1. A case of chondroblastoma occurring in the upper tibial epiphysis of the right leg of a girl aged fourteen is reported. 2. Because the tumour recurred the leg was amputated. 3. Pulmonary
A case is described of malignant osteoclastoma of the lower end of the femur in which death occurred from pulmonary
1. A case of primary intraosseous liposarcoma is described which was producing tumour bone (osteo-liposarcoma: malignant mesenchymoma) in the right fibula of a boy of fifteen. 2. Death occurred from pulmonary
Seven patients with Ewing's sarcoma of the pelvis were treated by chemotherapy followed by wide resection of the primary tumour. Although good function after operation is possible, survival in this series reflects the poor prognosis associated with the disease; two patients died, two are alive with local recurrence and
We describe a case of osteosarcoma of the scaphoid bone, which to our knowledge is only the second reported case of osteosarcoma in the carpus. A 38-year-old man complained of intense pain in the right wrist and had curettage and a bone graft for a lesion in the scaphoid. Histological examination showed this to be an osteosarcoma. Below-elbow amputation was performed and adjuvant chemotherapy given. There has been no evidence of recurrence or
1. Nine cases of haemangiopericytoma are described and the treatment is discussed. 2. Six of the patients had a recurrence of the tumour after local excision. 3. Four patients developed
1. Nine patients treated for osteogenic sarcoma by elective radical irradiation are reviewed. Five of the nine patients have survived for from three to fourteen years, but one patient has
In immature long bones, radical excision of malignant tumours of the metaphysis may necessitate sacrifice of the adjacent epiphysis. To preserve the adjacent joint while allowing a safe margin of excision, we used physeal distraction before removing the tumour. From July 1984 to August 1992, we operated on 20 patients by this method. After a mean follow-up of 54 months there was no local recurrence in the epiphyseal region. Three patients had developed pulmonary
We have reviewed 20 cases of parosteal osteosarcoma treated by wide local resection and prosthetic replacement and followed up for six to 17 years. Limb function was excellent in 85%. One patient with grade III histological disease developed pulmonary
1. Two girls with non-familial osteogenesis imperfecta who subsequently developed osteosarcoma of the femur are described. One is of special interest in that there were multiple bone
A study of cadaveric vertebral biopsy and a review of 100 clinical biopsies has shown that needles and trephines producing tissue specimens of two millimetres or more in diameter can be expected to give a high degree of diagnostic accuracy. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was a more useful screening investigation than were estimations of serum alkaline phosphatase. The complications are described. It is suggested that patients with painful thoracic
1. Secondary tumours in bone are common in Uganda. 2. Of the five tumours which often give rise to bone
Giant-cell tumours of the sacrum are difficult to treat. Surgery carries a high risk of morbidity, local recurrence and mortality. Radiation is effective in some patients, but has a risk of malignant change. We evaluated the effectiveness of serial arterial embolisation as an alternative to surgery. Five patients with giant-cell tumours of the sacrum which had been primarily treated by serial embolisation were retrospectively reviewed for changes in the size of the tumour. In four the symptoms resolved with full return of function and arrest in the growth of the tumour. They remained free from growth, recurrence, or
We assessed the results of 17 limb-salvage procedures using osteoarticular allografts after wide resection of high-grade malignant bone tumours. All patients received chemotherapy. At the five-year follow-up, three patients had died from
Endoprosthetic replacement of the proximal humerus has been performed in our unit on 25 occasions between 1950 and 1982. The indication for surgery was destruction of the proximal half of the humerus so extensive that the only alternatives were reconstruction or amputation. Of the patients with tumours two died from
Although an osteosarcoma appears to be a solitary lesion clinically, as in this instance, only routine radiographic skeletal survey in such cases will detect multiple osseous involvement. Ross (1964) reported that in ninety-eight cases of osteosarcoma arising in apparently normal bone, fifteen showed
We have used total hip replacement combined with cemented intramedullary nailing to treat a selected group of nine patients with pathological fractures of the proximal femur and impending fractures of the shaft due to