In cases of severe periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) of the knee, salvage procedures such as knee arthrodesis (KA) or above-knee amputation (AKA) must be considered. As both treatments result in limitations in quality of life (QoL), we aimed to compare outcomes and factors influencing complication rates, mortality, and mobility. Patients with PJI of the knee and subsequent KA or AKA between June 2011 and May 2021 were included. Demographic data, comorbidities, and patient history were analyzed. Functional outcomes and QoL were prospectively assessed in both groups with additional treatment-specific scores after AKA. Outcomes, complications, and mortality were evaluated.Aims
Methods
We report our experience with glenohumeral arthrodesis
as a salvage procedure for epilepsy-related recurrent shoulder instability.
A total of six patients with epilepsy underwent shoulder fusion
for recurrent instability and were followed up for a mean of 39 months
(12 to 79). The mean age at the time of surgery was 31 years (22
to 38).
1.
Forty-one arthrodeses of the shoulder in thirty-nine patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis (thirty women, nine men) have been reviewed. Using internal fixation and external splints the position of the shoulder was maintained in 55 degrees of abduction, 25 degrees of horizontal flexion and enough internal rotation to allow the patient to reach the mouth. The mean period of immobilisation in a thoracobrachial splint was nine weeks, and 90 per cent of the shoulders had solid bony fusion at review. After arthrodesis the total range of scapulothoracic movement improved by about 60 per cent, giving results rated as excellent in fifteen cases (36 per cent), as good in thirteen (32 per cent) and as fair in thirteen (32 per cent).
Plate and screw fixation has been the standard treatment for painful conditions of the wrist in non-rheumatoid patients in recent decades. We investigated the complications, re-operations, and final outcome in a consecutive series of patients who underwent wrist arthrodesis for non-inflammatory arthritis. A total of 76 patients, including 53 men and 23 women, with a mean age of 50 years (21 to 79) underwent wrist arthrodesis. Complications and re-operations were recorded. At a mean follow-up of 11 years (2 to 18), 63 patients completed questionnaires, and 57 attended for clinical and radiological assessment.Aims
Patients and Methods
Improvements in functional results and long-term survival are variable following conversion of hip fusion to total hip arthroplasty (THA) and complications are high. The aim of the study was to analyze the clinical and functional results in patients who underwent conversion of hip fusion to THA using a consistent technique and uncemented implants. A total of 39 hip fusion conversions to THA were undertaken in 38 patients by a single surgeon employing a consistent surgical technique and uncemented implants. Parameters assessed included Harris Hip Score (HHS) for function, range of motion (ROM), leg length discrepancy (LLD), satisfaction, and use of walking aid. Radiographs were reviewed for loosening, subsidence, and heterotopic ossification (HO). Postoperative complications and implant survival were assessed.Aims
Methods
Children treated for osteosarcoma around the knee often have
a substantial leg-length discrepancy at skeletal maturity. The aim
of this study was to investigate the results of staged skeletal
reconstruction after a leg lengthening procedure using an external
fixator in these patients. We reviewed 11 patients who underwent staged reconstruction with
either an arthroplasty (n = 6) or an arthrodesis (n = 5). A control
group of 11 patients who had undergone wide excision and concurrent
reconstruction with an arthroplasty were matched for gender, location,
and size of tumour. We investigated the change in leg-length discrepancy,
function as assessed by the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society Scale
(MSTS) score and complications.Aims
Patients and Methods
Postoperative rehabilitation regimens following ankle arthrodesis vary considerably. A systematic review was conducted to determine the evidence for weightbearing recommendations following ankle arthrodesis, and to compare outcomes between different regimens. MEDLINE, Web of Science, Embase, and Scopus databases were searched for studies reporting outcomes following ankle arthrodesis, in which standardized postoperative rehabilitation regimens were employed. Eligible studies were grouped according to duration of postoperative nonweightbearing: zero to one weeks (group A), two to three weeks (group B), four to five weeks (group C), or six weeks or more (group D). Outcome data were pooled and compared between groups. Outcomes analyzed included union rates, time to union, clinical scores, and complication rates.Aims
Patients and Methods
We retrospectively evaluated eight patients who underwent arthrodesis of the knee using cannulated screws. There were six women and two men, with a mean age of 53 years. The indications for arthrodesis were failed total knee arthroplasty, septic arthritis, tuberculosis, and recurrent persistent infection. Solid union was achieved in all patients at a mean of 6.1 months. One patient required autogenous bone graft for delayed union. One suffered skin necrosis which was treated with skin grafting. The mean limb-length discrepancy was 3.1 cm. On a visual analogue scale, the mean pain score improved from 7.9 to 3.3. According to the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome score quality of life items, the mean score improved from 38.3 pre-operatively to 76.6 at follow-up. Cannulated screws provide a high rate of union in arthrodesis of the knee with minimal complications, patient convenience, and a simple surgical technique.
This retrospective cohort study compared the results of vascularised
and non-vascularised anterior sliding tibial grafts for the treatment
of osteoarthritis (OA)of the ankle secondary to osteonecrosis of
the talus. We reviewed the clinical and radiological outcomes of 27 patients
who underwent arthrodesis with either vascularised or non-vascularised
(conventional) grafts, comparing the outcomes (clinical scores,
proportion with successful union and time to union) between the
two groups. The clinical outcome was assessed using the Mazur and
American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) ankle-hindfoot
scores. The mean follow-up was 35 months (24 to 68).Aims
Patients and Methods
We present a series of 16 patients treated between 1993 and 2006 who had a failed total ankle replacement converted to an arthrodesis using bone grafting with internal fixation. We used tricortical autograft from the iliac crest to preserve the height of the ankle, the malleoli and the subtalar joint. A successful arthrodesis was achieved at a mean of three months (1.5 to 4.5) in all patients except one, with rheumatoid arthritis and severe bone loss, who developed a nonunion and required further fixation with an intramedullary nail at one year after surgery, before obtaining satisfactory fusion. The post-operative American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society score improved to a mean of 70 (41 to 87) with good patient satisfaction. From this series and an extensive review of the literature we have found that rates of fusion after failed total ankle replacement in patients with degenerative arthritis are high. We recommend our method of arthrodesis in this group of patients. A higher rate of nonunion is associated with rheumatoid arthritis which should be treated differently.
In a prospective randomised study 31 patients were allocated to either arthrodesis or Mayo resection of the first metatarsophalangeal joint as part of a total reconstruction of the rheumatoid forefoot. Of these, 29 were re-examined after a mean of 72 months (57 to 80), the Foot Function Index was scored and any deformity measured. Load distribution was analysed using a Fscan mat in 14 cases, and time and distance were measured in 12 of these patients using a 3D Motion system. We found excellent patient satisfaction and a significant, lasting reduction of the Foot Function Index, with no statistically significant differences between the groups. There were no significant differences in recurrence of the deformity, the need for special shoes, gait velocity, step length, plantar moment, mean pressure or the position of the centre of force under the forefoot. The cadence was higher and the stance phase shorter in the fusion group. These results suggest that a Mayo resection may be an equally good option for managing the first metatarsophalangeal joint in reconstruction of the rheumatoid forefoot.
Total wrist arthrodesis (TWA) produces a spectrum of outcomes.
We investigated this by reviewing 77 consecutive TWA performed for
inflammatory and post-traumatic arthropathies, wrist instability
and as a salvage procedure. All operations were performed by a single surgeon using a specifically
designed pre-contoured dorsally applied non-locking wrist arthrodesis
plate at a single centre. Aims
Patients and Methods
Few reports compare the contribution of the talonavicular articulation
to overall range of movement in the sagittal plane after total ankle
arthroplasty (TAA) and tibiotalar arthrodesis. The purpose of this
study was to assess changes in ROM and functional outcomes following
tibiotalar arthrodesis and TAA. Patients who underwent isolated tibiotalar arthrodesis or TAA
with greater than two-year follow-up were enrolled in the study.
Overall arc of movement and talonavicular movement in the sagittal
plane were assessed with weight-bearing lateral maximum dorsiflexion
and plantarflexion radiographs. All patients completed Short Form-12
version 2.0 questionnaires, visual analogue scale for pain (VAS)
scores, and the Foot and Ankle Ability Measure (FAAM).Aims
Patients and Methods
A consecutive series of 23 patients (25 ankles) with osteoarthritis of the ankle and severe varus or valgus deformity were treated by open arthrodesis using compression screws. Primary union was achieved in 24 ankles one required further surgery to obtain a solid fusion. The high level of satisfaction in this group of patients reinforces the view that open arthrodesis, as opposed to ankle replacement or arthroscopic arthrodesis, continues to be the treatment of choice when there is severe varus or valgus deformity associated with the arthritis.
1. This report defines the indications, and describes in detail a technique for atlanto-axial arthrodesis. Open reduction, with wire fixation and bone grafting, achieves the objective of immediate stabilisation of an unstable C. 1-2 articulation. 2. The method is illustrated by fifteen consecutive patients who had atlanto-axial arthrodesis. fourteen of whom had excellent results. 3. When the indications are correct, atlanto-axial arthrodesis by the method described is a safe and effective procedure having an excellent success rate.
1. A method of arthrodesis of the ankle is described which combines the compression principle of Charnley with the medial approach to the joint described by Pridie. 2. Fusion occurred promptly in seventeen out of nineteen cases. In one case fusion was delayed, and in one case there was failure of fusion.
1. Sixty-nine patients with degenerative disease of the hip joint were treated by intra-articular arthrodesis using secure internal fixation. External fixation with plaster was not used and the patients were mobilised on crutches after a mean interval of 3·2 weeks. Radiologically evident bony union occurred in 87 per cent of cases. Among the nine patients (13 per cent) who failed to show union only three complained of persistence of severe symptoms. 2. The only significant complication was fracture of the upper femoral shaft in three cases (4·3 per cent). However, this has not occurred since a small plate was used in addition to the nail. 3. The disadvantages of the routine use of plaster fixation are discussed and are contrasted with the advantages of early mobilisation without plaster. 4. Whereas this series does not show a rate of fusion as good as that in the best reported series, it supports the view that arthrodesis of the hip offers the most certain, reliable and efficient means of treatment for severe unilateral degenerative disease of that joint.
It will be seen that the proportion of successful fusions in this series of ninety-five patients treated by ischio-femoral arthrodesis of the hip was over 80 per cent. Similar percentages of successful fusion have been reported by Knight (1945), Freiberg (1946), Langston (1947), and Nisbet, who was resident surgical officer at the Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital, and informed me in a personal communication that he had carried out twenty-six operations with an approximate fusion rate of 80 per cent. He stated: "It is the only operation which gives a reasonable chance of a successful arthrodesis in children. Up till now at Oswestry the chances of a fusion by the other methods in children have proved so disappointing that the operation had been abandoned. Dame Agnes Hunt, with her vast experience of the condition, was always very annoyed when she found a surgeon trying to fuse a child's hip. All this has been changed."
A combined anterior and posterior surgical approach
is generally recommended in the treatment of severe congenital kyphosis,
despite the fact that the anterior vascular supply of the spine
and viscera are at risk during exposure. The aim of this study was
to determine whether the surgical treatment of severe congenital thoracolumbar
kyphosis through a single posterior approach is feasible, safe and
effective. We reviewed the records of ten patients with a mean age of 11.1
years (5.4 to 14.1) who underwent surgery either by pedicle subtraction
osteotomy or by vertebral column resection with instrumented fusion
through a single posterior approach. The mean kyphotic deformity improved from 59.9° (45° to 110°)
pre-operatively to 17.5° (3° to 40°) at a mean follow-up of 47.0
months (29 to 85). Spinal cord monitoring was used in all patients
and there were no complications during surgery. These promising
results indicate the possible advantages of the described technique
over the established procedures. We believe that surgery should
be performed in case of documented progression and before structural
secondary curves develop. Our current strategy after documented
progression is to recommend surgery at the age of five years and
when 90% of the diameter of the spinal canal has already developed. Cite this article:
Transarticular screw fixation with autograft
is an established procedure for the surgical treatment of atlantoaxial instability.
Removal of the posterior arch of C1 may affect the rate of fusion.
This study assessed the rate of atlantoaxial fusion using transarticular
screws with or without removal of the posterior arch of C1. We reviewed
30 consecutive patients who underwent atlantoaxial fusion with a
minimum follow-up of two years. In 25 patients (group A) the posterior
arch of C1 was not excised (group A) and in five it was (group B).
Fusion was assessed on static and dynamic radiographs. In selected
patients CT imaging was also used to assess fusion and the position
of the screws. There were 15 men and 15 women with a mean age of
51.2 years (23 to 77) and a mean follow-up of 7.7 years (2 to 11.6).
Stable union with a solid fusion or a stable fibrous union was achieved
in 29 patients (97%). In Group A, 20 patients (80%) achieved a solid
fusion, four (16%) a stable fibrous union and one (4%) a nonunion.
In Group B, stable union was achieved in all patients, three having
a solid fusion and two a stable fibrous union. There was no statistically
significant difference between the status of fusion in the two groups.
Complications were noted in 12 patients (40%); these were mainly
related to the screws, and included malpositioning and breakage.
The presence of an intact or removed posterior arch of C1 did not
affect the rate of fusion in patients with atlantoaxial instability
undergoing C1/C2 fusion using transarticular screws and autograft. Cite this article:
1. A study is presented of 286 extra-articular subtalar arthrodeses done during the years 1958 to 1965 on 258 patients with pes calcaneo-valgus, pes planovalgus, pes varus or flail foot. 2. Certain changes in the surgical technique originally presented by Grice have been made. We have applied the arthrodesis not only to valgus feet but also to varus feet, and we have described the details of the surgical technique as used on the varus foot. 3. In none of our cases was there failure of fusion or reabsorption of the graft. The unsatisfactory results (239 per cent) were caused by residual varus or valgus deformity of the foot.
1. A modification of the Grice extra-articular subtalar arthrodesis is described. 2. The results of this operation are presented.
1. A series of twenty-three compression arthrodeses of the shoulder are reviewed. 2. The review demonstrates compression arthrodesis to be an excellent method of obtaining bony fusion of the shoulder. 3. The consistent success in achieving arthrodesis, in what is to be considered a difficult joint to fuse, is significant in the theory of compression arthrodesis, because the shoulder offers a more perfect example of compression arthrodesis than the knee in that the element of absolute fixation is less obvious.
1. The results of compression arthrodesis of the ankle performed on fifty-five patients (four bilateral) are presented. 2. Fifty per cent of these ankles were immobilised for a total period of no more than eight weeks. 3. Bony fusion occurred in 91 per cent. 4. The subjective result was good or excellent in 88 per cent. 5. The theoretical disadvantages of the transverse incision are not serious in practice. 6. The best position for arthrodesis of the ankle is at, or close to, the right angle.
One hundred cases of Lambrinudi's arthrodesis are reviewed. The shortest follow-up was one year. and the longest twenty-seven years. Thirty-seven per cent were successful. Nineteen per cent were failures; many of these were associated with faulty technique, and one method of operation which gives good results is described. Success is likely if there is a balance of power between the dorsiflexors and plantarflexors of the ankle, especially if there is some fixed equinus before operation. Success is less likely when the operation is done for a flail foot. In such circumstances arthrodesis of the ankle may have to be considered subsequently for instability of the lateral ligament, recurrence of dropfoot, or arthritis which may develop in the more active patients. Age in itself is no bar to success, but pseudarthrosis is more likely to occur in patients over the age of twenty.
1. A simple and effective method of wrist arthrodesis is described. Originally designed for the correction of flexion deformity of the wrist, it is useful also as a routine method of wrist fusion. 2. The results in nineteen cases are reviewed.
A method of intra-articular arthrodesis of the hip is described in which fixation is obtained with a lag-screw. Two main advantages are claimed: first, that it is a compression arthrodesis and gives early bony fusion; and second, that it gives adequate internal fixation in most cases so that the disadvantages of a plaster hip spica are avoided, and the patient may walk with crutches two or three weeks after the operation. The results were satisfactory in forty-seven of the first fifty cases in which this method of arthrodesis was employed. There were two post-operative deaths and one failure to secure fusion in a case of massive necrosis of the femoral head.
The technique of the transfibular approach for arthrodesis of the ankle joint is described. The results of this operation in a series of thirty cases shows that the procedure is reliable if the technique is carried out faithfully. The two cases in which a first operation failed can both be explained by errors of technique or after-treatment.
Correction of valgus deformity of the hindfoot using a medial approach for a triple fusion has only recently been described for patients with tight lateral soft tissues which would be compromised using the traditional lateral approach. We present a series of eight patients with fixed valgus deformity of the hindfoot who had correction by hindfoot fusion using this approach. In addition, we further extended the indications to allow concomitant ankle fusion. The medial approach allowed us to excise medial ulcers caused by the prominent medial bony structures, giving simultaneous correction of the deformity and successful internal fixation. We had no problems with primary wound healing and experienced no subsequent infection or wound breakdown. From a mean fixed valgus deformity of 58.8° (45° to 66°) pre-operatively, we achieved a mean post-operative valgus angulation of 13.6° (7° to 23°). All the feet were subsequently accommodated in shoes. The mean time to arthrodesis was 5.25 months (3 to 9). We therefore recommend the medial approach for the correction of severe fixed valgus hindfoot deformities.
The use of autograft bone is the best option
when undertaking a procedure that requires bone graft because it
is osteogenic, osteoconductive and osseo-inductive. Pain, morbidity
and complications associated with harvesting iliac or non-iliac
sites occur in between 6% and 30% of cases. An alternative source
of graft with possibly a lower morbidity is the intramedullary canal.
In this study, 28 patients undergoing 30 arthrodesis procedures
on the hindfoot had a mean of 48 cm3 (43 to 50) of bone
harvested locally from the hindfoot or the tibial shaft by antegrade or
retrograde reaming. No patient sustained a fracture of the calcaneum,
talus or tibia. There was no morbidity except for one complication
when the reamer breached the medial tibial cortex. This healed uneventfully. This method of using the reamer–irrigator–aspirator system is
an extension of the standard technique of intramedullary reaming
of the lower limb: it produces good-quality bone graft with viable
growth factors consistent with that of the iliac crest, and donor
site morbidity is low. This is an efficient method of obtaining
autologous bone for use in arthrodesis of the ankle or hindfoot.
We analysed the long-term results of arthrodesis of the shoulder after infection in 15 patients. At the time of operation, 14 cultures were positive for The complication rate was higher in patients with active sepsis but the younger the patient and the fewer number of previous operations (<
50 years, <
four previous operations), the better was the outcome. Considering the rate of complications, we recommend early surgery in these patients.
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 paralysis of the thumb when adequate muscles for transfer are not available.
1. The Batchelor method of subtalar fusion by a fibular graft inserted through the neck of the talus is described. 2. The results of the operation appear to be satisfactory.
1 . The results of compression arthrodesis of the hip have been studied in fifty-six patients. There was one post-operative death from pulmonary embolism on the tenth day. 2. Bony union for the whole series (fifty-five patients) was achieved in 76·4 per cent. Sound fibrous ankylosis, indistinguishable from bony union clinically and functionally, was achieved in 10·9 per cent. Residual movement occurred in 12·7 per cent. 3. Thirty-five patients were treated by the standard technique of eight weeks in plaster, followed by full weight bearing, irrespective of whether any movement was detected on clinical testing. 82·8 per cent achieved sound bony union; 5·7 per cent achieved sound fibrous ankylosis, and residual movement occurred in 11·4 per cent. 4. Ten patients were treated without plaster protection; six achieved bony union; three had sound fibrous ankylosis and one had residual movement. Healing was delayed in this group and there was more residual deformity. 5. 67·5 per cent of all patients recovered full knee range. Only one patient with reduced range had knee flexion of less than 90 degrees. Twenty-four of the thirty-five patients treated by the standard technique of eight weeks in plaster were examined. Fifteen had full knee movement; in only four was knee flexion less than 120 degrees and in no case was it less than 90 degrees. 6. Return to full activity was rapid. Sixty per cent of patients returned to work within six months and 80 per cent within nine months of surgery. Five of the six patients examined with residual movement in the hip joint were back at work within six months of surgery. 7. This study lends support to the view that arthrodesis of the hip, in the presence of normal function in the opposite hip, is compatible with vigorous and full activity.
1. The results of ischio-femoral arthrodesis for tuberculous arthritis of the hip in thirty-five adults and in twenty-nine children are reported. The "blind" technique of Brittain was used in thirteen patients and the open technique in fifty-one. 2. Bony fusion was obtained by the first operation in thirty-three out of the thirty-five adults and in twenty-three out of twenty-nine children. In children strikingly better results were gained from the posterior open technique than from the original "blind"technique of Brittain. 3. There was no evidence that ischio-femoral arthrodesis in children interfered with the growth of the limb.
The Brittain V-arthrodesis is a satisfactory procedure for osteoarthritis of the hip. It is particularly suitable for elderly patients when the range of hip flexion is less than 60 degrees. If the four deaths are excluded, two-thirds of the patients secured a sound bony fusion. This occurs slowly. All but one of the patients who survived for three years or more after operation had a sound bony fusion. It is evident that the operation, given time, yields a high rate of sound bony fusion in the hip. It seems likely that use of the McLaughlin nail plate would prevent the one serious complication, namely fracture of the shaft of the femur through or immediately below the drill hole made for the fibular graft.
1. A medial approach is preferred for arthrodesis of the wrist in reconstructive surgery because there is no interference with the extensor tendons. 2. The value of pre-operative assessment by a trial period in plaster is mentioned. 3. The technique of operation is described. 4. In the absence of active pronation, screwing the ulna to the radius in 45 degrees of pronation is advised. 5. The necessity for securing haemostasis before closing the wound is emphasised. 6. Thirty-four cases are reviewed. The shortest follow-up was one year and the longest twelve years. The result was satisfactory in all cases. Most patients were discharged from hospital after the plaster had been changed two weeks after operation. Union occurred in about sixteen weeks.
1. This is a simple clinical study of the end-results of arthrodesis of the hip joint in patients followed up and re-examined five to twenty-five years after operation. 2. The study was stimulated by our astonishment at recent reports which suggested that arthrodesis of the hip caused serious operative mortality, a high rate of wound infection, and failure of sound fusion in one of every two cases; and that even when sound fusion was gained there was always pain in the back and usually stiffness of the knee. To say that we were astonished puts it mildly. 3. This review includes 120 patients aged from ten to seventy years, treated for osteoarthritis of the hip joint by intra-articular arthrodesis with the internal fixation of a nail, usually with an iliac graft, and with immobilisation in plaster for not less than four months. 4. Of these 120 patients there was sound fusion of the joint, proved radiographically, in 94 per cent; a mortality of nil; and recovery of free movement of the knee joint to the right angle or far beyond in 91·5 per cent. Almost half of the patients regained normal movement, the heel touching the buttock. Only in eight patients was there less than right-angled flexion. 5. There was no pain in the backânone whateverâin 64 per cent of the patients. In 36 per cent there was some pain or discomfort. One alone said that the low back pain was worse than before the operation. Many others said that pain in the back had been relieved by the operation. 6. It is emphasised that these results were gained only from sound fixation of the joint in the mid-position with neutral rotation, no more abduction than is needed to correct true shortening, and no more flexion of the joint than that with which the patient lies on the table. The limb was immobilised in plaster for at least four months after operation. The stiff knee was mobilised by the patient's own exercise without passive stretching, force or manipulation. 7. Two other groups of patients are considered. There are fourteen treated by fixation of the joint with nail alone, an operation that was never intended to arthrodese the joint and which has long since been abandoned. The other small group is that of patients with old unreduced traumatic dislocation of the hip, a procedure in which the risks of operation are so great and the number of successful results so small as to dissuade us from attempting operative reduction. 8. After successful arthrodesis of the hip joint patients can return to every household activity and every recreation including ski-ing, mountaineering, rock climbing, or whatever else they want.
1. The usual methods of posterior arthrodesis of the lumbo-sacral joint are not satisfactory in cases in which laminectomy has been performed. 2. Estimation of fusion by mobility radiographs is unreliable and cannot distinguish between fibrous ankylosis and bony fusion. 3. Bone grafts inserted from behind between the vertebral bodies almost invariably fail to become incorporated. 4. Intertransverse arthrodesis has given promising results and is probably the best method available at present.
1. The indications for ischio-femoral arthrodesis are considered. 2. The technique of operation through an open posterior approach is described. 3. Indications for the modified Trumble operation are given. 4. The results of ischio-femoral arthrodesis in a series of forty-seven patients (mostly suffering from tuberculous hip disease) are presented. 5. The writers consider that ischio-femoral arthrodesis is the operation of choice in tuberculous disease of the hip, especially in children.