The optimal timing of percutaneous vertebroplasty
as treatment for painful osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures
(OVCFs) is still unclear. With the position of vertebroplasty having
been challenged by recent placebo-controlled studies, appropriate
timing gains importance. We investigated the relationship between the onset of symptoms
– the time from fracture – and the efficacy of vertebroplasty in
115 patients with 216 painful subacute or
Aims. Acute and
Aims. The aim of this study was to describe the prevalence and patterns of neuropathic pain over one year in a cohort of patients with
Aims. The principle strategies of fracture-related infection (FRI) treatment are debridement, antimicrobial therapy, and implant retention (DAIR) or debridement, antimicrobial therapy, and implant removal/exchange. Increasing the period between fracture fixation and FRI revision surgery is believed to be associated with higher failure rates after DAIR. However, a clear time-related cut-off has never been scientifically defined. This systematic review analyzed the influence of the interval between fracture fixation and FRI revision surgery on success rates after DAIR. Methods. A systematic literature search was performed according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, in PubMed (including MEDLINE), Embase, and Web of Science Core Collection, investigating the outcome after DAIR procedures of long bone FRIs in clinical studies published until January 2020. Results. Six studies, comprising 276 patients, met the inclusion criteria. Data from this review showed that with a short duration of infection (up to three weeks) and under strict preconditions, retention of the implant is associated with high success rates of 86% to 100%. In delayed infections with a fracture fixation-FRI revision surgery interval of three to ten weeks, absence of recurrent infection was reported in 82% to 89%. Data on late FRIs, with a fracture fixation-FRI revision surgery interval of more than ten weeks, are scarce and a success rate of 67% was reported. Conclusion. Acute/early FRI, with a short duration of infection, can successfully be treated with DAIR up to ten weeks after osteosynthesis. The limited available data suggest that
Aims. Single-stage revision total knee arthroplasty (rTKA) is gaining popularity in treating
Aims. Excision of
Aims. Closed suction subfascial drainage is widely used after instrumented posterior spinal fusion in patients with a spinal deformity. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of this wound drainage on the outcomes in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). This was a further analysis of a randomized, multicentre clinical trial reporting on patients after posterior spinal fusion using segmental pedicle screw instrumentation. In this study the incidence of deep surgical site infection (SSI) and
Aims. Removal of infected components and culture-directed antibiotics are important for the successful treatment of
Aims. Calprotectin (CLP) is produced in neutrophils and monocytes and released into body fluids as a result of inflammation or infection. The aim of this study was to evaluate the utility of blood and synovial CLP in the diagnosis of
Aims. Single-stage revision is not widely pursued due to restrictive inclusion criteria. In this study, we evaluated the results of single-stage revision of
Aims. The results of irrigation and debridement with component retention (IDCR) in the treatment of acutely infected total knee arthroplasties (TKAs) have been variable. The aim of this study was to assess the outcome after IDCR when combined with
We report the long-term results of the management
of neglected
Aims. The success rates of two-stage revision arthroplasty for infection have evolved since their early description. The implementation of internationally accepted outcome criteria led to the readjustment of such rates. However, patients who do not undergo reimplantation are usually set aside from these calculations. The aim of this study was to investigate the outcomes of two-stage revision arthroplasty when considering those who do not undergo reimplantation, and to investigate the characteristics of this subgroup. Methods. A retrospective cohort study was conducted. Patients with
Aims. To investigate whether
We present a retrospective review of 167 patients aged 18 years and under who were treated for
Aims.
Aims. To identify the prevalence of neuropathic pain after lower limb fracture surgery, assess associations with pain severity, quality of life and disability, and determine baseline predictors of
Aims.
This retrospective study was designed to evaluate
the outcomes of re-dislocation of the radial head after corrective osteotomy
for
The aim of this study was to assess the role
of synovial C-reactive protein (CRP) in the diagnosis of
We investigated the response of
Aims. The aim of this study was to examine the results of the acetabular
distraction technique in achieving implantation of a stable construct,
obtaining biological fixation, and producing healing of chronic
pelvic discontinuity at revision total hip arthroplasty. Patients and Methods. We identified 32 patients treated between 2006 and 2013 who underwent
acetabular revision for a
We present six patients with
Four men who presented with
Gram-negative periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) has been poorly studied despite its rapidly increasing incidence. Treatment with one-stage revision using intra-articular (IA) infusion of antibiotics may offer a reasonable alternative with a distinct advantage of providing a means of delivering the drug in high concentrations. Carbapenems are regarded as the last line of defense against severe Gram-negative or polymicrobial infection. This study presents the results of one-stage revision using intra-articular carbapenem infusion for treating Gram-negative PJI, and analyzes the characteristics of bacteria distribution and drug sensitivity. We retrospectively reviewed 32 patients (22 hips and 11 knees) who underwent single-stage revision combined with IA carbapenem infusion between November 2013 and March 2020. The IA and intravenous (IV) carbapenem infusions were administered for a single Gram-negative infection, and IV vancomycin combined with IA carbapenems and vancomycin was applied for polymicrobial infection including Gram-negative bacteria. The bacterial community distribution, drug sensitivity, infection control rate, functional recovery, and complications were evaluated. Reinfection or death caused by PJI was regarded as a treatment failure.Aims
Methods
We studied prospectively a consecutive series of 50 patients with
From a global point of view,
We hypothesised that a minimally invasive peroneus
brevis tendon transfer would be effective for the management of
a
The treatment of a
We report our experience using a biodegradable
calcium sulphate antibiotic carrier containing tobramycin in the surgical
management of patients with
1. The dominant role of pathogenic staphylococci in surgical infections has been confirmed by positive isolations in 89·9 per cent of a wide variety of lesions in a hospital infective unit. Of 150 staphylococci isolated, 147 were sensitive to fusidic acid, two were slightly sensitive and only one was resistant. 2. Fusidic acid was administered as sodium fusidate to 100 patients with staphylococcal infections (including seventy-two with
We studied a cohort of 26 diabetic patients with
The diagnosis of
We report the long-term results of the surgical treatment of
Aims. The aim of this study was to determine if a three-month course of microorganism-directed oral antibiotics reduces the rate of failure due to further infection following two-stage revision for
1. In the treatment of
With advances in the treatment of patients with
We describe a technique of soft-tissue reconstruction which is effective for the treatment of
This paper considers the increased risk of the development of lymphoma in patients with
We report a prospective study of the effects of extracorporeal shock-wave therapy in 195 patients with
We report a retrospective analysis of the results of combined arthroscopically-assisted posterior cruciate ligament reconstruction and open reconstruction of the posterolateral corner in 19 patients with
1. The treatment of twenty-nine consecutive patients suffering from
The treatment of
Sinus-track cultures were compared prospectively with cultures from operative specimens in 55 patients with
The aim of this study was to determine the effect
of radial extracorporeal shock-wave therapy (rESWT) on patients with
chronic tendinitis of the rotator cuff. This was a randomised controlled
trial in which 82 patients (mean age 47 years (24 to 67)) with chronic
tendinitis diagnosed clinically were randomly allocated to a treatment
group who received low-dose rESWT (three sessions at an interval
10 to 14 days, 2000 pulses, 0.11 mJ/mm. 2. , 8 Hz) or to
a placebo group, with a follow-up of six months. The patients and
the treating orthopaedic surgeon, who were both blinded to the treatment,
evaluated the results. A total of 44 patients were allocated to
the rESWT group and 38 patients to the placebo group. A visual analogue
scale (VAS) score for pain, a Constant–Murley (CMS) score and a simple
shoulder test (SST) score significantly improved in both groups
at three and six months compared with baseline (all p ≤ 0.012).
The mean VAS was similar in both groups at three (p = 0.43) and
six months (p = 0.262). Also, the mean CMS and SST scores were similar
in both groups at six months (p = 0.815 and p = 0.834, respectively). It would thus seem that low-dose rESWT does not reduce pain or
improve function in patients
The results of 63 operative repairs of
Between November 1994 and June 1999, 35 patients referred to our Problem Fracture Service with
This study reports the clinical outcome of reconstruction
of deficient abductor muscles following revision total hip arthroplasty
(THA), using a fresh–frozen allograft of the extensor mechanism
of the knee. A retrospective analysis was conducted of 11 consecutive
patients with a severe limp because of abductor deficiency which
was confirmed on MRI scans. The mean age of the patients (three
men and eight women) was 66.7 years (52 to 84), with a mean follow-up
of 33 months (24 to 41). . Following surgery, two patients had no limp, seven had a mild
limp, and two had a persistent severe limp (p = 0.004). The mean
power of the abductors improved on the Medical Research Council
scale from 2.15 to 3.8 (p <
0.001). Pre-operatively, all patients
required a stick or walking frame; post-operatively, four patients
were able to walk without an aid. Overall, nine patients had severe
or moderate pain pre-operatively; ten patients had no or mild pain
post-operatively. . At final review, the Harris hip score was good in five patients,
fair in two and poor in four. . We conclude that using an extensor mechanism allograft is relatively
effective in the treatment of
1. A method of treating
An operation for
We investigated the clinical response to arthroscopic
synovectomy in patients with undifferentiated
We analysed one surgeon’s attempt to reconstruct the hip in 66 patients (84 hips) with
1. A technique of closed instillation-suction for the treatment of
An unusual form of
An unusual case of bilateral
1 . Two cases of
1. Fifty-two patients with
The aetiology of pain in the lower leg during exercise has been studied in 110 athletes by monitoring intracompartmental pressure during exercise and by technetium bone scans. Patients were assigned to three diagnostic groups:
We describe a technique of ‘cross-hip distraction’ to reduce a dislocated hip with subsequent reconstruction of the joint for septic arthritis with extensive femoral osteomyelitis. A 27-year-old woman presented with a dislocated, collapsed femoral head and
Two consecutive cases of
In nine patients with
The conservative management of
Thirty-five patients who had been surgically treated for major symptomatic isolated
The costo-clavicular ligament is always ruptured in dislocation at the sterno-clavicular joint. Anterior, superior or posterior displacement of the medial end of the clavicle may occur. Acute dislocation usually responds to conservative treatment and operation is seldom required.
We have treated six patients with
We reviewed 15 patients, nine girls and six boys, with
We report two cases of bilateral
Seven children with
When using a staged approach to eradicate
Prosthetic joint infections (PJIs) of the hip and knee are associated with significant morbidity and socioeconomic burden. We undertook a systematic review of the current literature with the aim of proposing criteria for the selection of patients for a single-stage exchange arthroplasty in the management of a PJI. A comprehensive review of the current literature was performed using the OVID-MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library databases and the search terms: infection and knee arthroplasty OR knee revision OR hip arthroplasty OR hip revision, and one stage OR single stage OR direct exchange. All studies involving fewer than ten patients and follow-up of less than two years in the study group were excluded as also were systematic reviews, surgical techniques, and expert opinions.Aims
Material and Methods
Seven patients with
We have treated 45 patients (47 ankles) for
Five children with
We describe our medium-term results for the management of
1. A study of 2,200 patients receiving electro-convulsive therapy showed that fifty-three sustained fractures or dislocationsâan incidence of 2·4 per cent. Of the fifty-three injuries, twenty-one occurred in the spine, fifteen in the neck of femur, fifteen in the upper end of humerus, one in the coracoid process; one dislocated jaw required anaesthesia for its reduction (other cases of transient dislocation of the jaw are excluded). 2. The incidence, site, and type of spinal fractures are recorded, and the relation of the fracture to the first convulsion is noted. No late changes were found in the spines of patients examined two years or more after treatment. A neutral position of the spine during the convulsion is believed to diminish the risk of fracture. 3. Fracture of the neck of the femur is a serious injury in these patients. In one case the injury was bilateral. 4. The fifteen cases of fracture-dislocation of the upper humerus are analysed. They included two cases of posterior dislocation of the humeral head; the possible mechanism of this is explained and a method of prevention suggested. 5. Fifty-three patients with
Twenty-nine bone defects caused by
We present seven children with atlantoaxial rotatory fixation (AARF) of more than three months’ duration after an injury to the upper cervical spine. The deformity was irreducible by skull traction. MRI and MR angiography (MRA) of the vertebral arteries were performed in four children. The patients were neurologically intact. Thrombosis of the ipsilateral vertebral artery was noted in two patients. The deformity was gradually corrected and stabilised after transoral release of the atlantoaxial complex, skull traction and posterior atlantoaxial fusion. Soft-tissue interposition and contractures within the atlantoaxial complex prevented closed reduction. MRI and MRA of the vertebral arteries were useful in elucidating the pathology of
1. In
We report a prospective study of 49 patients who had arthroscopic subacromial decompression for
Nine children with
We treated 37 patients with
Ultrasound (US) was used to determine the congruity of the shoulder in 22 children with a deformity of the shoulder secondary to
We treated 11 patients with
A case is reported four years after successful total replacement of the left humerus for
Forty-eight men and three women were reviewed an average of thirty-one months after pes anserinus transposition for
The lateral substitution reconstruction operation described by MacIntosh has been evaluated in 27 patients with
We performed a retrospective study to assess the long-term outcome of non-augmented anatomical direct repair of the lateral ankle ligaments, as originally described by Duquennoy et al, for the treatment of
A 25-year-old male weightlifter felt increasing intractable low back pain during training but denied any acute injury. The physical examination, blood parameters, radiographs and MRI were unremarkable. He had been treated non-operatively by various means, with only temporary relief. The pressures in the lumbar paraspinal compartment were abnormally high and he was treated by surgical decompression. This gave rapid relief, he returned to training, and one year later the pain had not recurred.
Bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells were aspirated from immature male green fluorescent protein transgenic rats and cultured in a monolayer. Four weeks after the creation of the osteochondral defect, the rats were divided into three groups of 18: the control group, treated with an intra-articular injection of phosphate-buffered saline only; the drilling group, treated with an intra-articular injection of phosphate-buffered saline with a bone marrow-stimulating procedure; and the bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells group, treated with an intra-articular injection of bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells plus a bone marrow-stimulating procedure. The rats were then killed at 4, 8 and 12 weeks after treatment and examined. The histological scores were significantly better in the bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells group than in the control and drilling groups at all time points (p <
0.05). The fluorescence of the green fluorescent protein-positive cells could be observed in specimens four weeks after treatment.
Between 1993 and 2008, 41 patients underwent total coccygectomy for coccydynia which had failed to respond to six months of conservative management. Of these, 40 patients were available for clinical review and 39 completed a questionnaire giving their evaluation of the effect of the operation. Excellent or good results were obtained in 33 of the 41 patients, comprising 18 of the 21 patients with coccydynia due to trauma, five of the eight patients with symptoms following childbirth and ten of 12 idiopathic onset. In eight patients the results were moderate or poor, although none described worse pain after the operation. The only post-operative complication was superficial wound infection which occurred in five patients and which settled fully with antibiotic treatment. One patient required re-operation for excision of the distal cornua of the sacrum. Total coccygectomy offered satisfactory relief of pain in the majority of patients regardless of the cause of their symptoms.
We undertook a retrospective review of 24 arthroscopic procedures in patients with symptomatic ossicles around the malleoli of the ankle. Most of the patients had a history of injury and localised tenderness in the area coinciding with the radiological findings. Contrast-enhanced three-dimensional fast-spoiled gradient-echo MRI was performed and the results compared with the arthroscopic findings. An enhanced signal surrounding soft tissue corresponding to synovial inflammation and impingement was found in 20 patients (83%). The arthroscopic findings correlated well with those of our MRI technique and the sensitivity was estimated to be 91%. At a mean follow-up of 30.5 months (20 to 86) the mean American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society score improved from 74.5 to 93 points (p <
0.001). Overall, the rate of patient satisfaction was 88%. Our results indicate that symptomatic ossicles of the malleoli respond well to arthroscopic treatment.
The purpose of this study was to assess the clinical
and radiological outcomes of dorsal intercarpal ligament capsulodesis
for the treatment of static scapholunate instability at a minimum
follow-up of four years. A total of 59 patients who underwent capsulodesis
for this condition were included in a retrospective analysis after
a mean of 8.25 years (4.3 to 12). A total of eight patients underwent
a salvage procedure at a mean of 2.33 years (0.67 to 7.6) and were
excluded. The mean range of extension/flexion was 88° (15° to 135°)
and of ulnar/radial deviation was 38° (0° to 75°) at final follow-up.
The mean Disabilities of the Arm Shoulder and Hand (DASH) score
and Mayo wrist scores were 28 (0 to 85) and 61 (0 to 90), respectively Capsulodesis did not maintain carpal reduction over time. Although
the consequent ongoing scapholunate instability resulted in early
arthritic degeneration, most patients had acceptable long-term function
of the wrist.
We have shown in a previous study that patients with combined lesions of the anterior cruciate (ACL) and medial collateral ligaments (MCL) had similar anteroposterior (AP) but greater valgus laxity at 30° after reconstruction of the ACL when compared with patients who had undergone reconstruction of an isolated ACL injury. The present study investigated the same cohort of patients after a minimum of three years to evaluate whether the residual valgus laxity led to a poorer clinical outcome. Each patient had undergone an arthroscopic double-bundle ACL reconstruction using a semitendinosus-gracilis graft. In the combined ACL/MCL injury group, the grade II medial collateral ligament injury was not treated. At follow-up, AP laxity was measured using a KT-2000 arthrometer, while valgus laxity was evaluated with Telos valgus stress radiographs and compared with the uninjured knee. We evaluated clinical outcome scores, muscle girth and time to return to activities for the two groups. Valgus stress radiographs showed statistically significant greater mean medial joint opening in the reconstructed compared with the uninjured knees (1.7 mm (
We describe 22 patients who presented between the ages of 4 and 14 years with gradual onset of malaise and pain at the sites of multiple bone lesions. The symptoms from the bone lesions were sometimes sequential in onset and often relapsing. The radiological findings were typical of osteomyelitis. Radioisotope bone scans identified some clinically silent lesions. Bone biopsies were performed in 20 patients and the changes of osteomyelitis were seen in 17; microbiological culture was positive in only one. Seven patients had polyarthritis, two had palmoplantar pustulosis and one had psoriasis. Some symptomatic relief was obtained with anti-inflammatory agents and, to a less extent, with antibiotics. No patient had primary immunodeficiency. The mean duration of symptoms from the bone lesions was two years (1 to 4). When arthritis was present the joint symptoms lasted considerably longer (mean 7 years; range 4 to 10). The long-term prognosis was generally good. There was no evidence of altered bone growth or abnormal joint development. One patient developed a progressive kyphosis requiring fusion, but no other surgical intervention was necessary.