Chondroblastomas arise in the epiphyseal area of bones. In the femoral head this can cause considerable difficulty in obtaining access as the epiphysis is entirely intra-articular. We have reviewed management and outcome of 10 patients with
Introduction. Bony tumours of the foot account for approximately 3% of all osseous tumours. However, literature regarding os calcis and talar tumours comprises individual case reports, short case series or literature reviews with no recent large series. Methods. We retrospectively reviewed the medical notes and imaging for all patients with calcaneal or talar tumours recorded in the Scottish Bone Tumour Registry since the 1940's. Demographics, presentation, investigation, histology, management and outcome were reviewed. Results. 34 calcaneal tumours and 23 talar tumours were identified. Calcaneal tumours. 2:1 male prevalence, mean age at presentation 30, average length of symptoms 9 months. 4 cases presented with pathological fracture. 21 benign tumours including 6 unicameral bone cysts, 3
Introduction. The femoral neck in children is a common site for bone lesions. The majority are benign. However these lesions can cause diagnostic problems. Aim. To present a spectrum of chronic lesions of the femoral neck in children and emphasize the importance of tissue diagnosis. Materials and methods. Thirty two children with isolated chronic bone lesions in the femoral neck treated between 1994 and 2013were retrospectively reviewed. The ages ranged between 1–13 years. Clinical features were pain and limp. Routine blood tests, x-rays and CT scans were done in all and MRI scans in 5 cases. All diagnoses were confirmed histologically. Results. Three radiological patterns were seen: lucent or cystic in 22, infiltrative (permeative)in 2, and localized densities with nidus in 8 cases. Histologically the lesions were subacute osteomyelitis in 4, tuberculosis in 9, simple bone cyst in 7, osteoid osteoma in 7,
There is very limited literature available on the use of prosthetic replacement in the treatment of primary and secondary tumours of the radius. In the past these were treated with vascularised and non-vascularised autografts which had associated donor site morbidity, problems of non union, graft or junctional fractures and delayed return to function. Our study is a mid to long term follow-up of implant survivorship and the functional outcome of metal prosthetic replacement used for primary and metastatic lesions of radius. We had 15 patients (8 males:7 females) with a mean age of 53 years. 8 patients underwent proximal radial replacement, 2 with mid-shaft radial replacement and 6 patients had distal radial replacements with wrist arthrodesis. The indications for replacement included metastatic lesions from renal cell carcinoma, primary giant cell tumours, ewings' sarcoma,