We performed eight osteochondral autologous transplantations from the knee joint to the shoulder. All patients (six men, two women; mean age 43.1 years) were documented prospectively. In each patient the stage of the osteochondral lesion was Outerbridge grade IV with a mean size of the affected area of 150 mm. 2. All patients were assessed by using the Constant score for the shoulder and the Lysholm score for the knee. Standard radiographs, magnetic resonance imaging and second-look arthroscopy were used to assess the presence of glenohumeral osteoarthritis and the integrity of the grafts. After a mean of 32.6 months (8 to 47), the mean Constant score increased significantly. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed good osseointegration of the osteochondral plugs and congruent articular cartilage at the transplantation site in all but one patient. Second-look arthroscopy performed in two cases revealed a macroscopically good integration of the
We performed total hip replacement on 25 congenitally dislocated hips using corticocancellous bone from the femoral neck as a bone graft to reconstruct the deficient acetabulum. Two patients (two hips) died less than five years after surgery and three hips developed deep infection. We reviewed the remaining 20 hips at an average interval of 8.4 years (5.2 to 12.9). Their functional scores (modified Merle d'Aubigne and Postel) averaged 5.7 for pain, 5.1 for walking ability, and 4.2 for range of motion. Radiographs showed union and remodelling of the grafted bone in every case. There were radiological signs of aseptic loosening in three sockets (15%) without collapse of the grafted bone. None of the femoral stems was loose. No revision operation has been performed. Our results confirm the usefulness in the long term of femoral
Five vascularised allografts of the knee joint were performed in dogs immunosuppressed with cyclosporin A and azathioprine. Three survived with normal function for 3 to 4 months after operation. One of the unsuccessful grafts had a failed vascular anastomosis, the other an inadequate blood level of cyclosporin A. All three successful grafts healed well. In two, bone scans, radiographs and biopsies were indistinguishable from successful
Allografts of immature joint cartilage from the knees of lambs were transferred heterotopically into an intramuscular site in animals which had been presensitised by two sets of skin grafts from the same donors. All of these grafts were found to be largely destroyed by the immune response as early as four weeks after transfer. Similar grafts transferred orthotopically into the knees of the recipients, on the other hand, were found to be thriving even after twelve weeks and evoked a minimal response. Heterotopic
The results of a study of the use of
1. Cancellous bone cubes from calf and man were deproteinised with hydrogen peroxide and with ethylenediamine. 2. Long bones were removed aseptically from sheep, stored in the bone bank and used for cancellous homografts. 3. Holes were drilled in the upper part of the tibia or ulna or in the lower part of the femur of sheep. Some were left empty; others were filled with plugs of the deproteinised heterogenous bone, with
To determine the effectiveness of prone traction radiographs in predicting postoperative slip distance, slip angle, changes in disc height, and lordosis after surgery for degenerative spondylolisthesis of the lumbar spine. A total of 63 consecutive patients with a degenerative spondylolisthesis and preoperative prone traction radiographs obtained since 2010 were studied. Slip distance, slip angle, disc height, segmental lordosis, and global lordosis (L1 to S1) were measured on preoperative lateral standing radiographs, flexion-extension lateral radiographs, prone traction lateral radiographs, and postoperative lateral standing radiographs. Patients were divided into two groups: posterolateral fusion or posterolateral fusion with interbody fusion.Aims
Methods
We treated 21 patients with 22 dislocations of the knee by repair or reconstruction of all injured ligaments. Eight knees were treated in the acute phase (less than two weeks after injury); the remainder were treated more than six months after injury (6 to 72). Reconstructions were carried out with a combination of
We have undertaken a randomized clinical trial comparing two methods of reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament in patients with chronic instability. We used an ipsilateral bone-patellar-tendon-bone
1. The rates of vascularisation in 119 autogenous, homogenous and heterogenous bone grafts, placed in the femoral medullary cavity and under the renal capsule of rabbits, were studied. 2. Substantial differences have been found in the speed of vascular penetration and arrangement among
The healing of a hamstring graft to bone is the weak link in the reconstruction of a cruciate ligament using this donor material. We therefore investigated the augmentation of healing at the tendon-bone interface using calcium-phosphate cement (CPC). We performed semitendinosus
We reviewed the results of 13 adults of secondary reconstruction of malunited and ununited intraarticular distal humeral fractures. Their average age was 39.7 years, and preoperatively all had pain, loss of motion and functional disability; the average arc of motion was only 43 degrees and the average flexion contracture was 45 degrees. Nine patients had ulnar neuropathy. Elbow reconstruction, at an average of 13.4 months after the original injury, included osteotomy for malunion or debridement for nonunion, realignment with stable fixation and
Complex total hip arthroplasty (THA) with subtrochanteric shortening osteotomy is necessary in conditions other than developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) and septic arthritis sequelae with significant proximal femur migration. Our aim was to evaluate the hip centre restoration with THAs in these hips. In all, 27 THAs in 25 patients requiring THA with femoral shortening between 2012 and 2019 were assessed. Bilateral shortening was required in two patients. Subtrochanteric shortening was required in 14 out of 27 hips (51.9%) with aetiology other than DDH or septic arthritis. Vertical centre of rotation (VCOR), horizontal centre of rotation, offset, and functional outcome was calculated. The mean followup was 24.4 months (5 to 92 months).Aims
Methods
The purpose of this study was to report the long-term results of extendable endoprostheses of the humerus in children after the resection of a bone sarcoma. A total of 35 consecutive patients treated with extendable endoprosthetic replacement of the humerus in children were included. There were 17 boys and 18 girls in the series with a median age at the time of initial surgery of nine years (interquartile range (IQR) 7 to 11).Aims
Methods
1. An immunological examination of the sera of thirty rabbits which had received primary and secondary homografts of cancellous bone into a subcutaneous site did not reveal the presence of circulating precipitins, haemagglutinins or passive haemagglutinins. These findings are consistent with the observations of Bonfiglio and his colleagues (1955). 2. Electrophoretic examination of the serum of four rabbits receiving primary and secondary homografts of bone into an intramuscular site did not reveal any change in the serum protein fractions. 3. A search for auto-antibodies produced by primary and secondary
Distraction osteogenesis (callotasis) has been widely used in patients with limb-length inequality or massive bone defects. This procedure, however, may be associated with a high incidence of physical and psychosocial complications. Callotasis telescoping on a locked intramedullary nail has been used to shorten the period of external fixation. Little attention has been given to the use of locked intramedullary nails in the treatment of complications after callotasis. Between 1990 and 1999, we used locked intramedullary nailing in 27 patients for the treatment of complications after distraction osteogenesis. There were 17 men and ten women with a mean age of 33.2 years (16 to 66). The nail was inserted at a mean of 3.4 weeks (0 to 15) after removal of the external fixator. Simultaneous
In this study the direct relationship between the type of bone implant used, the vascular reaction caused to the host and the revascularisation of the implant has been studied. It was found that the best graft was that which was the most rapidly and permanently vascularised. Not only was the biological affinity between the graft and the bed important, but the structural facilities offered by the implant for the "penetration" by the host vessels were also of paramount importance. Thus small, fresh, cancellous bone grafts offered the best chance of rapid incorporation provided they were not crushed to the point of making vascular progress difficult. The findings from this investigation so strongly suggest that the rapid revascularisation of the bone grafts was because of an end-to-end anastomosis of the vessels of the host with those in the implant that it seems justified to consider that the best bone graft is that which is richest in vessels. Apart from a recent short paper by Graf (1960), we have not found this assertion before. It is this which seems to make the fresh, autogenous, cancellous implant so superior to all others. We believe that any new material for bone grafts should be tested by the technique described here. The material which one day may replace fresh, autogenous, cancellous implants will have to show the same readiness to vascular penetration, vascular osteogenesis and vascular permanency that at present is exhibited only by the cancellous