We have reviewed 37 patients under the age of 18 years with lesions of the lumbar posterior end plate. All but one were active in sport, and most were seen because of low back pain. An abnormality was commonly found at the inferior rim of the body of L4 and at the superior rim of the sacrum. All adjacent intervertebral discs showed a decrease of signal intensity on the T2-weighted MRI. In 12 patients there was no interposed tissue at the posterior end-plate lesions. When disc material had migrated posteriorly none protruded beyond the posterior margin of the end plate, the dissociated portion of which was the main element compressing neural tissue. The posterior end-plate lesion should be regarded as a vertebral non-articular osteochondrosis.
We studied the precise role of the fracture haematoma in healing by the experimental transplantation of the haematoma at two days and four days after fracture of the rat femur to subperiosteal and intramuscular sites. We used bone marrow and peripheral blood haematomas for control experiments. The transplanted two-day fracture haematoma produced new bone by endochondral ossification at the subperiosteal site, but not at the intramuscular site. Four-day fracture haematoma produced new bone formation at both subperiosteal and intramuscular sites. These results suggest that fracture haematoma has an inherent osteogenetic potential.