We report the clinical and radiological outcome
of
Options for the treatment of
1. Practical experience has shown that
We reviewed prospectively, after skeletal maturity, a series of 24 patients (25 hips) with severe acute-on-chronic slipped capital femoral epiphysis which had been treated by
Quantitative polarised light microscopy was applied to sections of unfixed, undecalcified bone taken at operation from patients with two types of proximal femoral fracture,
We report a prospective study of 198 cases of
Between 1999 and 2005, 10 264 patients who had undergone total hip replacement (THR) for
Articular cartilage from the femoral heads of 27 patients having an arthroplasty for
The results of primary total hip arthroplasty for sub-capital femoral neck fracture in previously normal hips are reported. Thirty-seven patients aged 70 or less at the time of surgery were reviewed at an average follow-up of 56 months. Eighteen (49%) had undergone or were awaiting revision surgery. A further four (11%) had definite radiological signs of loosening. Harris hip scores were calculated and correlated well with the results of gait analysis; these suggested that it was the more vigorous patients that were more liable to early failure. Consequently, primary total hip replacement is not recommended for
The management of displaced
This abridged account of a report to the British Medical Research Council describes a long-term investigation of 1,503
1. The long-term results in a consecutive series of 323 healed
Between December 1982 and June 1986, 98 displaced
A retrospective study of 200 cases of
1. Ten cases are reported of
We report a prospective study of the influence of various factors on the six-month mortality of 531 patients with
Ten cases of a complication of Garden screw fixation of
In a 10-year prospective study, 561 displaced
One hundred and twenty-seven consecutive patients with displaced
A prospective randomised trial of surgical treatment for the displaced