The Madelung deformity can result in pain and decreased function of the wrist and hand. None of the surgical techniques available has been shown consistently to improve grip strength, range of movement or relieve pain. In this prospective study we have treated 18 patients with the Madelung deformity (25 wrists) by wedge subtraction
A series of 167 patients with Charnley-type total hip replacements were studied retrospectively to determine the incidence of trochanteric non-union, the degree of postoperative trochanteric displacement, and the relation between these two complications. The power in the hip abductor muscles, measured with a load-cell device, was significantly reduced if the trochanteric fragment had displaced proximally by more than 3 cm; 12% of those studied fell into this group and, as a consequence, had a poorer result. It was concluded that displacement of the trochanter was of greater importance than bony union in determining function in the replaced hip. Because these unwanted problems may compromise an otherwise successful operation, it is suggested tentatively that trochanteric
Reorientation of the acetabulum may be required in adolescents and young adults with developmental dysplasia of the hip. We have carried out a retrospective review of 51 hips after triple
The work capacity of 26 women after a Chiari pelvic
We have investigated the changes in the interposed capsule after a Chiari pelvic
From 1990 to 1993 we treated 22 consecutive patients who had progressive spinal kyphosis due to ankylosing spondylitis by a closing-wedge posterior vertebral
The use of a rotation
The Chiari
We have studied retrospectively 37 hips in 36 children at an average of 91 months after simultaneous open reduction and Salter innominate
1. Rotational deformity of a finger caused by malunion of a phalangeal fracture has been corrected by metacarpal
1. Experimental evidence is advanced to suggest that the effect of the McMurray displacement
On three occasions we have reviewed a series of knees after high tibial
Internal fixation with a trifin nail after displacement
1. Almost all patients with osteoarthritis of the hip who consult the surgeon do so because they wish to be relieved of pain. They all have limitation of movement in varying degrees but most of them will be either unaware of it or will have accepted it. What is more important, they would not have sought medical advice because of stiffness if there had been no pain. The primary objective of operative treatment must therefore be to relieve pain. 2. Displacement
Cubitus varus is the most common complication of supracondylar fracture of the humerus in children. Although function of the elbow is not greatly impaired, the deformity is unsightly. It usually results from malunion, since growth disturbance of the humerus after this fracture is uncommon. The normal carrying angle can be restored by supracondylar
Thirty-two dysplastic hips with secondary osteoarthritis, in 28 patients aged 18 to 42 years, were treated by combined intertrochanteric and Chiari
Children who present late with hip dislocation may require femoral osteotomy after reduction, to correct valgus and anteversion deformity of the femoral neck. After these procedures proximal femoral growth is unpredictable. We have studied proximal femoral growth in 40 children who had been treated by femoral osteotomy. Preoperatively, the mean femoral neck-shaft angle was 5° greater on the affected side than on the contralateral side. Postoperatively, it was 28° less. There was progressive recorrection; after five years the angle was not significantly different from that on the contralateral side. In our series 70% of the capital epiphyses became abnormally shaped, taking the appearance of a ‘jockey’s cap’. All the growth plates became angulated but this corrected with time. Correction of the neck-shaft angle probably results from the more normal mechanical environment provided by reduction. The abnormal radiographic appearance of the epiphysis and growth plate is probably due to the rotation produced by the
Delay in the diagnosis of posterior shoulder dislocation is common. We present two such cases treated satisfactorily by rotation
We have studied the correlation between the prevention of progressive collapse and the ratio of the intact articular surface of the femoral head, after transtrochanteric rotational
We used a combined cuboid/cuneiform