We have examined whether the rotatory subluxation of the scaphoid which is seen in patients with advanced Kienböck’s disease is associated with scapholunate advanced collapse (SLAC) wrist. We studied 16 patients (11 men, 5 women) who had stage-IV Kienböck’s disease with chronic subluxation of the scaphoid. All had received
We analysed the results of arthroscopic synovectomy of the wrist in 18 patients (19 wrists) with rheumatoid arthritis who had not responded to
Ultrasound (US)-guided injections are widely used in patients with conditions of the shoulder in order to improve their accuracy. However, the clinical efficacy of US-guided injections compared with blind injections remains controversial. The aim of this study was to compare the accuracy and efficacy of US-guided compared with blind corticosteroid injections into the glenohumeral joint in patients with primary frozen shoulder (FS). Intra-articular corticosteroid injections were administered to 90 patients primary FS, who were randomly assigned to either an US-guided (n = 45) or a blind technique (n = 45), by a shoulder specialist. Immediately after injection, fluoroscopic images were obtained to assess the accuracy of the injection. The outcome was assessed using a visual analogue scale (VAS) for pain, the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) score, the subjective shoulder value (SSV) and range of movement (ROM) for all patients at the time of presentation and at three, six, and 12 weeks after injection.Aims
Methods
We performed a prospective, randomised study on 110 patients more than 50 years old with fractures of the distal radius to compare the outcome of
The late results of treatment of calcaneal fractures in 17 children (19 fractures) were reviewed at a mean of 16.8 years after injury. With the exception of one patient, all fractures had been treated conservatively. At follow-up there were few complaints. All but two patients had full or slightly reduced mobility of the subtalar joint and unrestricted foot function, including the ability to walk comfortably on uneven surfaces. Minor radiological abnormalities of the hindfoot were common; there were two cases of post-traumatic osteoarthritis. Clinical scoring of the ankle and hindfoot using the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society rating system averaged 96.2 points. The results suggest that up to 16.8 years after injury almost all children achieve excellent long-term functional results with
A study of structures which obstruct reduction of hip dislocation was performed on 15 hips by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Before treatment started, MRI studies were performed on 10 patients, six of whom were treated conservatively, after which further MRI studies helped to establish a concentric reduction. In the other four
Thirty-three patients who had undergone anterior cervical fusion for degenerative disc disease were reviewed to determine the efficacy of the procedure. Only patients who were available for examination and who had undergone operation at least one year previously were included in the review. Nearly all had had arm pain and three-quarters neck pain. Diminished neck movement and neurological abnormalities in the arms had been frequent findings. Diagnosis from the clinical features and plain radiographs is described. Myelography was not used routinely and discography was not used at all. Indications for operation and surgical technique are described. Results show that pain in the neck and arm was relieved in a high proportion of cases and that the neurological abnormalities often recovered. It is concluded that this operation is safe and has a definite place in the relief of pain from cervical disc degeneration resistant to
Ninety-five patients with steroid-induced avascular necrosis of bone have been personally treated by the author. Of these, eighteen had a lesion of the head of the humerus, on one or both sides. The conditions for which the steroids were given included post-transplantation, lupus erythematosus, glomerulonephritis and asthma. The characteristic lesion began as a subchondral osteolytic area which frequently progressed to collapse. The articular cartilage divided from the subchondral bone, either becoming detached as a free cap or at a later stage reattaching. In some cases the lesion was minimal and the symptoms were slight.
The results of treatment of injuries of the thoracic and thoraco-lumbar spine with neurological involvement have been reviewed in a retrospective study of 115 patients, of whom eighty-nine received conservative and twenty-six surgical treatment. Operation was reserved, in general, for patients with irreducible dislocations and incomplete neurological lesions, open reduction and internal fixation being the commonest procedure. Only three patients required a delayed spinal fusion for suspected instability after a period of
1. Sixty-eight crush fractures of the articular surface of the lateral tibial condyle have been analysed. 2. Follow-up examination at a minimum of three years after injury was carried out in all cases. 3. The only factors which appeared to influence the results were the extent of the original depression, and if this was severe, the degree of restoration obtained by the treatment. Prolonged plaster fixation was avoided. 4. At review, no patient complained of symptoms which were attributable to damage to ligaments or menisci and no patient had symptoms of late onset. 5. The results suggest that there is nothing to be gained by open reduction if the lateral condyle is depressed by less than 10 millimetres, as
Of 935 consecutive patients referred with shoulder pain, 50 fitted the criteria for primary frozen shoulder. Twelve patients who failed to improve after
The principle strategies of fracture-related infection (FRI) treatment are debridement, antimicrobial therapy, and implant retention (DAIR) or debridement, antimicrobial therapy, and implant removal/exchange. Increasing the period between fracture fixation and FRI revision surgery is believed to be associated with higher failure rates after DAIR. However, a clear time-related cut-off has never been scientifically defined. This systematic review analyzed the influence of the interval between fracture fixation and FRI revision surgery on success rates after DAIR. A systematic literature search was performed according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, in PubMed (including MEDLINE), Embase, and Web of Science Core Collection, investigating the outcome after DAIR procedures of long bone FRIs in clinical studies published until January 2020.Aims
Methods
This is a prospective study of 105 knees in 91 patients with idiopathic osteonecrosis of the femoral condyles, with an average follow-up of five years in 101 knees. Forty-eight of the 75 patients in whom the body weight was studied were obese and four of the 33 patients in whom a densitometry study was done showed decreased bone density. Prognosis is unfavourable if the lesion is larger than five square centimetres and if its width is more than 40 per cent of that of the condyle. Of the 22 patients followed up after
The results of 63 operative repairs of chronic tears of the rotator cuff in 61 patients are reviewed retrospectively; the mean follow-up was 32.7 months. Fifty-four patients presented with symptoms of persistent pain and seven patients with gross loss of movement. All the patients had failed to respond to
1. The pathology and pathogenesis of dislocations and fracture-dislocations of the cervical spine has been reviewed. 2. A method of treatment using skeletal traction and manipulation under relaxant general anaesthesia is described. Results of treatment are given for all patients admitted to the Centre with flexion-rotation dislocations of the cervical spine complicated by neurological lesions, between November 1961 and December 1968. 3. After reviewing the literature and considering the results obtained in seventy-six cases, we advocate a policy of conservative management with gentle manipulation of the cervical spine in selected cases, reduction being maintained thereafter by skeletal traction. We reserve operation for the few cases that demonstrate late instability or for those rarer cases in which manipulation fails and the patient has either an incomplete neurological lesion or a double skeletal injury. 4. The low incidence of late instability after adequate
1. Fifteen patients who had had osteomyelitis of the lower femur or upper tibia during infancy have been studied. The cases of four patients showing particular features of the disease are presented in detail and the remainder are summarised. 2. It is suggested that damage to the epiphysis may be due to an abscess, or to ischaemia following occlusion of the blood supply. In the latter instance the prognosis may be better. 3. In the early stages the radiographic appearances may be deceptive, suggesting that damage to the epiphysis is irreparable. 4. Significant recovery of the epiphysis may occur in some patients after a delay of several years. This, together with the often good function which is preserved at the joint, should deter the surgeon from early destructive operation on the limb. 5. Deformity, which was present to some extent in all cases, appeared early and was not well controlled by
1. Sixty-three fractures of the femur occurring in forty-eight patients with Paget's disease are presented. 2. In patients with Paget's disease the femur is the bone most often fractured, although the risk of fracture is probably not much greater than that of the normal population. 3. Many femoral fractures in Paget's disease are spontaneous and are preceded by pain. Extension of a stress fracture is the most likely cause. 4. All eleven femoral neck fractures in this series failed to unite; it is suggested that neither operation nor prolonged
1. A series of 705 fractures of the tibia is reviewed, 674 of which were treated conservatively. 2. The factors most conducive to delayed or non-union are initial displacement, comminution, associated soft-tissue wound and infection. The extent to which these are combined in any fracture determines its "personality" and its inherent propensity for union. 3. Eight fracture types are differentiated based on the above "personality rating." The incidence of delayed union or non-union varies from 9 per cent in the most favourable type to 39 per cent in the least favourable. Infection raises the incidence to 60 per cent. Comparative statistics which fail to recognise these differences can be entirely misleading. 4. Continuous traction does not retard union. 5. The results of
1. Sixty-three traction injuries of the brachial plexus in adults are reviewed. Most of the patients were seen at regular intervals for more than three years after injury. 2. The mechanism of injury is described. Forcible separation of the head and shoulder is the essential factor, but the type of lesion is determined by the position of the upper limb at the time of the accident. 3. In traction injuries the main damage is intraneural, and the lesions are of considerable extent. Extraneural scarring is a conspicuous feature of old injuries, but it does not cause any damage to uninjured parts of the plexus. 4. The prognosis of each type of lesion of the plexus is discussed. Satisfactory recovery occurs in most lesions of the upper three roots. Degenerative lesions of the whole plexus never recover completely. Cases with Horner's syndrome always have severe residual paralysis. 5.