracoacromial ligament through a deltoid-splitting approach. After a follow-up of more than six months all patients have been relieved of night pain. Six still have slight pain on movement, but the rest are symptom-free.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 2 | Pages 166 - 172
1 May 1977
Kessel L Watson M

Ninety-seven patients suffering from painful arc syndrome of the shoulder were studied. Local anaesthetic and radiographic contrast investigations were carried out. One-third of the patients had lesions in the posterior part of the rotator cuff which resolved after injections of local anaesthetic and steroid. One-third had anterior lesions in the subscapularis tendon: almost all resolved under the same regime but two required division of the coraco-acromial ligament. The remaining third had lesions of the supraspinatus tendon, usually associated with degeneration of the acromio-clavicular joint: most of these failed to gain relief from the local anaesthetic and steroid. Twenty-two operations were performed either by a transcromial or by a deltoid splitting approach. Excision of the outer end of the clavicle and division of the coraco-acromial ligament abolished the pain in most cases.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 3 | Pages 300 - 304
1 Aug 1976
Watson Wood H Hill R

Thirty-one patients with rheumatoid arthritis were reviewed after Shiers arthroplasty of the knee joint for which the main indication was intractable pain. Seven patients had the operation done to both knees. This review was done to assess the long-term results two to seven years later. All patients were clinically and radiologically assessed, and our results showed that pain and instability recurred within eighteen months. Thus it is likely that a prosthesis which allows rotation, and in which the bearing surfaces are metal on plastic, will replace the Shiers prosthesis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 3 | Pages 527 - 533
1 Aug 1974
Watson MS

1. Thirty-eight patients with sixty-two forefoot arthroplasties have been followed up from two to thirteen years after the operation. Eleven were free of pain, thirty-eight had some pain but were improved, and the rest were worse.

2. Patients over the age of fifty or with rheumatoid arthritis did best.

3. Kirschner wire fixation of the great toe often caused late painful stiffness of the metatarsophalangeal joint.

4. Previous interphalangeal fusion of a lesser toe was often the cause of metatarso-phalangeal dislocation of that toe and callous formation.

5. Arthrodesis of the metatarso-phalangeal joint of the great toe gave a high proportion of painless feet, apparently because it prevented both painful stiffness at that joint and dislocation of the same joint of the lesser toes.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 52-B, Issue 1 | Pages 77 - 87
1 Feb 1970
Blockey NJ Watson JT

1. Acute osteomyelitis is defined.

2. An analysis of 113 cases is given.

3. An effective programme of treatment was evolved from experience over a period of nine years.

4. Recommendations regarding a programme of treatment are given.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 4 | Pages 708 - 719
1 Nov 1968
Dent CE Friedman M Watson L

1. A child is described who presented with very severe rickets and gross myopathy. The clinical, biochemical and radiological signs were identical with those to be expected of a very chronic and severe vitamin D deficiency. The child's diet, however, had been normal.

2. All the pathological signs, except for residual dwarfism and leg bowing, disappeared on treatment with very large doses of vitamin D2. Ordinary anti-rachitic doses had no effect.

3. We suggest that this child demonstrates a true resistance to the action of vitamin D and that the defect is permanent. The findings in two similar patients that we have seen suggest that the condition is inherited as an autosomal recessive gene, and that it may be the same disease as that described in the continental literature as "hereditäre pseudo-mangelrachitis" and by other names.

4. The disease seems distinct clinically and biochemically from the disease originally described under the name "vitamin resistant rickets," which does not respond so well to massive vitamin D therapy and which is usually inherited as a sex-linked dominant gene.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 4 | Pages 774 - 780
1 Nov 1967
Joseph J Watson R

1. Telemetering electromyography has been used to investigate the pattern of activity of certain muscles of the lower limb and back while the subjects walked up and down stairs.

2. During walking up and down stairs each limb has a supporting and swinging phase in each complete step.

3. Walking up stairs revealed the following facts. Firstly, raising the body on to the stair above is brought about by the contraction of the soleus, quadriceps femoris, hamstrings and gluteus maximus; the gluteus medius at the same time prevents the body falling on to the unsupported side. Secondly, the tibialis anterior dorsiflexes the foot during the swinging phase and helps the limb to clear the stair on which the supporting limb is placed. Thirdly, the hamstrings flex the leg at the knee in the early part of the swinging phase and control the terminal part of extension at the knee at the end of this phase. Fourthly, both erectores spinae contract twice in each step and control the forward bending of the body at the vertebral column.

4. Walking down stairs revealed the following. Firstly, the body is lowered on to the stair below by the controlled lengthening of the soleus and quadriceps femoris; the gluteus medius at the same time prevents the body from falling on to the unsupported side. Secondly, the tibialis anterior inverts the foot at the beginning of the supporting phase as the toe is placed on the stair below and dorsiflexes the foot in the middle of the swinging phase. Thirdly, the hamstrings control the extension of the leg at the knee during the middle of the swinging phase. Fourthly, both erectores spinae contract twice in each step and prevent forward bending of the trunk at the vertebral column.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 1 | Pages 1 - 2
1 Feb 1967
Watson-Jones R


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 4 | Pages 804 - 825
1 Nov 1966
Baker SL Dent CE Friedman M Watson L

1. A clinical, radiological and histological description of a patient with fibrogenesis imperfecta ossium is given. We think that this is the first case in which diagnosis has been made during the life of the patient.

2. The disease is characterised by a defect in the formation of the collagen fibres of the bone matrix. There is also a failure of normal calcification of the matrix, giving rise to the appearance of wide "osteoid" seams. When examined with the polarising microscope and when stained with Gomori's reticulin stain the collagen fibres can be seen to be grossly deficient and abnormal.

3. The patient presented at the age of fifty-four years with bone pain and multiple fractures. The only biochemical abnormality detected in the plasma was an elevated alkaline phosphatase. He was also in negative calcium balance.

4. Treatment with vitamin D2, later changed to dihydrotachysterol, appears to have produced clinical, biochemical and radiological improvement. It appears that a direct action of the vitamin on the abnormal bone collagen must be postulated, in addition to its known actions on the calcifying mechanisms.

5. An unusual feature of the case was the slow development of a total unresponsiveness to large doses of vitamin D2, in spite of a markedly elevated level of vitamin D in the plasma. There was later a response to a much smaller dose of dihydrotachysterol, which is being maintained to date.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 4 | Pages 613 - 613
1 Nov 1966
Watson-Jones R


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 2 | Pages 245 - 259
1 May 1966
McKee GK Watson-Farrar J

1. The various surgical procedures in common use for the treatment of the osteoarthritic hip are briefly reviewed and compared with the operation of replacement of both the acetabulum and head of the femur by a metal prosthesis, that is, a complete artificial hip joint.

2. The development, description and technique of insertion of this artificial hip joint are given in detail.

3. The results of the first fifty cases of this operation show a success rate of over 90 per cent. The few failures are analysed in detail. The revision procedure has been the insertion of another artificial hip joint.

4. The essential details necessary for success are stressed and the indications and aims of the operation given.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 4 | Pages 736 - 736
1 Nov 1964
Watson-Jones R




The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 1 | Pages 3 - 3
1 Feb 1959
Watson-Jones R



The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 38-B, Issue 1 | Pages 3 - 3
1 Feb 1956
Watson-Jones R


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 38-B, Issue 1 | Pages 353 - 377
1 Feb 1956
Watson-Jones R Robinson WC

1. This is a simple clinical study of the end-results of arthrodesis of the hip joint in patients followed up and re-examined five to twenty-five years after operation.

2. The study was stimulated by our astonishment at recent reports which suggested that arthrodesis of the hip caused serious operative mortality, a high rate of wound infection, and failure of sound fusion in one of every two cases; and that even when sound fusion was gained there was always pain in the back and usually stiffness of the knee. To say that we were astonished puts it mildly.

3. This review includes 120 patients aged from ten to seventy years, treated for osteoarthritis of the hip joint by intra-articular arthrodesis with the internal fixation of a nail, usually with an iliac graft, and with immobilisation in plaster for not less than four months.

4. Of these 120 patients there was sound fusion of the joint, proved radiographically, in 94 per cent; a mortality of nil; and recovery of free movement of the knee joint to the right angle or far beyond in 91·5 per cent. Almost half of the patients regained normal movement, the heel touching the buttock. Only in eight patients was there less than right-angled flexion.

5. There was no pain in the back—none whatever—in 64 per cent of the patients. In 36 per cent there was some pain or discomfort. One alone said that the low back pain was worse than before the operation. Many others said that pain in the back had been relieved by the operation.

6. It is emphasised that these results were gained only from sound fixation of the joint in the mid-position with neutral rotation, no more abduction than is needed to correct true shortening, and no more flexion of the joint than that with which the patient lies on the table. The limb was immobilised in plaster for at least four months after operation. The stiff knee was mobilised by the patient's own exercise without passive stretching, force or manipulation.

7. Two other groups of patients are considered. There are fourteen treated by fixation of the joint with nail alone, an operation that was never intended to arthrodese the joint and which has long since been abandoned. The other small group is that of patients with old unreduced traumatic dislocation of the hip, a procedure in which the risks of operation are so great and the number of successful results so small as to dissuade us from attempting operative reduction.

8. After successful arthrodesis of the hip joint patients can return to every household activity and every recreation including ski-ing, mountaineering, rock climbing, or whatever else they want.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 38-B, Issue 1 | Pages 435 - 435
1 Feb 1956
Watson-Jones R




The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 32-B, Issue 4 | Pages 458 - 459
1 Nov 1950
Watson-Jones R


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 32-B, Issue 4 | Pages 694 - 729
1 Nov 1950
Watson-Jones R Adams JC Bonnin JG Burrows HJ King T Nicoll EA Palmer I vom Saal F Smith H Trevor D Vaughan-Jackson OJ Le Vay AD

One hundred and sixty-four cases of intramedullary nailing of the long bones have been studied with special reference to the difficulties and complications encountered.

There was one death not attributable to the method.

Two cases of pulmonal fat embolism and one case of thrombosis occurred, all in fractures of the femur.

The lessons we have learned from our mistakes can be summarised as follows:

1 . The method requires technical experience and knowledge and is not suited to inexperienced surgeons or surgeons with little fracture material at their disposal.

2. Intramedullary nailing should only be used in fractures to which the method is suited. In general, comminuted fractures or fractures near a joint are unsuitable.

3. Open reduction is preferable to closed methods.

4. The nail should never be driven in with violence. It should be removed and replaced with a new one if difficulty is encountered when inserting it.

5. In fractures of the femur the nail should be driven in from the tip of the trochanter after careful determination of the direction.

6. The nail should be introduced only to the level of the fracture before exploring and reducing the fracture.

7. Distraction of the fragments must be avoided.

8. If the nail bends it should be replaced by a new one, at least in femoral fractures.

9. If union is delayed, the fracture should be explored and chip grafts of cancellous bone placed around it.

10. Improvised nails or nails which are not made of absolutely reliable material should never be used.

11 . Make sure that the nail is equipped with an extraction hole for removal.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 4 | Pages 560 - 571
1 Nov 1949
Watson-Jones R

1. Léri's pleonosteosis is characterised by broadening and deformity of the thumbs and great toes, flexion contracture of the interphalangeal joints, limited movement of other joints, and often a Mongoloid facies. Four such cases are described.

2. A review of the twenty reports in the literature, and the cases now described, shows that the deformities are due to capsular contracture rather than deformity of bone.

3. In one patient there was striking evidence of fibro-cartilaginous thickening of the anterior carpal ligaments. It is suggested that the primary pathological change in pleonosteosis may be in the joint capsules rather than in the epiphyses.

4. The patient with thickening of the anterior carpal ligaments had bilateral median palsy from carpal tunnel compression.

5. The causes of carpal tunnel compression of the median nerve are reviewed. Acute compression may be due not only to dislocation of the semilunar bone but to haemorrhage in the palm. Late compression by bone may occur twenty to fifty years after injury. Late compression without bone abnormality has been attributed to occupational stress, but it is suggested that pathological thickening of the anterior carpal ligament may be the cause.

6. The patient with pleonosteosis and bilateral median palsy had also bilateral Morton's metatarsalgia with large digital neuromata.

7. Plantar digital neuritis has already been shown to be an ischaemic nerve lesion preceded by degenerative changes in the digital artery. The significance of the fibrous tunnel through which the artery passes to reach the digital cleft is considered.



The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 1 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Feb 1949
Watson-Jones R


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 4 | Pages 709 - 713
1 Nov 1948
Watson-Jones R


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 1 | Pages 2 - 2
1 Feb 1948
Watson-Jones R


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 1 | Pages 49 - 52
1 Feb 1948
Watson-Jones R

Summary—Fifty-two cases of exposure of the glenoid labrum are recorded. Fifty-one operations with anterior exposure, followed by capsular reefing and shortening of the subscapularis, were successful. One operation with superior exposure, and without capsular reefing or shortening of the subscapularis, was unsuccessful.