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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 3 | Pages 526 - 532
1 Aug 1965
Harris NH Kirkaldy-Willis WH

1. A primary subacute type of staphylococcal osteomyelitis has been described. It is the commonest form of osteomyelitis seen in East Africa, and the incidence appears to be increasing in Great Britain.

2. A review of the literature indicates that this is not a new disease but that in the past there has been some confusion in terminology.

3. The causative organism is a coagulase positive staphylococcus, but in a few instances a coagulase negative one has been isolated. The staphylococcus is thought to be of reduced virulence and in East Africa it is likely that the population has acquired an increased resistance to the staphylococcus.

4. Two radiologically distinct groups are recognised, depending on whether a bone abscess is present or not. In the first group there are two types of localised abscesses: the familiar Brodie's lesion and the less well recognised large bone abscess that occurs in the metaphysis of a long bone. While the pathology of the two types is similar, the radiological features are quite distinct. The lesions in the second group are characterised by extensive diaphysial changes, with or without metaphysial involvement, and an obvious abscess cannot usually be demonstrated.

5. The main clinical features are the long history, often weeks or months, before diagnosis; insignificant or absent general reaction to the infection and minimum physical signs.

6. Vertebral body osteomyelitis in adults is included because it generally presents as a subacute infection; the difficulties in distinguishing it from a tuberculous infection are outlined.

7. The most useful diagnostic aids are the staphylococcal antibody titres (especially in vertebral infections) and the erythrocyte sedimentation rate. A limited surgical exposure is usually required if the causative organism is to be isolated and empirical antibiotic therapy is to be avoided. The total and differential white blood count are so often normal in these patients that they are considered to be of no diagnostic value.

8. Curettage and local antibiotics together will cure the localised bone abscess. Other lesions may be effectively treated by systemic antibiotics alone, but in the later stages removal of sequestra and infected granulation tissue may be necessary. In this instance it is essential to make a planned incision and to cut a window in the bone large enough to expose the whole of the lesion; primary suture of the wound is advocated.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 4 | Pages 681 - 688
1 Nov 1959
Rowling DE


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 1 | Pages 51 - 55
1 Jan 1996
Crerand S Dolan M Laing P Bird M Smith ML Klenerman L

We reviewed all patients with a clinically infected foot ulcer attending a specialised neuropathic foot clinic. Neuropathy was confirmed by the inability to feel a 5.07 Semmes-Weinstein hair, areflexia and impaired vibration sense, as measured by a biothesiometer.

Of 40 patients who attended the clinic over a two-year period, six with ischaemic ulcers were excluded. The remaining 34 had plain radiographs of the foot followed by a 99mTc-MDP bone scan. If the latter was positive, an 111In-labelled WBC scan was performed with planar and/or tomographic dual-isotope studies where appropriate. Bone and WBC scans were performed in 31 patients. In ten, isotope imaging showed infection localised to the soft tissues only and conservative treatment was successful in them all. Eighteen patients were treated surgically with excision of the involved bone, which was sent for culture and histological examination.

Dual-isotope scans had a sensitivity of 93% and a specificity of 83%. 99mTc-MDP bone scans with the appropriate 111In-labelled WBC scans can reliably determine the site and extent of osteomyelitis in the neuropathic diabetic foot.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 4 | Pages 721 - 729
1 Nov 1974
Hierholzer G Rehn J Knothe H Masterson J

1. The dominant role of pathogenic staphylococci in surgical infections has been confirmed by positive isolations in 89·9 per cent of a wide variety of lesions in a hospital infective unit. Of 150 staphylococci isolated, 147 were sensitive to fusidic acid, two were slightly sensitive and only one was resistant.

2. Fusidic acid was administered as sodium fusidate to 100 patients with staphylococcal infections (including seventy-two with chronic post-traumatic osteomyelitis). Sterile swabs were achieved in seventy-seven of these patients and in the remaining twenty-three a change of flora was detected.

3. Bone samples were taken at operation from twenty-nine patients with chronic osteomyelitis who had been treated for at least five days with fusidic acid. Depending on dosage, the mean fusidic acid concentrations were 7·3 and 9·8 micrograms per gram. Corresponding levels in non-inflammatory bone samples from thirty-one patients were, depending on the duration of treatment, 12·3, 2l·3 and 25·4 micrograms per gram. The fusidic acid levels in cancellous bone were almost twice as high as those in compact bone.

4. The relevance of these findings to the use of fusidic acid therapy as an adjunct to surgical management of chronic osteomyelitis is discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 52-B, Issue 2 | Pages 302 - 307
1 May 1970
Rowling DE

1. The treatment of twenty-nine consecutive patients suffering from chronic osteomyelitis is reviewed. With the advent of an antibiotic, Fucidin, which has the ability to penetrate in significant amounts into tissues carrying a poor blood supply, a more limited surgical procedure has become possible.

2. A successful outcome, as judged by primary healing, was achieved in 86 per cent of patients treated with a combination of surgery and Fucidin with penicillin. This compares favourably with the results achieved in a previous series in which more radical surgery was undertaken.

3. Although Fucidin has advanced the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis, it is still essential to use surgery as well.

4. Fucidin caused no toxic effects despite an average total dose of seventy to eighty grammes. Resistance of the staphylococcus developed in vitro in one patient, without affecting a satisfactory clinical outcome.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 4 | Pages 697 - 699
1 Nov 1964
Mills KLG

A case of salmonella osteitis of the spine is described. It is thought to be the first case reported due to the serotype Salnionella muenchen.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 4 | Pages 671 - 680
1 Nov 1959
Trueta J

1. The three age types of acute haematogenous osteomyelitis are conditioned in their respective clinical features by the differing nature of their vascular bone pattern.

2. In the infant the condition causes severe and often permanent epiphysial damage and joint infection, a large involucrum but only transient damage to the shaft and metaphysis.

3. In the child the condition is responsible for extensive cortical damage with involucrum formation, but, except for some stimulation of growth, permanent damage to the growth cartilage and to joints is exceptional. Chronicity of the disease is rare if treatment has been effective.

4. In the adult acute osteomyelitis of the long bones is rare. It causes very frequent joint infection; the cortex is absorbed instead of sequestrating. The whole of the bone is invaded and frequently leaves chronic infection in the bone marrow.

5. The vascular characteristics of the bones in each age group and their relation to the onset of infection are described.

6. Some general directives for management based on these facts are suggested.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 33-B, Issue 1 | Pages 74 - 79
1 Feb 1951
Athanassiadis CN

1. The clinical findings and results in seventeen patients under two years of age, suffering from acute osteomyelitis, have been studied and compared with forty-eight similar cases treated without penicillin.

2. The results in the penicillin-treated group were not greatly superior to those in the control group and did not justify the high hopes that have been entertained for penicillin as a certain cure for osteomyelitis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 34-B, Issue 1 | Pages 80 - 81
1 Feb 1952
Lawrie RW


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 3 | Pages 535 - 541
1 Aug 1960
Harris NH

1. Forty-five cases of acute osteomyelitis have been reviewed with the object of determining the causes of relapse. The importance of an early diagnosis and prompt treatment is stressed, and the question of when to stop antibiotic drugs is discussed.

2. The provisional diagnosis was anterior poliomyelitis in seventeen out of forty-five patients; acute osteomyelitis was diagnosed in twelve only. The criteria for making an early diagnosis are discussed, including the value and limitation of blood culture.

3. The place of operation is discussed and certain conclusions are set out.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 6 | Pages 983 - 986
1 Nov 1997
Ezra E Wientroub S

Primary subacute haematogenous osteomyelitis (PSHO) of the small bones of the foot is a rare and infrequently considered cause of a limp in children. We describe 11 patients with PSHO, of whom nine were under three years of age, who had a limp with few symptoms. The talus was involved in 36%. Bone scans were positive in all patients and led to localisation of the lesion in two. The radiological features included soft-tissue swelling, an osteolytic lesion in the talus and the calcaneus and a sclerotic appearance of the cuboid and the navicular bones. All patients except one were cured with antibiotics.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 52-B, Issue 4 | Pages 692 - 703
1 Nov 1970
Roberts PH

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 conservative treatment. Operations were performed in twelve patients.

6. Shortening of the limb occurred in all patients and in some it was severe.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 3 | Pages 454 - 457
1 Aug 1969
Evans EM Davies DM

1. In chronic osteomyelitis grafting a cavity with split skin is a reliable method of treatment. The skin cover so obtained is durable.

2. The method may be used with good prospects of success even when the cavity is large and there is extensive disease of bone.

3. Operation is indicated for the relief of pain, to close a sinus or sinuses, to obtain healing of an ulcer or to prevent recurrent episodes of acute infection.

4. The technique of operation employed in eleven cases is described and illustrative case reports are given.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 1 | Pages 11 - 20
1 Feb 1960
Eyre-Brook AL

A series of ten infants is reported, seven of whom showed evidence of osteomyelitis of the upper end of the femur; the remaining three did not, but presented with an acute subluxation of the hip in a febrile illness. Four sequelae among the seven more severe cases were: 1) destruction of the capital epiphysis with dislocation at the hip; 2) destruction of the capital epiphysis, the femoral neck remaining in the acetabulum; 3) destruction of the epiphysial plate with the femoral head, remaining in the acetabulum, connected to the femoral neck by a fibrous union; 4) recovery with coxa magna but no other deformity.

The streptococcus plays a greater part in this osteomyelitis of infancy than in osteomyelitis of older children, but various other organisms were identified. The organism should be sought by blood culture as well as from the local lesion.

Aspiration of the hip, treatment of the hip in abduction and the use of the appropriate antibiotic are recommended. If there is marked swelling and induration, freer release of the pus is strongly advised.

Controlled abduction osteotomy plays a useful part in stabilising the femoral neck in the acetabulum or in stabilising the femoral neck beneath the capital epiphysis, but may usefully be preceded by an arthrograph because late ossification of a detached head sometimes occurs.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 33-B, Issue 1 | Pages 110 - 111
1 Feb 1951
Gallie WE


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 4 | Pages 796 - 809
1 Nov 1959
Wiley AM Trueta J

1. Vascular anatomical studies of the spine are described and the possibility of spread of infection from pelvis to spine through the paravertebral venous plexus is discussed.

2. Though a venous route does exist, our studies do not support the supposition that infection is likely to spread by this route; nor is there any clear clinical, pathological or anatomical evidence that such spread occurs.

3. Nineteen cases of pyogenic osteomyelitis of the spine are recorded, six of which followed urinary infections. The condition is compared with osteomyelitis as it occurs in the other bones of adults.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 36-B, Issue 4 | Pages 584 - 590
1 Nov 1954
Hazlett JW

1. One hundred and one cases of cancellous chip bone grafting operations for filling of infected bone defects are reviewed.

2. Short-term follow-up showed primary or delayed primary healing in 87 per cent of the cases.

3. Observation after five years revealed a recurrence rate of 20 per cent. The recurrences were successfully overcome by minor procedures except in five patients, who suffer from repeated flare-ups of infection.

4. At the present time, 91 per cent of the lesions are satisfactorily healed with a partial or complete bone graft intact. There have been ten failures.

5. The criteria for successful cancellous chip bone grafting of osteomyelitic cavities are discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 2 | Pages 273 - 274
1 Mar 2002
Baek GH Chung MS

We describe the development of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis of the scaphoid in a 49-year-old man from an infection occurring around a catheter in the radial artery. Total scaphoidectomy and appropriate antibiotic therapy eradicated the infection.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 4 | Pages 688 - 697
1 Nov 1974
Kemp HBS Lloyd-Roberts GC

1. Attention is drawn to the danger of avascular necrosis developing in the capital femoral epiphysis as a complication of osteomyelitis in the intertrochanteric region.

2. This necrosis is commonly aseptic. It is believed to be caused by compression or thrombosis of the epiphysial vessels.

3. The situation will be aggravated if infection spreads to involve the joint.

4. We believe that prompt decompression of both the joint and the bone is indicated in order to reduce the incidence and severity of these complications.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 4 | Pages 499 - 504
1 Nov 1949
Bolton H Fowler PJ Jepson RP

The pathology of pulp space infection is discussed. It is recommended that a direct incision which is localised precisely to the abscess site, even if the incision is in the tactile pad, is better than a lateral incision, which fails to maintain drainage, causes longer incapacity, and may injure the digital nerve and give rise to causalgia. Fifty cases of pulp space infection in which a direct incision was used are reviewed.