1. A lesion of the median nerve after reduction of a dislocated
A 10-year-old boy who sustained a fracture through a cyst in the ulna later developed a pseudarthrosis. During 13 years' follow-up the characteristic short bowed forearm developed but, instead of the more usual spontaneous dislocation of the head of the radius, the patient also developed the previously unreported complication of osteoarthritis of the
A new technique for repair of neglected posterior dislocation of the
Stable fixation after a corrective supracondylar osteotomy in adults is difficult because of the irregularity of the area of bony contact, displacement of the fragments, the predominance of cortical bone, and the need for early mobilisation. We have used the Ilizarov apparatus for fixation in 15 patients who were treated by complex osteotomies with displacement of fragments for cubitus varus or valgus. Most patients with cubitus varus required medial displacement with rotation of the distal fragment. Those with cubitus valgus required lateral shift of the distal fragment to reduce the medial prominence of the
We have reviewed 50 patients at a mean period of 2.7 years after operations to restore
A prospective randomised clinical trial was undertaken to compare biodegradable polyglycolic acid pins with standard Kirschner wires used to fix displaced
We have reviewed 185 articles published since 1966 to assess the scientific evidence for methods of treatment for lateral epicondylitis of the
The
Two boys with entrapment of the median nerve in the
We undertook this study to determine the minimum
amount of coronoid necessary to stabilise an otherwise intact elbow
joint. Regan–Morrey types II and III, plus medial and lateral oblique
coronoid fractures, collectively termed type IV fractures, were
simulated in nine fresh cadavers. An electromagnetic tracking system
defined the three-dimensional stability of the ulna relative to
the humerus. The coronoid surface area accounts for 59% of the anterior articulation.
Alteration in valgus, internal and external rotation occurred only
with a type III coronoid fracture, accounting for 68% of the coronoid
and 40% of the entire articular surface. A type II fracture removed
42% of the coronoid articulation and 25% of the entire articular
surface but was associated with valgus and external rotational changes
only when the radial head was removed, thereby removing 67% of the
articular surface. We conclude that all type III fractures, as defined here, are
unstable, even with intact ligaments and a radial head. However,
a type II deficiency is stable unless the radial head is removed.
Our study suggests that isolated medial-oblique or lateral-oblique
fractures, and even a type II fracture with intact ligaments and
a functional radial head, can be clinically stable, which is consistent
with clinical observation.