This paper presents four patients with injuries to the thoracolumbar spine assessed by computerised tomography. This technique enabled an easy, quick and accurate diagnosis to be made, avoiding dangerous manipulation of the patient. The scans were analysed using the anatomical classification of Louis to evaluate the instability of the lesions. Control CT scans were used to monitor progress and to provide an accurate
1. Thirty-two infants with genu recurvatum congenitum are reported. 2. Fifteen infants responded completely within eight weeks with conservative treatment; the remaining cases were recalcitrant. 3. The etiology, pathology and treatment of the two groups are discussed. 4. The
An analysis of 51 type III open tibial fractures treated by external skeletal fixation is presented. The fractures are subdivided according to the classification of Gustilo, Mendoza and Williams (1984) into types IIIa, IIIb and IIIc. The different prognoses of these fracture subtypes is examined. The use of the Hoffmann and Hughes external fixators in the management of type III open tibial fractures is presented and it is suggested that the
1. Three cases of cystic angiomatosis of bone are presented and the literature is reviewed. 2. The typical radiological appearances are described and illustrated. 3. The diagnosis must be confirmed by biopsy, and it is essential that the bone removed should be from an involved rib. 4. The
1. A series of six traction lesions of the common peroneal nerve in association with a severe adduction force to knee is described. 2. The reasons for failure of the nerve repair are discussed. 3. A new system of radiological marking of the anastomosis is described. 4. A less pessimistic view of the
1. Nine patients treated for osteogenic sarcoma by elective radical irradiation are reviewed. Five of the nine patients have survived for from three to fourteen years, but one patient has metastases. 2. These results are compared with those from primary amputation. 3. The importance of histological grading in
The existence of pulmonary metastases in patients presenting with osteosarcoma is known to indicate a poor
Premature epiphysial fusion is a common complication of injury of the capitulum in childhood and sometimes results in valgus deformity. Premature fusion can either follow the normal pattern of fusion, perhaps being accelerated on the capitular side, or it can be confined to the capitulum and metaphysis. An optimistic
Reflex sympathetic dystrophy of the knee has been studied in a series of 19 patients. Those diagnosed and treated early (at less than six months) did much better than those diagnosed and treated late. Nevertheless, when these patients were followed up at an average of 3.4 years from onset, not one was completely normal to objective tests with the Cybex II dynameter, an indication of the adverse
1. A specially designed splint is described with which it is possible to maintain the reduction of a paralytic dislocation in a child with spina bifida cystica. The results of its use in a series of thirteen cases are recorded. 2. It is suggested that all such children presenting in the first year of life, in whom the power of the flexor and adductor muscle groups is preserved, should be treated initially in this way until the
1 . The incidence of hydatid disease in bone is discussed and the relevant literature reviewed. 2. The parasitology and methods of control are described. 3. The pathology of hydatid disease affecting bone is described. 4. An analysis of fifty-three cases is made showing that the disease commonly occurs in the spine, the long bones, the ribs and scapula, and the pelvis and hip. The treatment and
The results of treatment of Lisfranc injuries are often unsatisfactory. This retrospective study investigated 46 patients with isolated Lisfranc injuries at a minimum of two years after surgery. Thirteen patients had a poor outcome and had to change employment, or were unable to find work as a result of this injury. The presence of a compensation claim (p = 0.02) and a delay in diagnosis of more than six months were associated with a poor outcome (p = 0.01). There was no association between poor functional outcome and age, gender, mechanism of injury or previous occupation. This study may have medico-legal implications on reporting the
Haemophilia is a rare cause of avascular necrosis of the femoral head. We report three cases from one centre, an incidence of 2.8%. All three cases presented "silently", and this makes the early diagnosis difficult. Awareness of the condition should lead to examination of the hips of haemophiliac patients at every outpatient visit and admission in the hope that hip disease can be diagnosed at an early stage. This may allow earlier treatment, less femoral head deformity, and an improvement in the long-term
1. Of forty-seven patients with histologically proven myeloma of the spine, thirty-three had multiple lesions at the time of the first examination and fourteen were solitary. 2. Five of the solitary cases, in which the patients are alive and well without signs of dissemination four to fourteen years after diagnosis, are considered in detail and the differences in clinical presentation and
1. Eleven cases of tuberculosis of the pubis are described. 2. The disease is often of insidious onset, and symptoms vary from vague discomfort to incapacitating pain in the region of the symphysis and the groin. 3. Abscess formation is common and was present in nine of the eleven patients when they first attended. 4. The lesion has a good
Sixty-seven patients with sternomastoid tumours have been treated by stretching and manipulation of the neck and the results evaluated after an average follow-up of six and a half years. Stretching was found to be useful in early management, although initial facial asymmetry and limitation of neck rotation of over 30 degrees usually precluded a good
Thirty-nine patients with neuralgic amyotrophy were reviewed. In addition to the clinical findings reported in the neurological literature, we commonly found pain throughout the upper limb, and diffuse involvement of the brachial plexus. Five patients had spinal accessory nerve lesions and five had glenohumeral instability. Sixty-four per cent of the patients had had an orthopaedic consultation during their acute illness. It is therefore important that orthopaedic surgeons are aware of this clinical syndrome and its management. The
A review of 77 patients with traumatic central cord syndrome revealed that atypical variations are more common than the existing literature suggests and that these may be seen in a wide variety of acute injuries to the cervical spine. In general the outcome is good; a favourable
Osteonecrosis of the knee comprises two separate disorders, primary spontaneous osteonecrosis which is often a self-limiting condition and secondary osteonecrosis which is associated with risk factors and a poor