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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 2 | Pages 184 - 189
1 May 1949
Linton P

1. Various types of fracture of the femoral neck represent different stages of one and the same displacing movement. 2. The displacement first produces an "abduction fracture" and terminates in an "adduction fracture," passing through the stage of an " intermediary fracture" which is less well recognised. 3. These three types of fracture occur in response to the same injury and they differ only in the degree of displacement. 4. It is a mistake to believe that in " adduction fractures" the femoral head lies medially to the collum : it lies posteriorly. 5. "Impaction" is no more than the first stage of displacement of fractures in which there is limited displacement, with contact still maintained between the fragments. 6. An "impacted fracture" is not necessarily stable—if there is additional strain it may progress to the next stage of a displaced and unstable fracture. 7. These principles apply not only to fractures of the femoral neck but to all other fractures at the ends of long bones


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 1 | Pages 95 - 98
1 Jan 1996
McQueen MM Christie J Court-Brown CM

We reviewed 25 patients with tibial diaphyseal fractures which had been complicated by an acute compartment syndrome. Thirteen had undergone continuous monitoring of the compartment pressure and the other 12 had not. The average delay from injury to fasciotomy in the monitored group was 16 hours and in the non-monitored group 32 hours (p < 0.05). Of the 12 surviving patients in the monitored group, none had any sequelae of acute compartment syndrome at final review at an average of 10.5 months. Of the 11 surviving patients in the non-monitored group, ten had definite sequelae with muscle weakness and contractures (p < 0.01). There was also a significant delay in tibial union in the non-monitored group (p < 0.05). We recommend that, when equipment is available, all patients with tibial fractures should have continuous compartment monitoring to minimise the incidence of acute compartment syndrome


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 3 | Pages 383 - 392
1 Mar 2017
Handoll HH Keding A Corbacho B Brealey SD Hewitt C Rangan A

Aims

The PROximal Fracture of the Humerus Evaluation by Randomisation (PROFHER) randomised clinical trial compared the operative and non-operative treatment of adults with a displaced fracture of the proximal humerus involving the surgical neck. The aim of this study was to determine the long-term treatment effects beyond the two-year follow-up.

Patients and Methods

Of the original 250 trial participants, 176 consented to extended follow-up and were sent postal questionnaires at three, four and five years after recruitment to the trial. The Oxford Shoulder Score (OSS; the primary outcome), EuroQol 5D-3L (EQ-5D-3L), and any recent shoulder operations and fracture data were collected. Statistical and economic analyses, consistent with those of the main trial were applied.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 3 | Pages 494 - 496
1 May 1995
Calder S Anderson G Harper W Jagger C Gregg P

We report a randomised prospective trial of the early results of three types of treatment for displaced intracapsular hip fractures. We used a questionnaire sent to patients at about six months (Nottingham Health Profile, NHP) in addition to clinical assessments. There was a 67.4% usable response to the questionnaire, similar to that in other studies using the NHP. There were more responders from younger patients, those walking independently before injury and those with higher mental test scores on admission. In the younger group (65 to 79 years) we found a trend for better scores in most NHP indices after the use of a bipolar prosthesis rather than a unipolar prosthesis or internal fixation, particularly for social function, pain and physical mobility. Postal assessment using the NHP gave a satisfactory response rate even in the elderly, and can provide an extra assessment to complement or replace hospital follow-up in some circumstances


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 7 | Pages 994 - 998
1 Sep 2003
Fuchs S Sandmann C Skwara A Chylarecki C

Tibiotalar fusion is considered to be the standard treatment for end-stage post-traumatic arthritis of the ankle. We report a retrospective, objective long-term study of the quality of life of 17 patients with 18 arthrodeses of the ankle, over a period of more than 20 years. We looked particularly for correlation between clinical and radiological signs of osteoarthritis in adjoining joints. At serial physical examinations, clinical grades were awarded according to the Olerud Molander Ankle (OMA) score. Any degree of degenerative change in the adjoining joints was recorded on standing radiographs. Patients filled out a SF-36 Health Survey form. Subjectively, 50% of patients were not handicapped in the performance of daily activities and 44% were in the same job as at the time of injury. At follow-up the mean OMA score was 59.4 points, the visual analogue scale was 1.99 and the radiological score was 2.7. The SF-36 for physical function, emotional disturbance and bodily pain revealed significant deficits. There was a significant correlation between the OMA and the radiological score (p = 0.05), and between the clinical and the SF-36 score (p = 0.01), but no significant correlation between the radiological score and the SF-36 score. Arthrodesis of the ankle leads to deficits in the functional outcome, to limitations in the activities of daily living and to radiological changes in the adjoining joints. The clinical outcome score correlates closely with the SF-36 score


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 4 | Pages 645 - 649
1 Jul 1993
Hardy Conlan D Hay S Gregg P

The changes in serum adjusted ionised calcium and parathyroid hormone (PTH) were prospectively studied in 32 patients with isolated tibial fractures, treated conservatively. We measured serum albumin, adjusted total calcium, phosphate, pH, adjusted ionised calcium and PTH at intervals until the fractures had healed. The mean ionised calcium adjusted for pH fell within 24 hours of injury, and then rose to a peak at between four and six weeks. These changes cannot be explained by changes in serum pH or PTH. The restoration of normal ionised calcium levels after fracture coincided with the period when the callus was being calcified. Analysis of the changes in ionised calcium, phosphate and PTH suggests that PTH levels alter in response to changes in ionised calcium levels. PTH is highest immediately after fracture and lowest, often not recordable, at six weeks. The cause of the changes in the ionised calcium level has yet to be elucidated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 6 | Pages 977 - 981
1 Nov 1991
Beyer C Cabanela M Berquist T

We treated 36 patients with unilateral facet dislocations or fracture-dislocations of the cervical spine at the Mayo Clinic between 1975 and 1986. Adequate records were available for 34: ten patients were treated by open reduction and posterior fusion, and 24 by nonoperative management. Of these, 19 had halo traction followed by halo-thoracic immobilisation, four had a simple cervicothoracic orthosis, and one received no active treatment. Anatomical reduction was achieved more frequently in the operative group (60% compared with 25%). Nonoperative treatment was more likely to result in cervical translation on flexion/extension lateral radiographs, and in significant symptoms. Only 36% of the patients treated by halo traction achieved anatomical alignment; in 25% halo traction failed to achieve or maintain any degree of reduction. During halo-thoracic immobilisation, half of the patients lost some degree of reduction and patient satisfaction with the appliance was low. Open reduction and internal fixation of unilateral facet injuries gave better results. 6


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 183 - 189
1 Mar 1997
Pihlajamäki H Myllynen P Böstman O

We analysed the complications encountered in 102 consecutive patients who had posterolateral lumbosacral fusion performed with transpedicular screw and rod fixation for non-traumatic disorders after a minimum of two years. Of these, 40 had spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis, 42 a degenerative disorder, 14 instability after previous laminectomy and decompression, and six pain after nonunion of previous attempts at spinal fusion without internal fixation. There were 75 multilevel and 27 single-level fusions. There were 76 individual complications in 48 patients, and none in the other 54. The complications seen were screw misplacement, coupling failure of the device, wound infection, nonunion, permanent neural injury, and loosening, bending and breakage of screws. Screw breakage or loosening was more common in patients with multilevel fusions (p < 0.001). Screws of 5 mm diameter should not be used for sacral fixation. Forty-six patients had at least one further operation for one or several complications, including 20 fusion procedures for nonunion. The high incidence of complications is a disadvantage of this technically-demanding method


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 5 | Pages 802 - 806
1 Nov 1988
Laupattarakasem W

Continuous passive motion (CPM) is an established method of preventing joint stiffness and of overcoming it. The optimum duration of treatment, however, is not known, though a period of one to three weeks is usual. This may be unnecessarily long and a programme lasting only three days has been tried in 34 patients: in 22 (Group A) treatment was designed to increase movement in stiff joints which had been operated on or manipulated, and in 12 (Group B) it was to prevent stiffness after an injury. A specially designed CPM device was used. In Group A, the range by the third day of treatment was significantly greater than before manipulation or operation and this increase was maintained until the latest follow-up at an average of 24 weeks. In Group B, the pre-injury range was almost retained and thereafter there was a gradual increase. Patient compliance in the first 12 hours of CPM was relatively poorer than that described in previous reports, and in five patients treatment had to be discontinued


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 5 | Pages 710 - 717
1 Sep 1996
Dendrinos GK Kontos S Katsenis D Dalas A

We treated 24 patients with high-energy fractures of the tibial plateau by the Ilizarov fixator and transfixion wires. Eleven fractures were open, and 20 patients had complex injuries. Twelve were treated by ligamentotaxis and percutaneous fixation, seven by limited open reduction and five by extensive open reduction. All were followed for at least 24 months. All the fractures united, with an average time to healing of 14.4 weeks. Thirteen patients achieved full extension and 13 more than 110° of flexion. Twenty-two knees were stable. Fifteen patients walked normally and the rest with only a slight limp. All but two knees had an articular step-off of less than 4 mm and all had normal axial alignment except two. There were no cases of postoperative skin infection, osteomyelitis or septic arthritis. Ilizarov circular fixation is an ideal method of treatment for these fractures when extensive dissection and internal fixation are contraindicated due to trauma to the soft tissue, deficiency of bone stock, and bony comminution


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 5 | Pages 706 - 709
1 Sep 1996
Rowley DI

Over 200 high-velocity missile injuries treated in a low-technology environment were audited under the aegis of the International Committee of the Red Cross Hospitals in Afghanistan and Northern Kenya. Femoral fractures were treated either by traction or external fixation using a uniaxial frame. The results showed that patients treated by external fixation remained in hospital longer than those treated on traction. The positional outcome was identical in both groups. In tibial fractures the external fixator was only of extra benefit in those of the lower third when compared with simple plaster slabs unless more complex procedures such as flaps or vascular repair were to be performed. In complex humeral fractures, external fixation resulted in long stays in hospital and a large number of interventions when compared with simple treatment in a sling. We conclude therefore that in an environment where facilities are limited and surgeons have only general experience very careful initial wound excision is the most important factor determining outcome. The application of complex holding techniques was generally inappropriate


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 3 | Pages 471 - 475
1 May 1986
Gibson M Barnes M Allen M Chan R

Weakness of dorsiflexion of the foot is a common complication of proximal tibial osteotomy and it has been suggested that this may be caused by an anterior tibial compartment syndrome. A prospective study of 20 patients undergoing tibial osteotomy was undertaken, in which compartment pressures were recorded and related to clinical signs. In 10 of the patients, the operation site was drained, and in 10 no drainage was employed. The undrained group showed significant elevation (greater than 45 mmHg) of the anterior compartment pressure in seven patients, and five of these had transient clinical signs. Only one patient had any permanent deficit, a minor asymptomatic weakness of extensor hallucis longus. In the drained group the pressures remained below 30 mmHg in all except two patients, who both had only a minor pressure rise and no significant early clinical signs. However, two patients from this group later developed weakness of dorsiflexion, probably due to common peroneal nerve injury, the cause of which is not clear


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 67-B, Issue 2 | Pages 214 - 217
1 Mar 1985
Taine W Armour P

The management of displaced subcapital fracture of the hip is still controversial because of the high incidence of complications after internal fixation or hemiarthroplasty. To avoid some of these complications we have used primary total hip replacement for independently mobile patients over 65 years of age. A total of 163 cases, operated on over four years, have been reviewed. There were relatively more dislocations after operation for fracture than after total replacement for arthritis, and these were associated with a posterior approach to the hip. Only seven revision operations have been required. Of 57 patients who were interviewed an average of 42 months after replacement, 62% had excellent or good results as assessed by the Harris hip score. All the others had major systemic disease which affected their assessment. This inadequacy of current systems of hip assessment is discussed. It is concluded that total hip replacement is the best management for a selected group of patients with this injury, and that further prospective studies are indicated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 3 | Pages 386 - 390
1 May 1984
Pozo J Kirwan E Jackson A

A subjective, objective and radiographic study of 21 patients with comminuted calcaneal fractures showing severe involvement of the subtalar joint is reported. The average follow-up was 14.6 years (range 8 to 29 years). Only patients with unilateral closed fractures and no associated injuries to either lower limb were admitted to the study. All were treated by early active mobilisation of the ankle, and the subtalar and the midtarsal joints. Seventy-six per cent of the patients achieved a good result with minor symptoms which did not interfere with their occupation or leisure requirements. Although two-thirds of the patients reached a point of maximal recovery at two to three years, 24% continued to improve for six years. None of the patients experienced any deterioration after this time. Neither the degree of clinical stiffness nor the degeneration of the subtalar joint, assessed radiographically, correlated with the severity of symptoms or functional disability. The role of the soft tissues in the aetiology of residual symptoms is discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 1 | Pages 92 - 97
1 Feb 1981
Edge A Denham R

An account is given of 38 patients with complicated tibial fractures who were treated by the Portsmouth method of external fixation. Twenty-one patients had multiple injuries and 30 had compound fractures of the tibia. Eighteen fractures wounds were infected, 17 cases required bone grafts and 13 had skin grafts. Thirty-four fractures united in an average time of six months; three patients underwent below-knee amputations; one with neurofibromatosis remains ununited. Those treated primarily by external fixation did better than those in whom external fixation was used after failure of another method. Most fresh fractures united with external callus; and the significance of this in relation to the rigidity of fixation is discussed. The method is easy to use, effective and economical. Improvements to permit adjustment of position and testing for union are suggested. We advise the use of this method of external fixation as the primary treatment for complicated tibial fractures where there is a significant risk of infection or non-union


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 2 | Pages 208 - 213
1 May 1980
Porat S Rousso M Shoshan S

The long flexor tendons of the second, third and fourth toes of 94 chickens were cut and sutured. After operation the birds were divided into three groups. To reduce peritendinous adhesions, an aqueous solution of beta-aminopropionitrile (BAPN) was added to a solution of enriched native collagen (ECS) and applied to the cut tendons of one group; untreated controls and controls treated with collagen solution alone comprised the other groups. Chickens from each group were killed one, two, three, four and five weeks after operation. The results were evaluated both biomechanically and biochemically. It was found that the collagen solution alone had the same effect as the treatment with BAPN. It is suggested that the exogenous collagen present at the site of injury binds the collagenase inhibitor released by tendon cells, thus providing enough active collagenase to control the formation of fibrous adhesions. The inefficiency of BAPN in these experiments might have been due to either inadequate dosage or wrong timing, or both


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 3 | Pages 285 - 293
1 Aug 1979
Mubarak S Carroll N

A review was conducted of the records of fifty-five children who were admitted to the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto between 1955 and 1975 with a diagnosis of Volkmann's contracture in fifty-eight limbs. Ten patients had been transferred to this hospital with established ischaemia after Bryant's traction for a fractured femur; all had a very poor outcome. Thirteen other cases of Volkmann's contracture affecting the superficial posterior compartment had been treated with a fixed Thomas' splint and a Bradford frame after fractures of the femoral shaft. Supracondylar fractures of the elbow resulting in Volkmann's contracture frequently had both an arterial injury and a compartment syndrome. Most of the fifty-five children reviewed here had not had early appropriate treatment. For the past twenty-one years the frequency of Volkmann's contracture has not declined in spite of many published reports on the compartment syndrome, and the hazards of supracondylar fractures and of Bryant's traction


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 4 | Pages 504 - 509
1 Nov 1978
Rothwell A Fitzpatrick C

One hundred and two fractures of the femoral shaft, including eighteen pathological fractures, in 100 patients were internally fixed by closed Kuntscher nailing. Sixty-eight fractures resulted from motor vehicle accidents; ten were compound. Seventy-five patients were under the age of thirty years and thirty-four had multiple injuries. Sixty-nine fractures were nailed on the day of the accident and the operative technique is described. Complications during and after operations were few. Fifty-eight patients left hospital within four weeks and 77% of those working returned to work in less than four months. There were no wound or bone infections. The results are discussed and it is concluded that, with the correct equipment and careful attention to detail, closed nailing is a straightforward procedure with few complications. Advantages include the wide range of fractures that can be nailed, the short hospitalisation, the rapid return of function to the knee, the early return to work and the absence of infection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 53-B, Issue 3 | Pages 519 - 531
1 Aug 1971
Sevitt S

1. The processes of repair and union were studied in six fractures of the lower end of the radius, ranging in age from ten days to five and a half months. 2. The major pathway to union is medullary, through the proliferation around the fracture of vascular granulation tissue with osteogenic power. This invades and then bridges the fracture and is followed by the laying down of trabeculae of new bone. 3. Success depends on the growth of new capillaries across the fracture line, some of which mature and re-establish the meduilary circulation. 4. Indriving of the lateral cortex of the proximal fragment into the distal spongy medulla at the time of injury (in Colles's fractures) permits bridging between proximal periosteal and distal meduliary callus. Otherwise periosteal proliferation plays only a subsidiary role in union. 5. Fissure fractures of the lower articular surface were frequent and they also healed by the invasion of granulation tissue proliferating in the medulla nearby


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 3 | Pages 563 - 570
1 Aug 1967
Scapinelli R

1. A study has been made of the blood supply of the human patella. There are two main systems, one penetrating the middle third of the anterior surface and the other entering the lower pole of the bone behind the patellar ligament. 2. The relationship between these findings and the complication of avascular necrosis of the upper fragment of the patella after fracture is discussed. Forty-one cases of necrosis after operation have been studied and notes made on the pathological, clinical and radiological evolution of the condition. Whatever the severity of the ischaemic necrosis the prognosis was not substantially affected and good function was observed in all knees six months after injury. 3. The surgical implications of the vascular anatomy are discussed. It is pointed out that surgical intervention may damage the blood vessels entering the anterior surface of the bone and that circumferential repair of patellar fractures may strangle the vessels in their peripatellar course. 4. If removal of one-half of the patella after a transverse fracture is indicated, vascular studies indicate that the upper fragment should be removed