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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 1 | Pages 90 - 92
1 Jan 1995
Sarathy M Madhavan P Ravichandran K

Nonunion of intertrochanteric fractures is uncommon but its effects are disabling. We describe a modification of the medial displacement and valgus osteotomy of Dimon and Hughston (1967) which we used in seven fractures, six of which united within 16 weeks. Postoperatively, hip function was good. The method provides good initial stability, a source of cancellous bone graft, good postoperative hip abductor function and reliable healing of the nonunion without the need for intraoperative imaging


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 4 | Pages 535 - 539
1 May 2002
Jingushi S Sugioka Y Noguchi Y Miura H Iwamoto Y

Our study describes the mid-term clinical results of the use of transtrochanteric valgus osteotomy (TVO) for the treatment of osteoarthritis of the hip secondary to acetabular dysplasia. The operation included valgus displacement at the level of the lesser trochanter, and lateral displacement of the greater trochanter by inserting a wedge of bone. We reviewed 70 hips. The mean age of the patients at operation was 44 years (14 to 59). Most (90%) had advanced osteoarthritis. The scores for pain and gait had improved significantly at a mean follow-up of 9.4 years. The rate of survival until an endpoint of a further operation during a follow-up of ten years was 82%. The survival rate was 95% in patients with unilateral involvement who were less than 50 years of age at operation. TVO is a useful form of treatment for advanced osteoarthritis of the hip, particularly in young patients with unilateral disease


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 4 | Pages 579 - 582
1 Nov 1978
Hughes S Khan R Davies R Lavender P

The residue and extraction of technetium-labelled methylene diphosphonate (99mTc-MDP), a substance used in bone scanning, was examined in the canine tibia and found to be low. Examination of washout curves suggested that there were four compartments in cortical bone, a vascular, a perivascular, a bone fluid and a bone compartment. After an osteotomy in the canine tibia the residue of 99mTc-MDP increased. This was believed to be due to an increase in the blood supply to the bone and to an associated increase in new bone available for exchange. Bone scanning in a fracture is therefore a reflection of the vascular status of the bone being examined and of the uptake by bone. This is dependent on there being an adequate blood supply to the bone and an increased number of mineral-binding sites


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 6 | Pages 924 - 927
1 Nov 1995
Kronberg M Brostrom L

A reduced retroversion angle of the humeral head may predispose to recurrent anterior shoulder dislocation and may also be a factor in persistent instability after soft-tissue repair. We performed rotational osteotomy of the proximal humerus in 20 patients with recurrent anterior shoulder dislocations (10 traumatic, 10 non-traumatic) and a decreased retroversion angle of the humeral head. The mean preoperative retroversion angle was 12 degrees, which was increased after surgery to a mean value of 32 degrees. All patients regained a normal range of shoulder motion and normal function within three months after surgery. At the five-year review all shoulders were stable, pain-free and had no radiological signs of osteoarthritis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 7 | Pages 963 - 968
1 Sep 2003
Koga H Matsubara M Suzuki K Morita S Muneta T

We have investigated the factors which affect the progression of osteoarthritis after rotational acetabular osteotomy (RAO). Between 1984 and 1998, we treated 60 dysplastic hips by RAO. The mean age at surgery was 31.6 years (13 to 51) and the mean period of follow-up was 4.6 years (2 to 9.5). The thickness of the articular cartilage on the weight-bearing area, pre- and postoperative acetabular cover, and the sphericity of the femoral head were used for radiological assessment. The osteoarthritis did not progress in 39 hips. Significant factors which affected the radiological grade included sphericity of the femoral head and the postoperative acetabular cover. The surgical approach and preoperative acetabular cover did not affect the progression of osteoarthritis. Patients were divided into two groups according to the surgical approach used, either conventional (23 hips) or modified (37 hips). Significant factors included the postoperative acetabular cover in the modified approach, and the sphericity of the femoral head in the conventional approach. It is critical that the postoperative cover is sufficient, especially when RAO is carried out using our modified technique


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 4 | Pages 506 - 510
1 Nov 1975
Beckmann J Rodegerdts U Buddecke E

on in vitro incubation of articular and epiphysial cartilage of the ulna of the domestic pig 70 to 80 per cent of [U-. 14. C] glucose was metabolised to . 14. C-lactate, but cartilage of the epiphysial plate produced up to five times as much . 14. C-CO. 2. as articular cartilage, and the specific radioactivity of . 14. C (or . 35. S)-chondroitin 4 (6)-sulphate isolated from epiphysial cartilage (following . 35. S-sulphate incorporation) was about twice as high as that of articular cartilage. Six weeks after an osteotomy on both sides of the proximal epiphysial plate of the left ulna, the glucose uptake, lactate production, and the specific radioactivity of the glycosaminoglycans displayed no significant differences when compared with those of the corresponding epiphysial plate of the control right ulna, whereas a 50 per cent increase in the oxidation of . 14. C-glucose to . 14. c-co. 2. was observed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 220 - 224
1 Mar 1997
Matsui M Masuhara K Nakata K Nishii T Sugano N Ochi T

We performed a modified, rotational acetabular osteotomy through a lateral transtrochanteric approach on 19 hips in 18 patients with a dysplastic joint. Six hips in six patients were operated on using the original approach. The mean age at operation was 28 years (14 to 54) and the mean period of follow-up 2.3 years (1 to 4.4). Clinical evaluation using the Merle d’Aubigné score showed excellent or good results in 76%. Radiologically, 15 hips showed good acetabular remodelling and no signs of progressive osteoarthritis. In ten hips (40%) there was chondrolysis and collapse of the transferred acetabulum or both within one year, although this gave only mild pain in some patients. Factors which were significantly associated with the grade of outcome included age at the time of operation, the thickness of the transferred acetabulum, failure to use a bone graft, and a transtrochanteric approach


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 962 - 966
1 Nov 1993
Yadav S

We treated 25 patients with severely deformed and shortened lower limbs by double oblique diaphyseal osteotomy of the short deformed bone, followed by balanced skeletal traction to correct the alignment and increase the length of the limb. The technique is simple and inexpensive and does not require special equipment. It has the advantage of allowing rapid lengthening and secure healing as the overlap allows end-to-end union with no bone gap. The lengthening achieved ranged from 6 to 16 cm. No serious complications were encountered


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 4 | Pages 622 - 626
1 Jul 1994
Cobb T Linscheid R

We treated three patients with malunion after comminuted intercondylar fractures of the humerus by intra-articular derotational opening-wedge osteotomy and the insertion of a tricortical iliac bone graft. Two patients required additional operations, including interposition arthroplasty and hardware removal. A mean arc of increased motion of 65 degrees was achieved in flexion and extension in two patients and a more functional arc in the third. Although this is viewed as a salvage procedure in patients who are thought to be too young for elbow arthroplasty, none of the three patients has significant pain and none has required total elbow arthroplasty after an average follow-up of 7.6 years


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 858 - 864
1 Nov 1993
Lee D Choi I Chung C Ahn J Steel H

We reviewed our experience with a modified triple innominate osteotomy for hip instability and limb shortening due to poliomyelitis in 62 adolescent and adult patients, treated from 1973 to 1990. Their ages at surgery ranged from 12 years to 35 years (average 22.3). At a mean follow-up of 4 years (2 to 18) 59 of the patients (95.2%) had substantial improvement in hip stability, and all but one had radiological improvement as determined by the acetabular angle, centre-edge angle and acetabulum-head quotient. In 59 cases in which transiliac limb lengthening was attempted, the mean gain was 1.7 cm (0.6 to 3.0). When the abductor muscles had been partially paralysed, the operation produced an appreciable increase in power in 12 of the 39 hips examined


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 2 | Pages 167 - 170
1 Mar 2001
Yasunaga Y Hisatome T Ikuta Y Nakamura S

We studied nine patients who had had a transtrochanteric anterior rotational osteotomy, as developed by Sugioka, for osteonecrosis of the femoral head. At a mean of 2.5 years after the initial operation we carried out a histological study of the previously necrotic femoral head which had not shown collapse of the new primary weight-bearing site. In seven joints, there was proliferation of fibrous tissue in the dead trabeculae with vascular ingrowth. New bone covering dead trabeculae created the characteristic appearance of ‘creeping substitution’. However, these changes were limited and did not extend over the entire necrotic area. Dead bone remained in all the cases. In the other two heads we did not observe proliferation of fibrous tissue or vascular ingrowth, only dead trabeculae and dead bone marrow


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 4 | Pages 686 - 693
1 Jul 1990
Louw J

Nineteen patients with thoracic or thoracolumbar spinal tuberculosis and neurological deficits were treated by anterior debridement, decompression and vascularised rib grafting, followed, either during the same procedure or 14 days later, by multilevel posterior osteotomies, instrumentation and fusion. Surgery was performed under cover of four-drug antituberculosis chemotherapy, given for 12 months. The average pre-operative kyphotic angulation of 56 degrees was reduced to 27 degrees postoperatively and 30 degrees at the latest follow-up (3 degrees loss of correction). Radiological fusion between the vascularised rib graft and the vertebrae was seen after an average of 3.3 months. Eighteen patients (95%) had normal neurological function at 14 months, and the other could walk with the aid of crutches


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 64-B, Issue 2 | Pages 169 - 175
1 Apr 1982
Gibson P Benson M

In 1957 Somerville and Scott presented their principles of management for the older child with congenital hip dislocation. They advocated preliminary traction followed, in those hips which remained dislocated, by excision of the limbus and subsequent derotation varus osteotomy of the femur. As alternative regimes are advocated it becomes increasingly important to subject each method to detailed long-term review. One hundred and forty-seven hips in 121 patients aged between 12 months and three years and treated by the standard Somerville and Scott regime have been reviewed. The age at review ranged from 16 to 31 years. The recall rate was 91 per cent. Each patient was seen regularly in a special clinic where detailed notes, radiographs and records were available. The results have been assessed clinically and radiographically by modifications of Severin's criteria to enable comparisons to be made with other published series. Attention has been focused on the good and the bad prognostic factors and on the long-term complications. The most worrying feature has been the premature onset of degenerative arthritis even in hips which seemed to have been satisfactorily reduced


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 5 | Pages 756 - 761
1 Sep 1995
Suda H Hattori T Iwata H

We studied the morphological changes in the proximal femur in 42 patients (42 hips) who had had varus derotation osteotomy of the upper femur for residual acetabular dysplasia and congenital subluxation of the hip and who did not show deformity of the head of the femur. In 19 patients the alignment of the whole leg was examined. The femoral neck-shaft angle (FNSA) at the final examination was unrelated to that immediately after operation or to the state of the acetabulum at that time. The postoperative FNSA was not related to the final result but the CE angle obtained at surgery influenced the outcome. The femoral length did not differ significantly between the unaffected and affected sides. Significant differences were found in the femorotibial angle (176.6 degrees v 174.5 degrees) and in the point of intersection between the mechanical axis and knee (65.0% v 57.2%)


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 2 | Pages 280 - 280
1 Feb 2007
RAMISETTY N GREISS ME


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 7 | Pages 897 - 903
1 Jul 2011
Bachhal V Sankhala SS Jindal N Dhillon MS

We report the outcome of 32 patients (37 knees) who underwent hemicallostasis with a dynamic external fixator for osteoarthritis of the medial compartment of the knee. There were 16 men (19 knees) and 16 women (18 knees) with a mean age at operation of 54.6 years (27 to 72). The aim was to achieve a valgus overcorrection of 2° to 8° or mechanical axis at 62.5% (± 12.5%). At a mean follow-up of 62.8 months (51 to 81) there was no change in the mean range of movement, and no statistically significant difference in the Insall-Salvati index or tibial slope (p = 0.11 and p = 0.15, respectively). The mean hip-knee-ankle angle changed from 190.6 (183° to 197°) to 176.0° (171° to 181°), with a mean final position of the mechanical axis of 58.5% (35.1% to 71.2%).

The desired alignment was attained in 31 of 37 (84%) knees. There were 21 excellent, 13 good, two fair and one poor result according to the Oxford knee score with no correlation between age and final score. This score was at its best at one year with a statistically significant deterioration at two years (p = 0.001) followed by a small but not statistically significant deterioration until the final follow-up (p = 0.17). All the knees with Ahlback grade 1 osteoarthritis had excellent or good results. Complications included pin tract infections involving 16.4% of all pins used, delayed union in two, knee stiffness in four, fracture of the lateral cortex in one and ring sequestrum in one.

In conclusion, hemicallostasis provides precision in attaining the desired alignment without interfering with tibial slope or patellar height, and is relatively free of serious complications.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 2 | Pages 180 - 185
1 Feb 2007
Koëter S Diks MJF Anderson PG Wymenga AB

An abnormal lateral position of the tibial tuberosity causes distal malalignment of the extensor mechanism of the knee and can lead to lateral tracking of the patella causing anterior knee pain or objective patellar instability, characterised by recurrent dislocation. Computer tomography is used for a precise pre-operative assessment of the tibial tubercle-trochlear groove distance. A distance of more than 15 mm is considered to be pathological and an indication for surgery in symptomatic patients.

In a prospective study we performed a subtle transfer of the tibial tuberosity according to the information gained from the pre-operative CT scan. This method was applied to two groups of patients, those with painful lateral tracking of the patella, and those with objective patellar instability. We evaluated the clinical results in 30 patients in each group. The outcome was documented at 3, 12 and 24 months using the Lysholm scale, the Kujala score, and a visual analogue pain score.

Post-operatively, all but one patient in the instability group who had a patellar dislocation requiring further surgery reported good improvement with no further subluxation or dislocation. All patients in both groups had a marked improvement in pain and functional score. Two patients sustained a tibial fracture six and seven weeks after surgery. One patient suffered a per-operative fracture of the tibial tubercle which later required further fixation.

If carefully performed, this type of transfer of the tibial tubercle appears to be a satisfactory technique for the treatment of patients with an increased tibial tubercle-trochlear groove distance and who present with symptoms related to lateral maltracking of the patella.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 7 | Pages 925 - 927
1 Jul 2006
Kalra KP Dhar SB Shetty G Dhariwal Q

We studied 15 patients with healed tuberculosis of the spine and a resultant kyphosis. We selected only those with no neurological deficit and performed a wedge resection of the vertebra using a transpedicular approach. The wedge was removed from the apex of the deformity. For those with a neurological deficit, we chose the conventional anterior debridement and decompression with 360° circumferential fusion. At a mean follow-up of 26.8 months (8 to 46) the outcome was good with an increase in the mean Oswestry Disability Index from 56.26 (48 to 62) pre-operatively to 11.2 (6 to 16) at the latest follow-up.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 97-B, Issue 4 | Pages 492 - 497
1 Apr 2015
Ike H Inaba Y Kobayashi N Yukizawa Y Hirata Y Tomioka M Saito T

In this study we used subject-specific finite element analysis to investigate the mechanical effects of rotational acetabular osteotomy (RAO) on the hip joint and analysed the correlation between various radiological measurements and mechanical stress in the hip joint.

We evaluated 13 hips in 12 patients (two men and ten women, mean age at surgery 32.0 years; 19 to 46) with developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) who were treated by RAO.

Subject-specific finite element models were constructed from CT data. The centre–edge (CE) angle, acetabular head index (AHI), acetabular angle and acetabular roof angle (ARA) were measured on anteroposterior pelvic radiographs taken before and after RAO. The relationship between equivalent stress in the hip joint and radiological measurements was analysed.

The equivalent stress in the acetabulum decreased from 4.1 MPa (2.7 to 6.5) pre-operatively to 2.8 MPa (1.8 to 3.6) post-operatively (p < 0.01). There was a moderate correlation between equivalent stress in the acetabulum and the radiological measurements: CE angle (R = –0.645, p < 0.01); AHI (R = –0.603, p < 0.01); acetabular angle (R = 0.484, p = 0.02); and ARA (R = 0.572, p < 0.01).

The equivalent stress in the acetabulum of patients with DDH decreased after RAO. Correction of the CE angle, AHI and ARA was considered to be important in reducing the mechanical stress in the hip joint.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015;97-B:492–7.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 1 | Pages 164 - 165
1 Jan 1995
Love C