Aims. The aim of this study is to evaluate the surgical treatment with the best healing rate for patients with proximal femoral unicameral
In 79 consecutive patients with unicameral
We prospectively evaluated the percutaneous injection of autogenous bone marrow for the treatment of active simple
Aim. The purpose of this study was to quantify the number of children treated with ESIN (elastic stable intra-medullary nails) at our institution and to determine what proportion of these nails have been removed and the time and difficulty taken to do so. Methods. Patients treated with ESIN between 2000 and 2005 were identified by database search. Their notes were reviewed to record patient and initial nailing details, and timing, difficulty and length of metalwork removal procedures. Complications leading to premature removal or following nail extraction were noted. Results. Eighty-seven patients were identified who fitted our study criteria (68% male, 32% female). Mean age was 10.9 years (4.7–15.9 years). Twelve of the procedures were for open fractures. Seventy-nine patients underwent nail removal at our institution. Four were followed up elsewhere and a decision to leave the nails in was made in another four patients (usually underlying bone pathology). Four patients had surgery earlier than planned to deal with implant problems: 3 to address prominent nails and 1 for re-fracture. The nails were removed at a mean of 8 months after insertion. Mean time taken to remove the metalwork was 25 minutes (10 to 75 minutes). Eight of the 79 removal procedures were graded as difficult, with one being extremely difficult: this was not predictable from pre-operative radiographs. There were 2 complications following metalwork removal. One was a re-fracture through a unicortical
Background. Unicameral
Osteofibrous dysplasia is an unusual developmental condition of childhood, which almost exclusively affects the tibia. It is thought to follow a slowly progressive course and to stabilise after skeletal maturity. The possible link with adamantinoma is controversial and some authors believe that they are part of one histological process. We retrospectively reviewed 16 patients who were diagnosed as having osteofibrous dysplasia initially or on the final histological examination. Their management was diverse, depending on the severity of symptoms and the extent of the lesion. Definitive (extraperiosteal) surgery was localised ‘shark-bite’ excision for small lesions in five patients. Extensive lesions were treated by segmental excision and fibular autograft in six patients, external fixation and bone transport in four and proximal tibial replacement in one. One patient who had a fibular autograft required further excision and bone transport for recurrence. Six initially underwent curettage and all had recurrence. There were no recurrences after localised extraperiosteal excision or bone transport. There were three confirmed cases of adamantinoma. The relevant literature is reviewed. We recommend extraperiosteal excision in all cases of osteofibrous dysplasia, with segmental excision and reconstruction in more extensive lesions.