Aims. The aim of this study was to explore the prognostic factors for postoperative neurological recovery and survival in patients with complete
1. Forty-five cases of zoster
We report the case of an eight-month-old girl who presented with a poliomyelitis-like
1. The distribution of the permanent paresis and
1. Ten patients with neurological evidence of damage to the intrathecal sacral nerve roots of the cauda equina by verified lumbar disc prolapse are described. 2. The nature of the bladder
We have reviewed 26 patients treated by trapezius transfer for deltoid
We treated 31 patients with non-traumatic
1 . A case is described in which complete transposition of the latissimus dorsi muscle with its neurovascular pedicle was performed to compensate for complete
Spinal accessory nerve palsy leads to painful disability of the shoulder, carrying an uncertain prognosis. We reviewed the long-term outcome in 16 patients who were treated for pain, weakness of active elevation and asymmetry of the shoulder and the neck due to chronic
After brachial plexus injuries, and other forms of
1. The arcade of Frohse, a fibrous arch over the posterior interosseous nerve, may well play a part in causing progressive
Three patients referred for rehabilitation of brachial plexus lesions and two referred with leg weakness associated with sciatica were found to have conversion
1. Sixteen cases of thenar
We report six patients with isolated
1. The indications for the use of lively splints in upper limb
1. Electro-physiological studies have been made in a case of "tourniquet paralysis" of the upper limb produced by the application of a pneumatic cuff. 2. The results indicate that an important part of the persistent
1 . Twenty-one cases of poliomyelitis and twenty cases of brachial plexus injury in which muscle transplantations had been performed to restore elbow flexion have been reviewed. The average follow-up period was four and a half years. 2. The results were graded objectively and subjectively. They were better when passive extension of the elbow was limited; such limitation always occurs after Steindler's operation, but infrequently after pectoral transplantation. 3. The results of pectoral transplantation are good when there is no significant shoulder
The aim of this study was to determine whether early surgical treatment results in better neurological recovery 12 months after injury than late surgical treatment in patients with acute traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI). Patients with tSCI requiring surgical spinal decompression presenting to 17 centres in Europe were recruited. Depending on the timing of decompression, patients were divided into early (≤ 12 hours after injury) and late (> 12 hours and < 14 days after injury) groups. The American Spinal Injury Association neurological (ASIA) examination was performed at baseline (after injury but before decompression) and at 12 months. The primary endpoint was the change in Lower Extremity Motor Score (LEMS) from baseline to 12 months.Aims
Methods
1. The case of a girl aged sixteen years who avulsed the iliacus muscle from the ilium during a gymnastic exercise is reported. 2. The lesion was complicated by
1. Six cases of development of heterotopic bone around joints in association with
We report 13 patients with missed bilateral facet dislocation of the lower cervical spine who subsequently developed severe spinal-cord involvement. There were more women and the patients were older than in most groups with spinal injury. The commonest cause was a fall, and
1. Four cases of facial
Seven pectoralis major transfers in children suffering from bilateral
1. In a survey of 107 cases of Erb's
We describe a 31-year-old man in whom a paresis and sensory defect of the left arm developed after amputation of the index finger. The operation was performed in a bloodless field, using a pneumatic tourniquet. The sensory defect resolved in two months and the paresis in five and a half months. We consider that direct pressure produced by the tourniquet caused the nerve lesion. It is probable that the tourniquet was inflated to a pressure of 500 millimetres of mercury instead of the intended 250 millimetres of mercury because of a faulty gauge. In order to avoid this rare complication, it is advisable to check the tourniquet gauge each time before use.
1. A case of complete sciatic palsy complicating anticoagulant therapy is presented. 2. A brief review of the possible pathogenesis is made and the importance of early recognition and treatment of the syndrome is emphasised.
1. Four cases of spontaneous interosseous nerve palsy are reported. 2. The condition is commoner than is usually thought. 3. Recovery is quick after operation done to excise or exclude a band causing mechanical compression.
1. Deformities of the foot in children with myelomeningocele are described and classified. The results of a policy of operative correction of deformity in 148 patients all of whom had had at least one operation on the foot between 1947 and 1965 are described. 2. In 241 feet in which there were deformities 433 operations were performed, including tenotomies, soft-tissue divisions, tendon transfers and bony procedures. At the time of review successful correction of deformity had been obtained in 81 per cent with a plantigrade foot that could bear weight safely, and with a distribution of muscle activity that required minimal external support and presented the least liability to recurrent deformity. 3. The management of individual deformities is described and the causes of failure are analysed and discussed.
We believe that this technique has several advantages. After poliomyelitis recovery in the clavicular head of pectoralis major may exceed that in the sternal head; there may be considerable but incomplete recovery in both heads and it is then desirable to use all the active muscle available. Girls and women dislike conspicuous scars; the incisions used in this technique are unobtrusive when the arm is by the side.
We describe five patients, seen since 1984, with posterior shoulder pain and isolated wasting and weakness of the infraspinatus. In four of these a ganglion in the spinoglenoid notch was demonstrated by MRI and in one recent case ultrasound scans were positive. Three patients have been treated by operation, but there was recurrence in one after five years. In each confirmed case, the ganglion straddled the base of the spine of the scapula, extending into both supraspinatus and infraspinatus fossae. The nerve was either compressed against the spine or stretched over the posterior aspect of the ganglion. Adequate surgical exposure is essential to preserve the nerve to the infraspinatus and to allow complete removal of the ganglion. This is difficult because of the location and thin-walled nature of the cysts.
1. A modified technique of tendon transference for irreparable damage of the radial nerve is described. The tendon of the pronator teres is transferred to the two radial extensors of the wrist and to the tendon of extensor carpi ulnaris. 2. The method succeeds in preventing radial deviation on attempted dorsiflexion of wrist and helps to provide a powerful grip.
1. A case of spontaneous posterior interosseous paresis is reported. It is suggested that the cause was replacement fibrosis secondary to local ischaemic damage from unremembered minor trauma. 2. In a patient with a posterior interosseous nerve paresis examination may reveal a space-occupying lesion near the elbow along the course of the nerve thus compressing it. Recovery may be expected after its removal. Consequently the nerve should be explored before resort to tendon transfers.
A description is given of 20 patients with winging of the scapula. The majority had suffered spontaneous severe pain in the region of the shoulder followed about two weeks later by the deformity and associated loss of function. Only in three patients was there a clear history of trauma. Some patients may have strained the arm, but in the majority no single factor heralded the problem. Most of the patients were followed up for more than two years and it became clear that functional recovery could take up to this time to be complete. However, careful examination revealed that often a slight degree of winging remained. No specific treatment apart from gentle physiotherapy was prescribed and certainly no operative procedures. It is considered that a number of these cases were examples of neuralgic amyotrophy.
1. A case of posterior interosseous nerve palsy from compression in the supinator muscle by what appeared to be a simple ganglion is described. 2. Surgical decompression led to an effective cure. 3. The course of the nerve through this muscle invites compression. 4. Rotation of the forearm, especially with super-added deformity of the limb, may increase the compresssion.
1. A dynamic muscle-tendon transposition is described for supplementing the power of weak lateral abdominal muscles, and the details of the operative technique are given. 2. A clinical assessment of the results in a series of twenty-four patients is given. 3. The indications for the operation in poliomyelitis are suggested.
Traumatic neuritis of the deep branch of the ulnar nerve may be caused by compression of the nerve by a ganglion originating in a carpal joint, and removal of the protrusion is followed by a prompt recovery. This lesion was found in four out of five explorations.
1 . An operation for strengthening the lateral abdominal muscles in children after poliomyelitis is described. It consists of transposition of the proximal part of the gluteus maximus, the tensor fasciae latae and the ilio-tibial band ("the pelvic deltoid" of Henry) to a chosen rib. 2. The results of this operation in eight consecutive cases of paralytic scoliosis, pelvic obliquity and thoraco-pelvic instability are assessed. 3. A "strong" motor allows the child to lift the pelvis against gravity, whereas with a "weak" motor the child is unable to do so efficiently. However, even a "weak" musculotendinous tendinous unit helps invariably in restoring the thoraco-pelvic stability, just as a weak "hamstring-into-patella" transplant stabilises the knee. 4. Those motors (gluteus maximus with or without tensor fasciae latae) that contract vigorously and move the free end of the ilio-tibial band for at least three centimetres on direct faradic stimulation with a bipolar electrode during the operation become ultimately strong and most efficient. 5. The unreliability of the clinical test of tensor fasciae latae in small children is discussed, and the advantage of using the gluteus maximus as the motor for the musculo-tendinous unit is emphasised. 6. Using the proximal half (or less) of the gluteus maximus for strengthening the lateral abdominal muscles does not seem to affect appreciably the strength of hip extension. This phenomenon may be explained with reasonable probability by the existence of a twofold insertion of that muscle.
A total of 11 patients with combined traumatic injuries of the brachial plexus and spinal cord were reviewed retrospectively. Brachial plexus
Between March 1994 and June 2003, 80 patients with brachial plexus palsy underwent a trapezius transfer. There were 11 women and 69 men with a mean age of 31 years (18 to 69). Before operation a full evaluation of muscle function in the affected arm was carried out. A completely flail arm was found in 37 patients (46%). Some peripheral function in the elbow and hand was seen in 43 (54%). No patient had full active movement of the elbow in combination with adequate function of the hand. Patients were followed up for a mean of 2.4 years (0.8 to 8). We performed the operations according to Saha’s technique, with a modification in the last 22 cases. We demonstrated a difference in the results according to the pre-operative status of the muscles and the operative technique. The transfer resulted in an increase of function in all patients and in 74 (95%) a decrease in multidirectional instability of the shoulder. The mean increase in active abduction was from 6° (0 to 45) to 34° (5 to 90) at the last review. The mean forward flexion increased from 12° (0 to 85) to 30° (5 to 90). Abduction (41°) and especially forward flexion (43°) were greater when some residual function of the pectoralis major remained (n = 32). The best results were achieved in those patients with most pre-operative power of the biceps, coracobrachialis and triceps muscles (n = 7), with a mean of 42° of abduction and 56° of forward flexion. Active abduction (28°) and forward flexion (19°) were much less in completely flail shoulders (n = 34). Comparison of the 19 patients with the Saha technique and the 15 with the modified procedure, all with complete
A study of limb shortening after poliomyelitis in 225 children in whom
1. We have described what happens to patients a number of years after injury of the sciatic nerve or of its divisions; there were 329 who had been under observation for periods ranging from three to eighteen years. The neurological recovery was recorded in every case and, more important, the behaviour of the limb as appreciated by the patient. 2. Although it was generally true that good neurological recovery and good function went together there were remarkable discrepancies. Isolated
1. Five cases of scoliosis with paraplegia are reported, and thirty-six comparable cases from the literature are reviewed. These forty-one cases have been studied with the object of determining the etiology of scoliosis, the reason why cord compression sometimes develops, and the results of conservative and operative treatment of such compression of the cord. 2. The cause of paraplegia is nearly always compression of the spinal cord by the dura, which, in severe scoliosis, is under longitudinal tension because of its firm attachment to the foramen magnum above and the sacrum below. Such tension, resisting displacement of the spinal cord from the straight line, may be shown to cause incomplete spinal block even when there is no
1. A review of 193 African and Indian children suffering from spina bifida has been made. Forty-three were seen on the first day of life and the remainder during subsequent weeks of life. 2. For the baby with mild or moderate
One hundred and nine children with myelodysplasia were evaluated and classified according to the level and type of
1. An experimental study of the effects of nerve and muscle lesions upon the growth of bone has been made. In each case animals were subjected to unilateral lesions in the hind limb, the other limb serving as a control. The growth of the tibia was measured by calculating the difference between the length of the bone on a radiograph at the beginning of the experiment and the length of the dried bone after necropsy. The weights of the dried bones were compared. 2. In the young rabbit simple exposure of the common peroneal nerve, or division of the sural nerve, produced no change in the growth rate of the tibia. Division of both peroneal nerves, producing
After establishing anatomical feasibility, functional reconstruction to replace the anterolateral part of the deltoid was performed in 20 consecutive patients with irreversible deltoid
Knowledge on total knee arthroplasties (TKAs) in patients with a history of poliomyelitis is limited. This study compared implant survivorship and clinical outcomes among affected and unaffected limbs in patients with sequelae of poliomyelitis undergoing TKAs. A retrospective review of our total joint registry identified 94 patients with post-polio syndrome undergoing 116 primary TKAs between January 2000 and December 2019. The mean age was 70 years (33 to 86) with 56% males (n = 65) and a mean BMI of 31 kg/m2 (18 to 49). Rotating hinge TKAs were used in 14 of 63 affected limbs (22%), but not in any of the 53 unaffected limbs. Kaplan-Meier survivorship analyses were completed. The mean follow-up was eight years (2 to 19).Aims
Methods
We describe a case of bilateral weakness of the lower limbs, sensory disturbance and intermittent urinary incontinence, secondary to untreated Gitelman’s syndrome, in a 42-year-old female who was referred with presumed cauda equina syndrome. On examination, the power of both legs was uniformly reduced, and the perianal and lower-limb sensation was altered. However, MRI of the lumbar spine was normal. Measurements of serum and urinary potassium were low and blood gas analysis revealed metabolic alkalosis. Her symptoms resolved following potassium replacement. We emphasise the importance of measurement of the plasma and urinary levels of electrolytes in the investigation of patients with
Initial treatment of traumatic spinal cord injury remains as controversial in 2023 as it was in the early 19th century, when Sir Astley Cooper and Sir Charles Bell debated the merits or otherwise of surgery to relieve cord compression. There has been a lack of high-class evidence for early surgery, despite which expeditious intervention has become the surgical norm. This evidence deficit has been progressively addressed in the last decade and more modern statistical methods have been used to clarify some of the issues, which is demonstrated by the results of the SCI-POEM trial. However, there has never been a properly conducted trial of surgery versus active conservative care. As a result, it is still not known whether early surgery or active physiological management of the unstable injured spinal cord offers the better chance for recovery. Surgeons who care for patients with traumatic spinal cord injuries in the acute setting should be aware of the arguments on all sides of the debate, a summary of which this annotation presents. Cite this article:
This is a prospective study of 107 repairs of obstetric brachial plexus palsy carried out between January 1990 and December 1999. The results in 100 children are presented. In partial lesions operation was advised when
1. In ten healthy young men an experimental
1. It is possible that neonatal sciatic palsy occurs more often than is suggested by perusal of the literature:
1.
We analysed the cases of lumbar kyphosis in 151 (21%) of a series of 719 patients with myelomeningocele. Three different types were distinguished: paralytic, sharp-angled and congenital. In a cross-sectional and partly longitudinal study the size and magnitude of the kyphosis, the apex of the curve and the level of
1. The management of severe kyphosis of the lumbar spine in association with myelomeningocele is discussed. 2. Neonatal spinal osteotomy-resection has been performed in six patients with partial correction of the deformity and a greatly improved ease of closure and healing of the skin defect. The severity of lower limb
Two hundred and twenty-two adult crawling poliomyelitic cripples were investigated. Analysis showed that bilateral lower limb
1. The treatment of contractures at the hip secondary to poliomyelitis by Soutter's muscle slide or by Yount's fasciotomy gives excellent results. So does high femoral osteotomy, but it is not superior to the other two and should therefore be kept in reserve as a supplementary operation for the completion of correction of a deformity so gross as not to be wholly remediable by division of the soft parts. 2. Subluxation of the hip occurs only if the
1. Three cases of ganglion of the lateral popliteal nerve are reported, all of which were treated by resection of the nerve. 2. In none was a connection between the ganglion and the superior tibio-fibular joint seen. 3. A careful histological study suggests that the condition is one of simple ganglion arising in the supporting tissues of the nerve. 4. A search of the literature has revealed twelve reported cases. The clinical and operative findings, together with the results of treatment, have been reviewed. 5. The treatment of choice is dissection of the ganglion from the nerve. If this proves difficult because of the multiplicity of cysts, incision and evacuation of cyst contents should be performed, although recurrence is possible after this procedure. 6. The prognosis for recovery of function is good when
Medial humeral epicondyle fractures (MHEFs) are common elbow fractures in children. Open reduction should be performed in patients with MHEF who have entrapped intra-articular fragments as well as displacement. However, following open reduction, transposition of the ulnar nerve is disputed. The aim of this study is to evaluate the need for ulnar nerve exploration and transposition. This was a retrospective cohort study. The clinical data of patients who underwent surgical treatment of MHEF in our hospital from January 2015 to January 2022 were collected. The patients were allocated to either transposition or non-transposition groups. Data for sex, age, cause of fracture, duration of follow-up, Papavasiliou and Crawford classification, injury-to-surgery time, preoperative ulnar nerve symptoms, intraoperative exploration of ulnar nerve injury, surgical incision length, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative ulnar nerve symptoms, complications, persistent ulnar neuropathy, and elbow joint function were analyzed. Binary logistic regression analysis was used for statistical analysis.Aims
Methods
Children with spinal dysraphism can develop various musculoskeletal deformities, necessitating a range of orthopaedic interventions, causing significant morbidity, and making considerable demands on resources. This systematic review aimed to identify what outcome measures have been reported in the literature for children with spinal dysraphism who undergo orthopaedic interventions involving the lower limbs. A PROSPERO-registered systematic literature review was performed following PRISMA guidelines. All relevant studies published until January 2023 were identified. Individual outcomes and outcome measurement tools were extracted verbatim. The measurement tools were assessed for reliability and validity, and all outcomes were grouped according to the Outcome Measures Recommended for use in Randomized Clinical Trials (OMERACT) filters.Aims
Methods
Patients with differentiated thyroid carcinomas (DTCs) have a favourable long-term survival. Spinal metastases (SMs) cause a decline in performance status (PS), directly affecting mortality and indirectly preventing the use of systemic therapies. Metastasectomy is indicated, if feasible, as it yields the best local tumour control. Our study aimed to examine the long-term clinical outcomes of metastasectomy for SMs of thyroid carcinomas. We collected data on 22 patients with DTC (16 follicular and six papillary carcinomas) and one patient with medullary carcinoma who underwent complete surgical resection of SMs at our institution between July 1992 and July 2017, with a minimum postoperative follow-up of five years. The cancer-specific survival (CSS) from the first spinal metastasectomy to death or the last follow-up was determined using Kaplan-Meier analysis. Potential factors associated with survival were evaluated using the log-rank test. We analyzed the clinical parameters and outcome data, including pre- and postoperative disability (Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group PS 3), lung and non-spinal bone metastases, and history of radioiodine and kinase inhibitor therapies.Aims
Methods
Hip fractures are a major cause of morbidity and mortality, and malnutrition is a crucial determinant of these outcomes. This meta-analysis aims to determine whether oral nutritional supplementation (ONS) improves postoperative outcomes in older patients with a hip fracture. A systematic literature search was conducted in August 2022. ONS was defined as high protein-based diet strategies containing (or not containing) carbohydrates, fat, vitamins, and minerals. Randomized trials documenting ONS in older patients with hip fracture (aged ≥ 50 years) were included. Two reviewers evaluated study eligibility, conducted data extraction, and assessed study quality.Aims
Methods
Midline prolapse of a disc causing compression of the cauda equina is rare but needs urgent diagnosis and surgical treatment. The onset of bladder and rectal
Repeated lumbar spine surgery has been associated with inferior clinical outcomes. This study aimed to examine and quantify the impact of this association in a national clinical register cohort. This is a population-based study from the Norwegian Registry for Spine surgery (NORspine). We included 26,723 consecutive cases operated for lumbar spinal stenosis or lumbar disc herniation from January 2007 to December 2018. The primary outcome was the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), presented as the proportions reaching a patient-acceptable symptom state (PASS; defined as an ODI raw score ≤ 22) and ODI raw and change scores at 12-month follow-up. Secondary outcomes were the Global Perceived Effect scale, the numerical rating scale for pain, the EuroQoL five-dimensions health questionnaire, occurrence of perioperative complications and wound infections, and working capability. Binary logistic regression analysis was conducted to examine how the number of previous operations influenced the odds of not reaching a PASS.Aims
Methods
1. The results of a three-year study of recovery in 3,033 lower limb muscles and 1,905 upper limb muscles in 142 patients are presented. 2. The rate of recovery of partly paralysed muscles is the same in all muscles and muscle groups in the lower or upper limb. Clinical differences in the ability of individual muscles to recover depend upon the proportions of their number that remain permanently paralysed. 3. The rate of recovery is slowest in adults and most rapid in young children. 4. The amount of further recovery to be expected in a muscle can be predicted from a knowledge of its grade at any time after one month from the onset of the
The aim of this study was to investigate whether the type of cervical disc herniation influences the severity of symptoms at the time of presentation, and the outcome after surgical treatment. The type and extent of disc herniation at the time of presentation in 108 patients who underwent anterior discectomy for cervical radiculopathy were analyzed on MRI, using a four-point scale. These were dichotomized into disc bulge and disc herniation groups. Clinical outcomes were evaluated using the Neck Disability Index (NDI), 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36), and a visual analogue scale (VAS) for pain in the neck and arm at baseline and two years postoperatively. The perceived recovery was also assessed at this time.Aims
Methods
1. The claw position of a finger with intrinsic
Multiple secondary surgical procedures of the shoulder, such as soft-tissue releases, tendon transfers, and osteotomies, are described in brachial plexus birth palsy (BPBP) patients. The long-term functional outcomes of these procedures described in the literature are inconclusive. We aimed to analyze the literature looking for a consensus on treatment options. A systematic literature search in healthcare databases (PubMed, Embase, the Cochrane library, CINAHL, and Web of Science) was performed from January 2000 to July 2020, according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis guidelines. The quality of the included studies was assessed with the Cochrane ROBINS-I risk of bias tool. Relevant trials studying BPBP with at least five years of follow-up and describing functional outcome were included.Aims
Methods
1. The intrinsic
Aims. The aim of this study is to introduce and investigate the efficacy
and feasibility of a new vertebral osteotomy technique, vertebral
column decancellation (VCD), for rigid thoracolumbar kyphotic deformity
(TLKD) secondary to ankylosing spondylitis (AS). . Patients and Methods. We took 39 patients from between January 2009 and January 2013
(26 male, 13 female, mean age 37.4 years, 28 to 54) with AS and
a TLKD who underwent VCD (VCD group) and compared their outcome
with 45 patients (31 male, 14 female, mean age 34.8 years, 23 to
47) with AS and TLKD, who underwent pedicle subtraction osteotomy
(PSO group), according to the same selection criteria. The technique
of VCD was performed at single vertebral level in the thoracolumbar
region of AS patients according to classification of AS kyphotic
deformity. Pre- and post-operative chin-brow vertical angle (CBVA),
sagittal vertical axis (SVA) and sagittal Cobb angle in the thoracolumbar
region were reviewed in the VCD and PSO groups. Intra- , post-operative
and general complications were analysed in both group. Results. lf patients could lie on their backs and walk with horizontal
vision and sagittal profile, radiographic parameters improved significantly
post-operatively in both groups. No major acute complications such
as death or complete
To report the outcome of spinal deformity correction through anterior spinal fusion in wheelchair-bound patients with myelomeningocele. We reviewed 12 consecutive patients (7M:5F; mean age 12.4 years (9.2 to 16.8)) including demographic details, spinopelvic parameters, surgical correction, and perioperative data. We assessed the impact of surgery on patient outcomes using the Spina Bifida Spine Questionnaire and a qualitative questionnaire.Aims
Methods
The outcome following the development of neurological complications after corrective surgery for scoliosis varies from full recovery to a permanent deficit. This study aimed to assess the prognosis and recovery of major neurological deficits in these patients, and to determine the risk factors for non-recovery, at a minimum follow-up of two years. A major neurological deficit was identified in 65 of 8,870 patients who underwent corrective surgery for scoliosis, including eight with complete paraplegia and 57 with incomplete paraplegia. There were 23 male and 42 female patients. Their mean age was 25.0 years (SD 16.3). The aetiology of the scoliosis was idiopathic (n = 6), congenital (n = 23), neuromuscular (n = 11), neurofibromatosis type 1 (n = 6), and others (n = 19). Neurological function was determined by the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) impairment scale at a mean follow-up of 45.4 months (SD 17.2). the patients were divided into those with recovery and those with no recovery according to the ASIA scale during follow-up.Aims
Methods
We present our experience of managing patients
with iatropathic brachial plexus injury after delayed fixation of
a fracture of the clavicle. It is a retrospective cohort study of
patients treated at our peripheral nerve injury unit and a single
illustrative case report. We identified 21 patients in whom a brachial
plexus injury occurred as a direct consequence of fixation of a
fracture of the clavicle between September 2000 and September 2011. The predominant injury involved the C5/C6 nerves, upper trunk,
lateral cord and the suprascapular nerve. In all patients, the injured
nerve was found to be tethered to the under surface of the clavicle
by scar tissue at the site of the fracture and was usually associated
with pathognomonic neuropathic pain and
The aim of this study was to assess the reliability of using MRI scans to calculate the Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) in patients with metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC). A total of 100 patients were retrospectively included in the study. The SINS score was calculated from each patient’s MRI and CT scans by two consultant musculoskeletal radiologists (reviewers 1 and 2) and one consultant spinal surgeon (reviewer 3). In order to avoid potential bias in the assessment, MRI scans were reviewed first. Bland-Altman analysis was used to identify the limits of agreement between the SINS scores from the MRI and CT scans for the three reviewers.Aims
Methods
To investigate the impact of the Charlson and Elixhauser comorbidity indices on patient-reported outcomes measures (PROMs) following shoulder arthroplasty. Patients undergoing total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA), reverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA), or hemiarthroplasty (HA) from 2016 to 2018 were identified, along with the Charlson and Elixhauser comorbidities listed as their secondary diagnoses in the electronic medical records. Patients were matched to our institution’s registry to obtain their PROMs, including shoulder-specific (American Shoulder and Elbow Society (ASES) and Shoulder Activity Scale (SAS)) and general health scales (12-Item Short Form Survey (SF-12) and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System-Pain Interference). Linear regression models adjusting for age and sex were used to evaluate the association between increasing number of comorbidities and PROM scores. A total of 1,817 shoulder arthroplasties were performed: 1,017 (56%) TSA, 726 (40%) RSA, and 74 (4%) HA. The mean age was 67 years (SD 10), and 936 (52%) of the patients were female.Aims
Methods
A case of anterior interosseous neuritis due to compression of the nerve over an abnormally large tendon of origin of the flexor digitorum profundus is described. Excision of the band relieved the
The oldest texts describing infantile
Contracture of the iliotibial band leading to flexion and abduction deformity at the hip is common in residual
We report a case in which compartment syndrome and tourniquet
Six patients, aged between 3 and 51 years, with tuberculosis of the upper cervical spine were studied. Prominent features of the disease included pain and stiffness,
1. Three cases of Colles's fracture complicated by ulnar nerve
1. Six patients suffering from spontaneous posterior interosseous
1. A technique of arthrodesis of the trapezio-metacarpal joint of the thumb is described. Primary fusion was achieved in thirty-six of thirty-nine cases. 2. Compensatory movement at the adjacent joints permits a good range of thumb movement. 3. Trapezio-metacarpal arthrodesis is the operation of choice for patients under fifty with isolated osteoarthritis of this joint. It is also useful for stabilising the thumb in patients with
1. The indications for and technique of posterior iliopsoas transplantation are described with particular reference to paralytic dislocation and subluxation of the hip in children. 2. Experience of 150 operations in ninety-five patients and of the long-term results of forty-one operations are given. 3. Reduction of the dislocation has been maintained in every case even when there was complete
A three-month-old girl presented with a massive abdominal tumour arising from the right lumbar region. Microscopic examination of a biopsy specimen showed a typical neuroblastoma. No treatment was given except that necessary symptomatically for
Thirty-two operations on the common peroneal nerve for leprous neuritis are reported. A combined medical and surgical approach to treatment is recommended, and the technique of operation is described. Recovery of motor power was satisfactory but depended on many factors, including the duration of the neuritis, the extent of the compression, the immunopathological status of the patient and the efficacy of medical treatment. The main indication for neurolysis is hyperalgesic neuritis. The only contraindication is painless long-standing
Paraplegia occurred in an adolescent girl with osteogenesis imperfecta after chiropractic manipulation. The child had been able to walk freely out of doors. Complete motor
1. The tarsal tunnel syndrome is a clinical entity and is probably more often encountered than is recognised. 2. The cause is unknown but is probably like that responsible for the carpal tunnel syndrome. Experimental evidence suggests that the sensory symptoms in both these conditions are due to localised ischaemia of the nerve within the fibro-osseous tunnels, and that later structural changes are responsible for motor