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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 40 - 40
1 Dec 2019
Traore SY Yacaria C Amadou I Coulibaly Y
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Objectives. Our objectives were to describe the therapeutic aspects and assess the prognosis of chronic osteomyelitis in children. Materials and methods. We made a retrospective study from January 2007 to December 2016. The study concerned children from 0 to15 years, treated for chronic osteomyelitis and monitored in the pediatric surgery department of the teaching hospital Gabriel Toure, Bamako (Mali). The other types of bone infections, osteitis and bone tumors were not included in the study. In 10 years we received and treated 215 children with chronic osteomyelitis. This represented 3.56% of all the hospitalizations. The mean age was 8.8 (± 6.67) years with extremes of 28 days and 15 years. The patients were first seen by the traditional healer in 165 (76.7%) cases. The sex ratio was 1.26. The major clinical feature was local swelling associated with pain in 110 cases (51.2%). In 135 cases (62.8%) the staphylococcus aureus was found in direct examination or culture. After a year we performed a functional and morphological assessment according to the method of DIMEGLIO. Results. Surgical treatment was performed in all patients. The average delay of stay in hospital was 4.95 ± 4.57 weeks, with extremes of 2 and 12 weeks. The means follow-up was 13 months with extremes of 3 and 20 months. Good results were found in 115 patients, fair in 60 (40 in keloid knee valgus to 11 ° in 10, muscular atrophy 10), bad in 40 (shortening member in 25 non-union in 10 valgus to 18 ° in 5) According Dimeglio score. There was no significant association between the time of consultation, prior treatment received, the surgical technique and the occurrence of complications (p> 0.05). Conclusion. The management of the chronic osteomyelitis is well codified. The functional prognosis is dependent on an early care and sequels can be dramatic in children of school age. Keywords. Chronic osteomyelitis, Treatment, Prognosis, Children


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 10 - 10
1 Aug 2017
Levine W
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Subscapularis tenotomy (SST) has been the preferred approach for shoulder arthroplasty for decades but recent controversy has propelled lesser tuberosity osteotomy (LTO) as a potential alternative. Early work by Gerber suggested improved healing and better outcomes with LTO although subscapularis muscular atrophy occurred in this group as well with unknown long-term implications. However, we previously performed a biomechanical study showing that some of the poor results following tenotomy may have been due to historic non-anatomic repair techniques. Surgical technique is critical to allow anatomic healing – this is true of both SST or LTO techniques. A recent meta-analysis of biomechanical cadaveric studies showed that LTO was stronger to SST at “time-zero” with respect to load to failure but there were no significant differences in cyclic displacement. A recent study evaluated neurodiagnostic, functional, and radiographic outcomes in 30 patients with shoulder arthroplasty who had SST. The authors found that the EMG findings were normal in 15 patients but abnormal in the other 15 and that these abnormalities occurred in 5 muscle groups (not just the subscapularis). In another study, patient outcomes were inferior in those patients who had documented subscapularis dysfunction following SST compared to patients who had LTO (none of whom had subscap dysfunction). The literature is not clear, however, on ultimate outcomes based on subscapularis dysfunction post-arthroplasty with some studies showing no difference and others showing significant differences