All elderly patients with extracapsular hip fractures seen in hospitals in Newcastle upon Tyne over a 12-month period were studied and followed up for six months. At one of the hospitals, patients were randomised to treatment by AO dynamic hip-screw or by traction. Complications specific to the two treatments were low, and general complications, six-month mortality and prevalence of pain, leg swelling and unhealed sores, showed no difference between the two modes of treatment. Operative treatment gave better anatomical results and a shorter hospital stay, but significantly more of the patients treated by traction showed loss of independence six months after injury.
A prospective study to investigate changes in the rib hump or rib deformity after correction of the lateral curvature in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis is reported. The operative treatment for 47 patients was by a Harrington distraction rod and posterior fusion. Before operation and at follow-up, measurements of the Cobb angle, of vertebral rotation, and of the rib deformity were taken. Despite operative correction of the lateral curve, there was a progression of the rib deformity in 64% of the cases after four years. Correction of the lateral curve may thus have no effect on vertebral rotation and cannot be guaranteed to effect a permanent reduction of the rib hump.
A simple modification of Gallie's subtalar fusion is described as a salvage procedure in treating patients with pain from old fractures of the calcaneous involving the subtalar joint. Graft bone for the fusion is taken from the outer half of the calcaneus, thus avoiding disturbance of the tibia or iliac crest. Collapse of the donor site helps to narrow the widened heel present in these patients. The posterior approach allows the peroneal tendons to be freed from any adhesions, and at the same time release of the calcaneo-fibular ligament permits some correction of the valgus of the heel. The early results in six patients have been encouraging.
1. One hundred and forty-nine cases of leontiasis ossea reported in the literature have been reviewed. 2. The clinical, radiographic and pathological features of the condition are discussed. 3. Four additional personal cases are reported in detail. 4. A new classification of leontiasis ossea is suggested, by which the condition is divided into 5. Classified in this way, ninety-seven of the total of 153 cases considered were classified as true leontiasis (forty-five Type 1 and fifty-two Type 2); forty were classified as false leontiasis; and sixteen did not fall into either category.