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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 38-B, Issue 3 | Pages 692 - 698
1 Aug 1956
Cameron AH McMillan DH

A boy aged eleven with a solitary chondroma of the right tibia, and angiomata of the skeletal muscle, subcutaneous tissues, and periarticular tissues of the same limb, is considered to be a case of Maffucci's syndrome (dyschondroplasia with angiomata), although there was not the severe deformity encountered in the previously reported cases. There was a secondary atrophy and adiposity of skeletal muscle, and this was attributed to anoxic effects produced by the angiomata


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1303 - 1305
1 Sep 2005
Kragh JF Svoboda SJ Wenke JC Ward JA Walters TJ

Our aim was to compare the biomechanical properties of suturing methods to determine a better method for the repair of lacerated skeletal muscle. We tested Kessler stitches and the combination of Mason-Allen and perimeter stitches. Individual stitches were placed in the muscle belly of quadriceps femoris from a pig cadaver and were tensioned mechanically. The maximum loads and strains were measured and failure modes recorded. The mean load and strain for the Kessler stitches were significantly less than those for combination stitches. All five Kessler stitches tore out longitudinally from the muscle. All five combination stitches did not fail but successfully elongated. Our study has shown that the better method of repair for suturing muscle is the use of combination stitches


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1184 - 1188
1 Nov 2002
Bushell AJ Klenerman L Taylor S Davies H Grierson I Helliwell TR Jackson MJ

Ischaemic preconditioning is a process by which exposure of a tissue to a short period of non-damaging ischaemic stress leads to resistance to the deleterious effects of a subsequent prolonged ischaemic stress. It has been extensively described in the heart, but few studies have examined the possibility that it can occur in skeletal muscle. We have used a rat model of ischaemia of one limb to examine this possibility. Exposure of the hind limb to a period of ischaemia of five minutes and reperfusion for five minutes significantly protected the tibialis anterior muscle against the structural damage induced by a subsequent period of limb ischaemia for four hours and reperfusion for one hour. This protection was evident on examination of the muscle by both light and electron microscopy. Longer or shorter times of prior ischaemia had no effect


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 1 | Pages 120 - 127
1 Jan 2002
Musgrave DS Pruchnic R Bosch P Ziran BH Whalen J Huard J

We have examined whether primary human muscle-derived cells can be used in ex vivo gene therapy to deliver BMP-2 and to produce bone in vivo. Two in vitro experiments and one in vivo experiment were used to determine the osteocompetence and BMP-2 secretion capacity of cells isolated from human skeletal muscle. We isolated five different populations of primary muscle cells from human skeletal muscle in three patients. In the first in vitro experiment, production of alkaline phosphatase by the cells in response to stimulation by rhBMP-2 was measured and used as an indicator of cellular osteocompetence. In the second, secretion of BMP-2 was measured after the cell populations had been transduced by an adenovirus encoding for BMP-2. In the in vivo experiment, the cells were cotransduced with a retrovirus encoding for a nuclear localised β-galactosidase gene and an adenovirus encoding for BMP-2. The cotransduced cells were then injected into the hind limbs of severe combined immune-deficient (SCID) mice and analysed radiographically and histologically. The nuclear localised β-galactosidase gene allowed identification of the injected cells in histological specimens. In the first in vitro experiment, the five different cell populations all responded to in vitro stimulation of rhBMP-2 by producing higher levels of alkaline phosphatase when compared with non-stimulated cells. In the second, the five different cell populations were all successfully transduced by an adenovirus to express and secrete BMP-2. The cells secreted between 444 and 2551 ng of BMP-2 over three days. In the in vivo experiment, injection of the transduced cells into the hind-limb musculature of SCID mice resulted in the formation of ectopic bone at 1, 2, 3 and 4 weeks after injection. Retroviral labelling of the cell nuclei showed labelled human muscle-derived cells occupying locations of osteoblasts in the ectopic bone, further supporting their osteocompetence. Cells from human skeletal muscle, because of their availability to orthopaedic surgeons, their osteocompetence, and their ability to express BMP-2 after genetic engineering, are an attractive cell population for use in BMP-2 gene therapy approaches


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 6 | Pages 906 - 911
1 Aug 2004
Kearns SR Daly AF Sheehan K Murray P Kelly C Bouchier-Hayes D

Compartment syndrome is a unique form of ischaemia of skeletal muscle which occurs despite patency of the large vessels. Decompression allows the influx of activated leucocytes which cause further injury. Vitamin C is a powerful antioxidant which concentrates preferentially in leucocytes and attenuates reperfusion-induced muscle injury. We have evaluated the use of pretreatment with oral vitamin C in the prevention of injury caused by compartment syndrome in a rat cremasteric muscle model. Acute and delayed effects of pretreatment with vitamin C were assessed at one and 24 hours after decompression of compartment syndrome. Muscle function was assessed electrophysiologically. Vascular, cellular and tissue inflammation was assessed by staining of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) and by determination of the activity of myeloperoxidase (MPO) in neutrophils and tissue oedema. Compartment syndrome impaired skeletal muscle function and increased the expression of ICAM-1, activity of MPO and muscle weight increased significantly. Pretreatment with vitamin C preserved muscle function and reduced the expression of ICAM-1, infiltration of the neutrophils and oedema


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1189 - 1193
1 Nov 2002
Bushell AJ Klenerman L Davies H Grierson I McArdle A Jackson MJ

We have previously shown that prior exposure of rat hind limbs to ischaemia for five minutes and reperfusion for five minutes reduced the structural damage to skeletal muscle which followed a subsequent period of ischaemia for four hours and reperfusion for one hour. We have now examined the potential mechanisms by which this ischaemic preconditioning protocol may be effective in reducing damage to skeletal muscle induced by prolonged ischaemia and reperfusion. Prior exposure of the hindlimb to ischaemia for five minutes and reperfusion for five minutes did not prevent the fall in the ATP content of tibialis anterior which occurred after a subsequent period of ischaemia for four hours and reperfusion for one hour. Similarly, no effect of the preconditioning protocol was seen on the elevated muscle myeloperoxidase, indicative of an elevated neutrophil content, or abnormal muscle cation content. Reperfused ischaemic muscle was also found to have an increased content of heat-shock protein (HSP) 72, but the preconditioning protocol did not further increase the content of this or other HSPs indicating that it was not acting by increasing the expression of these cytoprotective proteins. The protective effects of preconditioning appeared to be mimicked by the infusion of adenosine to animals immediately before exposure to the four-hour period, indicating a potential mechanism by which skeletal muscle may be preconditioned to maintain structural viability


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 3 | Pages 356 - 368
1 Aug 1949
Bowden REM Gutmann E

1. Biopsies of muscle were taken during the course of operation from sixteen patients with vascular injuries to the limbs. Three types of histological change were found. 2. In the first, there was massive necrosis of muscle fibres—a group of cases in which there had always been serious damage to the main artery of the limb or to the vessel supplying the affected muscles. 3. In the second type there was dense interstitial fibrosis, the muscle fibres sometimes being normal and sometimes showing necrosis or denervation—a group of cases in which the vascular injury varied from severance of the vessels by gunshot wounds to trivial damage, causing slow haemorrhage within fascial-bound spaces. 4. The third type showed scattered foci of necrosis together with patchy interstitial fibrosis—due to the pressure of tight plasters, crushing of the limb, fractures with arterial contusion, or slow haemorrhage or extravascular transfusion within fascial planes. The rise of tension within the muscles was probably sufficient to occlude the smaller arterioles with resultant patchy necrosis. 5. The vulnerability of certain muscles to vascular damage is partly related to the intramuscular vascular pattern, of which five types have been described. 6. In ischaemic muscles the intramuscular nerve trunks may be normal or they may show evidence of degeneration or necrosis; but in favourable circumstances there may be regeneration of axons. 7. In some cases there was evidence of regeneration of muscle fibres in man, the regeneration being dependent to some extent upon the efficiency of intramuscular anastomoses. 8. The prognosis, in cases of ischaemia of human voluntary muscle, depends upon the extent and the reversibility of damage to both muscle and nerve fibres and upon the extent of regeneration of muscle fibres


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1202 - 1206
1 Nov 2001
Kearns SR Moneley D Murray P Kelly C Daly AF

Ischaemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is caused by endothelial and subendothelial damage by neutrophil-derived oxidants. Vitamin C is an antioxidant which attenuates endothelial injury after IRI. Our aim was to evaluate the effect of oral vitamin C in the prevention of IRI in skeletal muscle. We used a model of cross-clamping (3 hours) and reperfusion (1 hour) of the cremaster muscle in rats. Muscle function was assessed electrophysiologically by electrical field stimulation. Infiltration by neutrophils was determined by the activity of tissue myeloperoxidase (MPO) and tissue oedema by the wet-to-dry ratio. Neutrophil respiratory burst activity was measured in control animals and groups pretreated with vitamin C. IRI significantly decreased muscle function and increased muscle neutrophil MPO activity and muscle oedema. Pretreatment with vitamin C preserved muscle function and reduced tissue oedema and neutrophil infiltration. Neutrophil respiratory burst activity was reduced in the group treated with vitamin C compared with the control group. We conclude that pretreatment with oral vitamin C protects against acute muscle IRI, possibly by attenuating neutrophil respiratory burst activity


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 2 | Pages 178 - 183
1 May 1979
Patterson S Klenerman L

Experiments have been carried out on rhesus monkeys to determine the effect of the application of a pneumatic tourniquet on the ultrastructure of the muscles of the lower limb. Tourniquets were applied for periods lasting between one and five hours. The changes in the muscle lying immediately under the cuff of the tourniquet were more marked than those observed in muscle distal to the cuff. Three hours appears to be close to the limit of the time that a muscle can resist the sustained compression of a tourniquet.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 35-B, Issue 1 | Pages 113 - 124
1 Feb 1953
Saunders JH Sissons HA

1 . The repair of a simple crush injury was studied in rats, in both normally innervated and completely denervated muscle. In each case the histological findings at periods from two hours to thirty-two weeks are described.

2. The denervated muscle showed active and effective repair.

3. A comparison with the findings in normally innervated muscle establishes that the cellular processes of repair do not depend on connections with the central nervous system.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 35-B, Issue 1 | Pages 125 - 130
1 Feb 1953
Sissons HA Hadfield GJ

The effect of cortisone on the repair of simple muscle injury was studied in rabbits. The histological findings in the crushed muscle are described for a period up to twenty-one days after injury.

Cortisone defers the onset of muscle regeneration, and retards its progress, but it does not change the course of the repair process or alter its eventual outcome under the conditions of the experiment.

This apparent refractoriness of repair of muscle, as compared with that of other connective tissues, is discussed.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 3 | Pages 321 - 330
1 Mar 2022
Brzeszczynski F Brzeszczynska J Duckworth AD Murray IR Simpson AHRW Hamilton DF

Aims. Sarcopenia is characterized by a generalized progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass, strength, and physical performance. This systematic review primarily evaluated the effects of sarcopenia on postoperative functional recovery and mortality in patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery, and secondarily assessed the methods used to diagnose and define sarcopenia in the orthopaedic literature. Methods. A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Google Scholar databases according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Studies involving sarcopenic patients who underwent defined orthopaedic surgery and recorded postoperative outcomes were included. The quality of the criteria by which a diagnosis of sarcopenia was made was evaluated. The quality of the publication was assessed using Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Results. A total of 365 studies were identified and screened, 26 full-texts were reviewed, and 19 studies were included in the review. A total of 3,009 patients were included, of whom 2,146 (71%) were female and 863 (29%) were male. The mean age of the patients was 75.1 years (SD 7.1). Five studies included patients who underwent spinal surgery, 13 included hip or knee surgery, and one involved patients who underwent fixation of a distal radial fixation. The mean follow-up was 1.9 years (SD 1.9; 5 days to 5.6 years). There was wide heterogeneity in the measurement tools which were used and the parameters for the diagnosis of sarcopenia in the studies. Sarcopenia was associated with at least one deleterious effect on surgical outcomes in all 19 studies. The postoperative rate of mortality was reported in 11 studies (57.9%) and sarcopenia was associated with poorer survival in 73% (8/11) of these. The outcome was most commonly assessed using the Barthel Index (4/19), and sarcopenic patients recorded lower scores in 75% (3/4) of these. Sarcopenia was defined using the gold-standard three parameters (muscle strength, muscle quantity or quality, and muscle function) in four studies (21%), using two parameters in another four (21%) and one in the remaining 11 (58%). The methodological quality of the studies was moderate to high. Conclusion. There is much heterogeneity in the reporting of the parameters which are used for the diagnosis of sarcopenia, and evaluating the outcome of orthopaedic surgery in sarcopenic patients. However, what data exist suggest that sarcopenia impairs recovery and increases postoperative mortality, especially in patients undergoing emergency surgery. Further research is required to develop processes that allow the accurate diagnosis of sarcopenia in orthopaedics, which may facilitate targeted pre- and postoperative interventions that would improve outcomes. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2022;104-B(3):321–330



The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 4 | Pages 524 - 529
1 Aug 1988
Gattuso J Davies A Glasby M Gschmeissner S Huang C

Skeletal muscle grafts, when thawed after freezing, can be used to repair peripheral nerves. This method was used after transection of the median nerve in the upper arm in marmosets. Examination at 28 days showed total denervation of flexor carpi radialis; at 150 days electrophysiological evidence of recovery of nerve conduction across the graft and of muscle activation was seen. Sections at this time showed nerve fibres and new functional neuromuscular junctions in the muscle. It is concluded that effective reinnervation of target muscles is possible after peripheral nerve repair using skeletal muscle autografts


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 1 | Pages 133 - 141
1 Jan 2003
Kraft CN Diedrich O Burian B Schmitt O Wimmer MA

Wear products of metal implants are known to induce biological events which may have profound consequences for the microcirculation of skeletal muscle. Using the skinfold chamber model and intravital microscopy we assessed microcirculatory parameters in skeletal muscle after confrontation with titanium and stainless-steel wear debris, comparing the results with those of bulk materials. Implantation of stainless-steel bulk and debris led to a distinct activation of leukocytes combined with a disruption of the microvascular endothelial integrity and massive leukocyte extravasation. While animals with bulk stainless steel showed a tendency to recuperation, stainless-steel wear debris induced such severe inflammation and massive oedema that the microcirculation broke down within 24 hours after implantation. Titanium bulk caused only a transient increase in leukocyte-endothelial cell interaction within the first 120 minutes and no significant change in macromolecular leakage, leukocyte extravasation or venular diameter. Titanium wear debris produced a markedly lower inflammatory reaction than stainless-steel bulk, indicating that a general benefit of bulk versus debris could not be claimed. Depending on its constituents, wear debris is capable of eliciting acute inflammation which may result in endothelial damage and subsequent failure of microperfusion. Our results indicate that not only the bulk properties of orthopaedic implants but also the microcirculatory implications of inevitable wear debris play a pivotal role in determining the biocompatibility of an implant


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 4 | Pages 530 - 533
1 Aug 1988
Norris R Glasby M Gattuso J Bowden R

Coaxial autografts of skeletal muscle which had been frozen then thawed were used to repair injured digital nerves in eight patients. Assessment from three to 11 months after operation showed recovery to MRC sensory category S3+ in all but one patient, an excellent level of recovery. We conclude that bespoke muscle grafts treated and used in this way may offer significant advantages over conventional nerve grafts or cable grafts especially where large peripheral nerves are involved


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. 44-B, Issue 3 | Pages 711 - 721
1 Aug 1962
Van Linge B

1. The effects of heavy training on a skeletal muscle have been studied in the rat. After denervation of the triceps surae muscle the tendon of the plantaris muscle was implanted into the tuberosity of the calcaneum. It was then possible to demand an unusual performance of the plantaris, the weight of which is only 18 per cent of the weight of the triceps surae. 2. Formation of new muscle fibres was observed after prolonged heavy training. This is incontrast to the opinion of most investigators, who have seen no new fibres formed after training. Degenerative changes followed by regeneration were also seen. 3. The trained muscle could almost double its weight, and treble its force. Paradoxically, the supposedly non-contractile sarcoplasm was seen to have increased after training. 4. Training induced a strong protein synthesis in muscle. In normal muscle protein synthesis can hardly be demonstrated. 5. Connective tissue grew between single muscle fibres in the heavily trained muscle. Its distribution was unequal. 6. Heavy exercise caused marked swelling of an untrained muscle. 7. Functional recovery was satisfactory after the operation. This showed that a muscle can be replaced by one only one-fifth its weight, provided the latter is trained adequately. 8. Not even the most arduous training could inflict permanent damage on the muscle


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 1 | Pages 153 - 169
1 Feb 1966
Allbrook D Baker WDC Kirkaldy-Willis WH

1. Direct injury to skeletal muscle results in fragmentation and necrosis of muscle fibres, though this is patchy in distribution. 2. The sarcolemmal basement membranes form the interface along which fibre regeneration takes place. 3. Phagocytosis of disorganised sarcoplasm is an essential prelude to the reconstitution of severely damaged fibres. 4. Regeneration of injured muscle begins with proliferation of basophilic cells probably originating from muscle satellite cells. After a few days typical myoblast nuclear chains are present. By a week following injury the chains of myoblasts have formed myotubes, which possess myofibrils and sarcomeres. 5. By twelve days in the monkey and by eighteen days in man the muscle fibre regenerative process shows many new fibres which have not reached a mature diameter. 6. Much collagen may be formed in the tissue space at the site of injury. It appears that as the muscle fibres increase in diameter the collagen decreases in extent. 7. In the monkey by three weeks the muscle at the fracture site appears normal. This is also true in the specimens examined at four, six and twelve weeks. 8. In the monkeys the injured limb was immediately used to run and jump. A parallel intense and early activity of muscle and joints was a cardinal point in the management of this series of fracture patients. The clinical results were satisfactory. 9. It is concluded that in both the monkey and in man, given active limb movements, permanent and functionally useful muscle regeneration occurs following soft-tissue injury associated with a bone fracture


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 4 | Pages 597 - 599
1 Apr 2021
Kader DF Oussedik S Kader N Haddad FS