Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 6 of 6
Results per page:
Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXI | Pages 3 - 3
1 May 2012
R. D A. C M. F R. B
Full Access

Introduction and aims

We present a series of patients who have had secondary reconstruction of war injuries to the upper and lower limbs, sustained during the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts.

Material and Methods

All patients were seen at the combined Peripheral Nerve Injuries Clinic at the Defence Medical Centre for Rehabilitation, Headley Court. All surgery was performed at Odstock Hospital. Procedures include scar excision and neurolysis (all patients), release of scar contractures, tenolysis, tendon transfers, revision nerve grafts, excision of neuroma, and soft tissue reconstruction using pedicled or free flaps.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 3 - 3
1 Jun 2023
Williams L Stamps G Peak H Singh S Narayan B Graham S Peterson N
Full Access

Introduction. External fixation (EF) devices are commonly used in the management of complex skeletal trauma, as well as in elective limb reconstruction surgery for the management of congenital and acquired pathology. The subsequent removal of an EF is commonly performed under a general anaesthetic in an operating theatre. This practice is resource intensive and limits the amount of operating theatre time available for other surgical cases. We aimed to assess the use of regional anaesthesia as an alternative method of analgesia to facilitate EF removal in an outpatient setting. Materials & Methods. This prospective case series evaluated the first 20 consecutive cases of EF removal in the outpatient clinic between 10/06/22 to 16/09/22. Regional anaesthesia using ultrasound-guided blockade of peripheral nerves was administered using 1% lidocaine due to its rapid onset and short half-life. Patients were assessed for additional analgesia requirement, asked to evaluate their experience and perceived pain using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Results. Twenty patients were included in the study. The mean age was 46.6 years (range 21–85 years). Two thirds were male patients (N=13). Post procedure all patients indicated positive satisfaction ratings, each participant responding as either ‘satisfied’ (N=4), ‘very satisfied’ (N=15) or ‘highly satisfied’ (N=1). In addition, 85% of participants reported they would opt for this method of EF removal in future should it be necessary. VAS for pain immediately following completion of the procedure was low, with an average score of 0.45 (range 0–4), where a score of 0= ‘No pain’, and 10 = ‘worst pain possible’. Conclusions. We present the first description of outpatient EF removal using sole regional anaesthesia, with a prospective case series of 20 EF removed in fully awake patients. This novel technique is cost-effective, reproducible, and safe. This not only reduces the burden of these surgical cases on an operating list but also improves patient experience when compared to other forms of conscious sedation. By eliminating the use of Entonox and methoxyflurane for sedation and analgesia, this project demonstrates a method of improving environmental sustainability of surgery, anaesthesia and operating theatres


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_21 | Pages 71 - 71
1 Dec 2016
Smallman T Shekitka K Mann K Race A
Full Access

This study documents the gross and histologic structure of the infrapatellar plica, and fat pad, and adds to an earlier report to the COA. The important new findings are that the femoral attachment of the plica is an enthesis, and that the plica itself is. This study seeks to demonstrate that the structure of the fat pad (FP) and infrapatellar plica (IPP) is that of an enthesis organ. Twelve fresh frozen cadaver knees, each with an IPP, were dissected and the gross anatomic features recorded. The IPP and FP were harvested for study. Representative histologic sections were prepared on tissue fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin, embedded in paraffin, cut at 4 microns on a rotatory microtome. Staining techniques included hematoxylin and eosin, Masson's trichrome, elastic stain and S100. Appropriate decalcification of sections of the femoral insertion of the IPP was performed. All sections were examined by light microscopy at low, medium and high power. IPP types included 8 separate, 1 split, 2 fenestrated, and one vertical septum. The origin of the IPP is a fibrous arc arising from the apex of the notch separate from the margin of the articular cartilage. This attachment site is the instant centreof rotation of the IPP and FP; they are thus not isometric. The central zone of the IPP consists of a mix of connective tissue types. Representative sections taken of the femoral attachment of the IPP display a transition zone between dense fibrillar collagen of the IPP, then fibrocartilage and cortical bone similar to a ligament attachment site or enthesis. The central plica histology is composed predominantly of dense regular connective tissue with variable clear space between the collagen bundles, and is thus ligamentous. There is abundant elastase staining throughout, as well as crimping of the collagen suggesting capacity for stretch. S100 staining demonstrates nerves around and in the substance of the IPP. The central body shows lobulated collections of mature adipose tissue admixed with loose connective tissue, containing abundant small peripheral nerves and vessels (all showing crimping and redundancy), merging with the dense fibrous tissue of the IPP. The FP is highly innervated, deformable, and fibro-fatty. Its histology shows lobules of fat, separated by connective tissue septa, which merge with the synovial areolar membrane surrounding the FP. The linked structures, IPP, central body, and FP occupy the anterior compartment, and function as an enthesis organ: the IPP tethers the FP via the central body and together they rotate around the femoral origin of the IPP. They are not isometric, and must stretch and relax with knee motion. The histology correlates with this requirement. The origin of the IPP is an enthesis, a new observation. Elastase staining, redundancy of vessels and nerves, crimping and redundancy of the dense connective tissue all reflect the requirement to deform. The fat pad merges with the central body, both highly innervated space fillers, tethered by the IPP, which is a non-isometric ligament, also containing nerves. The important clinical significance of these structures is that release of the IPP at the origin reuces or eliminates anterior knee pain in most


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1090 - 1092
1 Aug 2006
Odinsson A Finsen V

Over a two-year period, 265 Norwegian orthopaedic surgeons working at 71 institutions performed 63 484 operations under a tourniquet. Their replies to a questionnaire revealed that they mostly followed modern guidelines in their use of the tourniquet. Most felt that the tourniquet could be left on for two hours, and that it could be re-applied after 15 minutes. A total of 26 complications (one in 2442 operations) that might have been due to the tourniquet were reported, of which 15 were neurological. Three were in the upper limb (one in 6155 operations) and 12 in the lower limb (one in 3752 operations). Two were permanent (one in 31742 operations), but the remainder resolved within six months. One permanent and one transient complication occurred after tourniquet times of three hours. The incidence of tourniquet complications is still at least as high as that estimated in the 1970s.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 2 | Pages 220 - 224
1 Feb 2008
Pereira JH Palande DD Narayanakumar TS Subramanian AS Gschmeissner S Wilkinson M

A total of 38 patients with leprosy and localised nerve damage (11 median at the wrist and 37 posterior tibial at the ankle) were treated by 48 freeze-thawed skeletal muscle autografts ranging between 2.5 cm and 14 cm in length. Sensory recovery was noted in 34 patients (89%) and was maintained during a mean period of follow-up of 12.6 years (4 to 14). After grafting the median nerve all patients remained free of ulcers and blisters, ten demonstrated perception of texture and eight recognised weighted pins. In the posterior tibial nerve group, 24 of 30 repairs (80%) resulted in improved healing of the ulcers and 26 (87%) demonstrated discrimination of texture. Quality of life and hand and foot questionnaires showed improvement; the activities of daily living scores improved in six of seven after operations on the hand, and in 14 of 22 after procedures on the foot. Another benefit was subjective improvement in the opposite limb, probably because of the protective effect of better function in the operated side. This study demonstrates that nerve/muscle interposition grafting in leprosy results in consistent sensory recovery and high levels of patient satisfaction. Ten of 11 patients with hand operations and 22 of 25 with procedures to the foot showed sensory recovery in at least one modality.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 3 | Pages 382 - 387
1 Mar 2007
Knight DMA Birch R Pringle J

We reviewed 234 benign solitary schwannomas treated between 1984 and 2004. The mean age of the patients was 45.2 years (11 to 82). There were 170 tumours (73%) in the upper limb, of which 94 (40%) arose from the brachial plexus or other nerves within the posterior triangle of the neck. Six (2.6%) were located within muscle or bone. Four patients (1.7%) presented with tetraparesis due to an intraspinal extension.

There were 198 primary referrals (19 of whom had a needle biopsy in the referring unit) and in these patients the tumour was excised. After having surgery or an open biopsy at another hospital, a further 36 patients were seen because of increased neurological deficit, pain or incomplete excision. In these, a nerve repair was performed in 18 and treatment for pain or paralysis was offered to another 14.

A tender mass was found in 194 (98%) of the primary referrals. A Tinel-like sign was recorded in 155 (81%). Persistent spontaneous pain occurred in 60 (31%) of the 194 with tender mass, impairment of cutaneous sensibility in 39 (20%), and muscle weakness in 24 (12%).

After apparently adequate excision, two tumours recurred. No case of malignant transformation was seen.