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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 23 - 23
1 May 2014
Evans J Guyver P Smith C
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We present (with intra-operative imaging) 4 patients who sustained Pectoralis major ruptures on the same piece of equipment of the “Tarzan” assault course at the Commando Training Centre, Royal Marines (CTCRM). Recruits jump at running pace, carrying 21 pounds of equipment and a weapon (8 pounds) across a 6ft gap onto a vertical cargo-net. The recruits punch horizontally through the net, before adducting their arm to catch themselves, and all weight, on their axilla.

All patients presented with immediate pain and reduced function. 2 had ruptures demonstrated on MRI, 1 on USS and one via clinical examination. All 4 patients were found, at operation, to have sustained type IIIE injuries.

All patients underwent Pectoralis major repair using a uni-cortical button fixation and had an uneventful immediate post operative course. Patient 1 left Royal Marines training after the injury (out of choice, not because of failure to rehabilitate). All other patients are under active rehabilitation hoping to return to training.

Review of 10 years of records at CTCRM reveal no documented Pectoralis major rupture prior to our first case in October 2013. There has been no change to the obstacle or technique used and all patients deny the use of steroids.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 7 - 7
1 May 2014
Evans J Evans C Armstrong A
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NICE guidelines state that patients undergoing hip or knee arthroplasty should start as an in-patient and then continue pharmacological VTE prophylaxis for 28–35 days.

Retrospective review of all elective hip and knee arthroplasties during one calendar month gave a baseline measurement of how many patients had VTE prophylaxis prescribed on their discharge summary.

A new, electronically completed, bespoke Trauma and Orthopaedic discharge summary was created with a discreet area clearly marked for VTE prophylaxis, to serve as a reminder to prescribe it.

In March 2012, 93 patients underwent hip/knee arthroplasty. 76% (71/93) were prescribed VTE prophylaxis to take home, there was no clinical reason explaining the failure to prescribe prophylaxis in the remaining 24%.

In July 2013, after implementation of the change, 117 patients underwent hip/knee arthroplasty. 99% (116/117) were prescribed VTE prophylaxis to take home.

Repeat audit in October 2013 showed that 103 patients underwent hip/knee arthroplasty and 100% were prescribed VTE prophylaxis.

A simple but clear change to paperwork, brought about a rapid and seemingly lasting change in the prescription of out-patient VTE prophylaxis.

The improvement was seen before and after a change of the Junior Doctor workforce suggesting the change in documentation was the main influencing factor.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 12 - 12
1 May 2014
Evans J Woodacre T Hockings M Toms A
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We aimed to analyse complication rates following medial opening-wedge high tibial osteotomy (OWHTO) for knee OA.

A regional retrospective cohort study of all patients who underwent HTO for isolated medial compartment knee OA from 2003–2013.

115 OWHTO were performed. Mean age = 47 (95%CI 46–48). Mean BMI = 29.1 (95%CI 28.1–30.1).

Implants used: 72% (n=83) Tomofix, 21% (n=24) Puddu plate, 7% (n=8) Orthofix Grafts used: 30% (n=35) autologous, 35% (n=40) artificial and 35% (n=40) no graft. 25% (n=29) of patients suffered 36 complications. Complications included minor wound infection 9.6%, major wound infection 3.5%, metalwork irritation necessitating plate removal 7%, non-union requiring revision 4.3%, vascular injury 1.7%, compartment syndrome 0.9%, and other minor complications 4%.

Apparent higher rates of non-union occurred with the Puddu plate (8.3%) relative to Tomofix (3.6%) but was not statistically significant. No other significant differences existed in complication rates relative to implant type, bone graft used, patient age or BMI.

Serious complications following HTO appear rare. The Tomofix has an apparent lower rate of non-union compared to older implants but greater numbers are required to determine significance. There is no significant difference in union rate relative to whether autologous graft, artificial graft or no graft is used.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 23 - 23
1 Mar 2014
Evans J Carlile G Standley D
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All licensed doctors are required to revalidate from June 2012. The GMC states that patient feedback should form part of doctors provided evidence. A standardised GMC PSS has been shown to offer a reliable basis for the assessment of professionalism among UK doctors and has been suggested as a tool for revalidation. We aim to show its use in the secondary care setting to be simple and effective, offering further evidence for doctors undergoing revalidation.

Having sought permission from the Trust the GMC PSS was used in the manner directed for 3 doctors in a Trauma and Orthopaedic fracture clinic. The data was analysed using an automated system and the results made available to individual clinicians in a simple to present format.

3 clinicians used the survey across 13 clinic sessions. The mean number of clinics it took to generate sufficient responses was 3.25 (range 2–5). We found the survey easy to use, HCAs handed forms to patients before consultation. Survey results were collected as patients left clinic and analysed by the Patient Services Department.

The GMC PSS, although designed principally for use in Primary care appears to be a useful tool in secondary care.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Feb 2013
Kassam A Evans J Guyver P Hubble M
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Femoral neck stress fractures (FNSF) are uncommon, representing 3.5% to 8% of all stress fractures in military recruits. The majority of displaced FNSF undergo operative fixation and are at risk of avascular necrosis (AVN) and non union with a 40–100% medical discharge rate. We aimed to review the incidence and outcome of displaced FNSF in Royal Marine Recruits.

Retrospective review identified 6 Royal Marine recruits, aged 17 to 25, who had suffered a displaced FNSF over a 6 and a half year period. Incidence was 0.93 per 1000 recruits.

Patients were treated urgently by operative fixation with a 2 hole dynamic hip screw device, in 3 cases supplemented with an anti-rotation screw. There were no cases of AVN, no surgical complications and no further procedures were required. All united with a mean time to union of 11 months. 50% had a union time greater than 1 year. 2 completed training, 2 are still in rehabilitation and 2 (33%) were discharged before completion of training.

These fractures are slow to unite compared to other fractures at this site or stress fractures elsewhere. With urgent surgical intervention and stable fixation all however went onto successful union with time and all returned to rehabilitation or training with minimal complications. Awareness of the length of time to union has been invaluable in guiding treatment and rehabilitation. It can help avoid the risks of unnecessary secondary interventions for delay to union.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 81 - 81
1 Jan 2013
Evans J Giddins G Miles T
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Aim

The purpose of this study was to develop and test the utility of a hybrid barbed-suture in the core repair of digital flexor tendon injuries. Despite offering advantages over traditional suture methods, concerns over the cost, strength to failure and biocompatibility of barbed sutures have hindered their development. Moreover the recent designs have been very complex. We have attempted to develop and test a simple barbed suture, to assess it's viability in flexor tendon repair and in particular to establish a baseline for the efficacy and modes of failure barbed sutures, in order to help provide a basis for future research.

Method

The barbed suture device was constructed by inserting 3 steel barbs into the weaved construct of a braided polyester suture. The barbed sutures were inserted into 28 porcine lateral extensor tendons yielding a single sided core repair. Tensile testing of the repair was undertaken using a tabletop load frame with the distal end of the tendon fixed in a cryo clamp.

Linear load testing to failure was undertaken. Maximum load, repair excursion and repair stiffness were recorded.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXII | Pages 12 - 12
1 Jul 2012
Evans J Howes R Droog S Wood IM Wood A
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The Royal Marines regularly deploy to Norway to conduct Cold Weather, Arctic and Mountain Warfare training. A total of 1200 personnel deployed to Norway in 2010 over a 14-week period. Patients, whose injuries prevented them from continuing training, were returned to the UK via AEROMED. The aim of this investigation was to describe the epidemiology of musculoskeletal injuries during cold weather training.

All data on personnel returned to the UK was prospectively collected and basic epidemiology recorded.

53 patients (incidence 44/1,000 personnel) were returned to the UK via AEROMED. 20/53 (38%) of cases were musculoskeletal injuries (incidence 17/1000 personnel). 15/20 musculoskeletal injuries were sustained while conducting ski training (incidence 13/1,000): 4/20 were non-alcohol related injuries, 1/20 was related to alcohol consumption off duty. Injuries sustained whilst skiing: 5/15 sustained anterior shoulders dislocation, 5/15 Grade 1-3 MCL/LCL tears, 2/15 sustained ACJ injuries, 1/15 crush fracture T11/T12, 1/15 tibial plateau fracture and 1/15 significant ankle sprain. Non-Training injuries: 1 anterior shoulder dislocation, 1 distal radial fracture, 1 olecranon fracture, 1 Scaphoid Fracture and one 5th metatarsal fracture. 60% of injuries were upper limb injuries. The most common injury was anterior shoulder dislocation 6/20 (Incidence 5/1000)

Our results suggest that cold weather warfare training has a high injury rate requiring evacuation: 4% of all people deployed will require AEROMED evacuation, and 2% have musculoskeletal injuries. Ski training causes the majority of injuries, possibly due to the rapid transition from non-skier to skiing with a bergen and weapon. Military Orthopaedic and rehabilitation units supporting the Royal Marines, should expect sudden increases in referrals when large scale cold weather warfare training is being conducted. Further research is required to see if musculoskeletal injury rates can be decreased in cold weather warfare training.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXIII | Pages 195 - 195
1 May 2012
Enninghorst N Toth L King K Evans J Balogh Z
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High-energy pelvic ring fractures are associated with polytrauma where staged surgery is recommended. While temporary skeletal stabilisation is part of the acute management, definitive care is done in a later phase. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of acute pelvic ORIF by comparing its short term outcome with those who were stabilised late.

A 45-month retrospective review of the prospective pelvic fracture database of a level one trauma centre was performed. All high-energy trauma patients who were potential candidates for minimally invasive internal fixation of the pelvic ring were included. Patients were categorised as acute ORIF (<24 hrs) or late ORIF (>24 hrs). Demographics, ISS, pelvic AIS, 24 hour pack cell transfusions, physiological parameters, time to operating theatre, angiography requirement, LOS and mortality were recorded. Data was presented as mean+/−SD or percentages. Statistical significance was determined at ∗p<0.05 based on univariate analysis.

Forty-three patients met inclusion criteria, seventeen patients had acute definitive ORIF (5.5 hrs to OT) and twenty-six late definitive ORIF (5 days to OT). Acute and late ORIF patients had statistically not different demographics (age: 48+/−22 years vs 40+/− 14, gender: 82% vs 79% males), injury severity (ISS: 30+/−18 vs 24.5+/−13, pelvic AIS: 3.7+/− 1 vs 3.4+/− 1.1) and 24 hour transfusion (4.7+/−5 U vs 6.6+/−4 U). Initial shock parameters were significantly worse in the acute ORIF group (∗SBP 69.7+/−17 vs 108+/−21 mmHg, ∗BD -7.35+/−4 vs -4.9+/−1.5 mEq/L, ∗Lactate 6.67+/−7 vs 2.51+/−1.3 mmol/L). Angiography was used 18% (3/17) vs 21% (6/29) of the cases. All early ORIF patients survived and one (3%) of the late ORIF patients died. The trend in shorter hospital LOS was not significant in the early ORIF group (25+/− 24 vs 37+/− 32 days) while the ICU LOS was comparable (12/17 patients with 2.9+/−2.5 days vs 15/26 patients with 3.7+/−3.6 days).

Minimally invasive acute ORIF of unstable pelvic ring fractures could be performed even in severely shocked polytrauma patients. The procedure did not lead to increased rates of transfusion, mortality, ICU LOS or overall LOS. Furthermore, all these parameters showed a trend towards benefit compared to a staged approach.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 407 - 407
1 Jul 2010
Whatling GM Larcher M Young P Evans J Jones D Banks SA Fregly BJ Khurana A Kumar A Williams RW Wilson C Holt CA
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Introduction: Inaccuracies in kinematic data recording due to skin movement artefact are inherent with motion analysis. Image registration techniques have been used extensively to measure joint kinematics more accurately. The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of using MRI for creating 3D models and to quantify errors in data collection methods by comparing kinematics computed from motion analysis and image registration.

Methodology : 5 healthy and 5 TKR knees were examined for a step up/down task using dynamic fluoroscopy and motion capture. MRI scans of the knee, femur and tibia were performed on the healthy subjects and were subsequently segmented using ScanIP(Simpleware) to produce 3D bone models. Registration of the models produced from fine and coarse scan data was used to produce bony axes for the femoral and tibial models. Tibial and femoral component CAD models were obtained for the TKR patients. The 3D knee solid models and the TKR CAD models were then registered to a series of frames from the 2D fluoroscopic image data (Figure 1) obtained for the 10 subjects, using KneeTrack(S. Banks, Florida) to produce kinematic waveforms. The same subjects were also recorded whilst performing the same action, using a Qualisys (Sweden) motion capture system with a pointer and marker cluster-based technique developed to quantify the knee kinematics.

Results: The motion analysis method measured significantly larger frontal and transverse knee rotations and significantly larger translations than the image registration method.

Conclusion: The study demonstrated that MRI, rather than CT scan, can be used as a non-invasive tool for developing segmented 3D bone models, thus avoiding highly invasive CT scanning on healthy volunteers. It describes an application of combining fine and coarse scan models to establish anatomical or mechanical axes within the bones for use with kinematic modeling software. It also demonstrates a method to investigate errors associated with measuring knee kinematics.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 145 - 145
1 Mar 2006
Little J Adam C Evans J Pettet G Pearcy M
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Introduction: Low back pain (LBP) is an ailment affecting a large portion of the population and may result from degeneration of the intervertebral discs. Degeneration of the discs may be characterized by a loss of hydration, a more granular texture in the disc components and the presence of anular lesions which are tears in the anulus fibrosus. Research to date has been lacking in defining a relationship between LBP and anular lesions. In this study a materially and geometrically accurate finite element model (FEM) of an L4/5 intervertebral disc was developed in order to study the effects of anular lesions on the disc mechanics.

Methods: An anatomically accurate transverse profile for the disc FEM was derived from transversely sectioned human cadaveric discs. The anulus fibrosus ground substance was represented as an incompressible material using an Ogden hyperelastic strain energy equation. Material parameters were derived from experimentation on sheep discs. In order to separately assess the effects of degeneration of the nucleus and of the entire disc, four models were analysed. A healthy disc was modelled as reference and the three degenerate models comprised a degenerate nucleus (no hydrostatic nucleus pressure) with either a healthy anulus, or with a radial or rim anular lesion. Loading conditions to simulate the extreme range of physiological motions about the 6 axes of rotation were applied to the models and the peak rotation moments compared.

Results: The reduction in peak moment between the Healthy Disc FEM and the Healthy Anulus FEM ranged from 24% under flexion to 86% under right lateral bending. When the lesions were simulated, the rim and radial lesion resulted in variations in peak moment from the Healthy Anulus FEM of 1–10% and 0–4%, respectively.

Conclusions: The analysis suggested that loss of the nucleus pulposus pressure had a much greater effect on the disc mechanics than the presence of anular lesions. This indicated that the development of anular lesions prior to the degeneration of the nucleus would have minimal effect on the disc mechanics. But the response of an entirely degenerate disc would show significantly different mechanics compared to a healthy disc. With the degeneration of the nucleus, the disc stiffness will reduce and the outer innervated anulus may become overloaded and painful.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 4 | Pages 619 - 623
1 Aug 1989
Hornby R Evans J Vardon V

All elderly patients with extracapsular hip fractures seen in hospitals in Newcastle upon Tyne over a 12-month period were studied and followed up for six months. At one of the hospitals, patients were randomised to treatment by AO dynamic hip-screw or by traction. Complications specific to the two treatments were low, and general complications, six-month mortality and prevalence of pain, leg swelling and unhealed sores, showed no difference between the two modes of treatment. Operative treatment gave better anatomical results and a shorter hospital stay, but significantly more of the patients treated by traction showed loss of independence six months after injury.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 2 | Pages 179 - 182
1 Mar 1987
Weatherley C Draycott V O'Brien J Benson D Gopalakrishnan K Evans J O'Brien J

A prospective study to investigate changes in the rib hump or rib deformity after correction of the lateral curvature in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis is reported. The operative treatment for 47 patients was by a Harrington distraction rod and posterior fusion. Before operation and at follow-up, measurements of the Cobb angle, of vertebral rotation, and of the rib deformity were taken. Despite operative correction of the lateral curve, there was a progression of the rib deformity in 64% of the cases after four years. Correction of the lateral curve may thus have no effect on vertebral rotation and cannot be guaranteed to effect a permanent reduction of the rib hump.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 3 | Pages 287 - 289
1 Aug 1977
Kalamchi A Evans J

A simple modification of Gallie's subtalar fusion is described as a salvage procedure in treating patients with pain from old fractures of the calcaneous involving the subtalar joint. Graft bone for the fusion is taken from the outer half of the calcaneus, thus avoiding disturbance of the tibia or iliac crest. Collapse of the donor site helps to narrow the widened heel present in these patients. The posterior approach allows the peroneal tendons to be freed from any adhesions, and at the same time release of the calcaneo-fibular ligament permits some correction of the valgus of the heel. The early results in six patients have been encouraging.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 35-B, Issue 2 | Pages 229 - 243
1 May 1953
Evans J

1. One hundred and forty-nine cases of leontiasis ossea reported in the literature have been reviewed.

2. The clinical, radiographic and pathological features of the condition are discussed.

3. Four additional personal cases are reported in detail.

4. A new classification of leontiasis ossea is suggested, by which the condition is divided into true leontiasis and false (or symptomatic) leontiasis, True leontiasis is a clinical syndrome caused by two distinct types of disease, whose pathology, however, is related. False leontiasis gives a superficially similar picture but on detailed examination is found to be distinct; it may be caused by a variety of different conditions.

5. Classified in this way, ninety-seven of the total of 153 cases considered were classified as true leontiasis (forty-five Type 1 and fifty-two Type 2); forty were classified as false leontiasis; and sixteen did not fall into either category.