Aims. The aim of this study was to assess the safety and clinical outcome of patients with a femoral
Intramedullary locking nails have proved to be of considerable advantage when treating complex, comminuted or segmental femoral
Fractures of the femoral shaft are generally considered to affect young patients, but we have reviewed 24 cases in patients over 60 years who have been treated by locked nailing, usually by closed methods. Most were women with low-velocity injuries, but despite this, 14 fractures were significantly comminuted. The complication rate was 54% with a peri-operative mortality of 17%. Most complications were the general ones of operating on elderly patients. Specific complications included: fractures below an abnormal hip, proximal fracture related to the nail and poor purchase in the distal femur. In all survivors, the femoral
We analysed the results of 93 tibial
All tibial
The torsion of both femora was evaluated in 110 patients who had been treated by intramedullary nailing for unilateral femoral
In two hospitals, 115 consecutive open femoral
We studied 47 patients with closed, displaced, diaphyseal fractures of the femur caused by blunt trauma, to determine the incidence of associated knee injuries, particularly of the meniscus. After femoral nailing, all patients had an examination under anaesthesia and an arthroscopy. There were 12 medial meniscal injuries (5 tears) and 13 injuries of the lateral meniscus (8 tears). Ten of the 13 tears were in the posterior third of the meniscus, and two patients had tears of both menisci. Synovitis was common at the meniscal attachments. Complex and radial tears were more common than peripheral or bucket-handle tears. Examination under anaesthesia revealed ligamentous laxity in 23 patients (49%), but meniscal injuries had a similar incidence in knees with and without ligament injury. Femoral
One hundred patients who had sustained a fracture of the tibial shaft and had been treated by internal fixation were reviewed to obtain information on residual ankle and subtalar disability. This study reinforces the belief that early mobilisation of patients with tibial
We describe the use of Ender nails for the internal fixation of femoral
Ten patients with humeral
The stability of union following the conservative treatment of tibial
Sixty patients each of whom had a fracture of the lower limb a minimum of five years (median 11 years) previously were studied by photoplethysmography, foot volumetry, popliteal venous reflux and arterial Doppler measurements. The non-fractured limb was used as a control. Postphlebitic symptoms were present in 51% and signs in 49% of fractured limbs compared with 4% and 24% respectively in the control limbs. The incidence was greater in patients who had fractured 15 years or more previously than in those who had fractured 5 to 15 years previously. Eleven limbs had clinically disabling postphlebitic symptoms including venous ulceration. The postphlebitic syndrome following lower limb fractures in young patients is more common than generally appreciated and develops after a prolonged latent interval. A prospective randomised study using prophylactic anticoagulation for lower limb
We performed a prospective randomised trial on matched groups of patients with displaced tibial
A prospective study of 141 patients with 143 tibial
We have reviewed our recent results with functional bracing of tibial
One hundred consecutive closed fractures of the adult tibial shaft treated by closed methods were surveyed prospectively in order to observe their natural history. The fractures were analysed with regards to speed of healing and the influence of age, sex, causal force, radiological morphology and concurrent fibular fracture. At 20 weeks 19 fractures had not yet united, but 15 of these had united by 30 weeks with conservative treatment alone. The remaining four cases were operated upon because no further progress in healing was anticipated. These findings suggest that, with regard to healing, open reduction and internal fixation is rarely justified in closed adult tibial
We reviewed and radiographed 30 skeletally-mature patients after isolated closed femoral
Excellent results can be achieved by plating fractures of the shaft of the humerus in patients with multiple injuries. This helps in nursing care and in the management of other injuries. In 38 patients admitted to a regional trauma centre, 39 humeral
Over 15 years (1967 to 1982) 140 uncomplicated femoral