Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 21 - 40 of 6143
Results per page:
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 3 | Pages 427 - 437
1 Aug 1974
Porter BB Richardson C Vainio K

1. One hundred and twenty-three patients with rheumatoid arthritis who had synovectomy and excision of the head of the radius performed on 154 elbows have been reviewed one to six years after operation.

2. The severity of the disease process at the time of operation was graded radiologically and an attempt made to relate this to the results.

3. Overall, the clinical results were most satisfactory; more than 70 per cent of the patients were pleased with the outcome. When radiographic deterioration of the joint was taken into account, however, only 54 per cent achieved a "satisfactory" result.

4. Clearance of the synovium through combined medial and lateral incisions gave better results than a lateral approach alone.

5. When the disease was far advanced by the time of operation any good results were likely to be short-lived.

6. The indications for synovectomy of the rheumatoid elbow are discussed in the light of these findings.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 3 | Pages 558 - 559
1 Aug 1967
Seymour N

1. The long-term results of thirty-two naviculo-cuneiform fusions for flat foot have been reviewed sixteen to nineteen years after operation.

2. The initial encouraging results of the operation have not been maintained.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 2 | Pages 205 - 212
1 May 1960
Clawson DK Seddon HJ

1. The results of repair of the sciatic nerve and of its main divisions have been analysed in a series of 118 cases, the patients having been under observation for three to eighteen years (average 11·7 years).

2. A result was satisfactory if there was some return of sensibility throughout the autonomous zone (the area of skin supplied exclusively by the damaged nerve) and if the more important muscles of the leg were capable of contraction against gravity and resistance.

3. When the whole of the sciatic nerve is damaged it is necessary to present the results separately for the lateral and medial popliteal divisions.

4. Of forty-seven cases of repair of the medial popliteal nerve 79 per cent showed useful motor and 62 per cent useful sensory recovery. In three out of four cases the correspondence between the degree of motor and of sensory recovery was fairly close.

5. Of seventy-two cases of repair of the lateral popliteal nerve 36 per cent showed useful motor and 74 per cent useful sensory recovery. The latter figure must be regarded with some reserve because sensory "recovery" in the lateral popliteal zone may be due to the ingrowth of nerve fibres from contiguous normally innervated skin. Thus it is not possible to correlate motor and sensory recovery.

6. In eighteen cases of repair of the posterior tibial nerve, there was useful sensory recovery in the sole in twelve. But although there was evidence of recovery in the plantar muscles in eleven cases it was functionally valueless.

7. In repair of the medial popliteal nerve the result was better if suture had been carried out early. In repair of the lateral popliteal nerve there was no evidence that delay was harmful; but the proportion of good results was so low (as judged by motor function alone, sensory recovery being often extraneous) that this exception to a general rule cannot be taken very seriously.

8. Gaps of up to twelve centimetres–estimated after resection of the damaged nerve ends–could be closed without difficulty by the usual technique, and the extent of the gap up to that limit had no influence on the prognosis. The closure of larger gaps, when the knee must be flexed beyond a right angle, is not compatible with good recovery because the post-operative stretching of the nerve causes serious intraneural damage.

9. Nerve grafting has given poor results in repair of the sciatic nerve.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 3 | Pages 546 - 549
1 Aug 1959
Robb WAT

1. The method of treatment of a mallet finger deformity by immobilisation in a plaster in the position of hyperextension of the distal interphalangeal joint and flexion of the proximal interphalangeal joint is, on the whole, unsatisfactory because the splint is difficult to apply, it may need to be changed frequently, and it is sometimes complicated by pressure sores.

2. In many cases the deformity is still present after six weeks of adequate immobilisation, but gradual improvement from the contraction of fibrous tissue occurs for up to six months.

Therefore an assessment of the results of any method of treatment should be made only after an interval of at least six months.

3. The subjective end results at the end of six months are satisfactory whether or not there has been efficient immobilisation in hyperextension. Few patients have any disability and only rarely is this sufficient to cause interference with normal activities. A high proportion of patients show slight persistent deformity and limitation of movement, and this is seemingly uninfluenced appreciably by the type or duration of treatment.

4. The only treatment necessary for most cases of mallet finger is the application of elastic adhesive strapping or a straight spatula splint in order to relieve the initial discomfort from the injury.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 34-B, Issue 4 | Pages 581 - 587
1 Nov 1952
Scott JC Jones BV

1. A series of 1,211 cases of infection of the hand and fingers is reviewed. Of the 1,066 which required operation about two-thirds were treated by excision and suture, and the results in these cases are analysed.

2. The criterion of success was per primam healing in seventeen days or less, and 54 per cent of the cases treated by this method (excluding paronychiae) fulfilled this criterion.

3. The causes of failure are discussed.

4. It is concluded that excision and suture is the method of choice in well localised infections, but that it should be avoided in diffuse infections and in some cases with sinuses. Its use is unnecessary in trivial infections.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 33-B, Issue 4 | Pages 496 - 502
1 Nov 1951
Drew AJ

Our investigations have shown that the late results of tarsal arthrodesis are good. We have endeavoured to find the disadvantages and to stress residual symptoms, but the general mpression after seeing these patients is that they were all well satisfied with the result. We think it should be added that these patients were selected in so far as they were all operated upon by masters of operative technique who were acknowledged authorities in this particular subject. Without the careful attention to detail and to the points discussed, these operations can be dismal failures and a burden to the patients concerned.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 94-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1260 - 1264
1 Sep 2012
Raiss P Lin A Mizuno N Melis B Walch G

A total of 12 epileptic patients (14 shoulders) with recurrent seizures and anterior dislocations of the shoulder underwent a Latarjet procedure and were reviewed at a mean of 8.3 years (1 to 20) post-operatively. Mean forward flexion decreased from 165° (100° to 180°) to 160° (90° to 180°) (p = 0.5) and mean external rotation from 54° (10° to 90°) to 43° (5° to 75°) (p = 0.058). The mean Rowe score was 76 (35 to 100) at the final follow-up. Radiologically, all shoulders showed a glenoid-rim defect and Hill-Sachs lesions pre-operatively. Osteo-arthritic changes of the glenohumeral joint were observed in five shoulders (36%) pre-operatively and in eight shoulders (57%) post-operatively. Re-dislocation during a seizure occurred in six shoulders (43%). Five of these patients underwent revision surgery using a bone buttress from the iliac crest and two of these patients re-dislocated due to a new seizure.

Due to the unacceptably high rate of re-dislocation after surgery in these patients, the most important means of reducing the incidence of further dislocation is the medical management of the seizures. The Latarjet procedure should be reserved for the well-controlled patient with epilepsy who has recurrent anterior dislocation of the shoulder during activities of daily living.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 3 | Pages 366 - 370
1 May 1997
Simank H Brocai DRC Reiser D Thomsen M Sabo D Lukoschek M

We report our results using three different threaded acetabular components (Mecring A, Mecring B and Weill) in 715 hips with a follow-up of between one and ten years (median: 99.1, 56.5, 38.3 months, respectively). All cups were implanted with one type of cementless stem.

The clinical results were good or acceptable in about 70% of the hips, but signs of loosening with radiolucency and/or migration were found in 10.1%. Radiological evidence of loosening did not correlate significantly with the clinical outcome. Pain was not a reliable indicator of loosening and its absence sometimes allowed severe osteolysis to develop. Twenty-five hips were revised (3.5%) for aseptic loosening of the acetabular component. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the cumulative rate of failure showed a rapid increase five years after the initial operation, but no significant correlation with gender, age or weight.

The high rate of failure indicates that further use of these acetabular components cannot be recommended. Annual radiographs are required to assess osteolysis even if the patients are free from pain.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 322 - 326
1 Mar 1997
Katz RP Callaghan JJ Sullivan PM Johnston RC

We performed 83 consecutive cemented revision total hip arthroplasties in 77 patients between 1977 and 1983 using improved cementing techniques. One patient (two hips) was lost to follow-up. The remaining 76 patients (81 hips) had an average age at revision of 63.7 years (23 to 89).

At the final follow-up 18 hips (22%) had had a reoperation, two (2.5%) for sepsis, three (4%) for dislocation and 13 (16%) for aseptic loosening. The incidence of rerevision for aseptic femoral loosening was 5.4% and for aseptic acetabular loosening 16%. These results confirm that cemented femoral revision is a durable option in revision hip surgery when improved cementing techniques are used, but that cemented acetabular revision is unsatisfactory.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 2 | Pages 258 - 262
1 Mar 1994
Owen T Moran C Smith Pinder I

We reviewed a consecutive series of 241 uncemented, porous-coated anatomic (PCA) hip replacements at an average follow-up of five years (2 to 9). Of these, 32 had failed (13%), 26 at the acetabular component (11%) and six at the femoral component (2%). Acetabular failure was associated with local osteolysis and excessive polyethylene wear in 20 cases: in these histological examination showed giant macrophages incorporating numerous particles of high-density polyethylene. The femoral failures were related to a poor intramedullary fit with subsequent subsidence. Using the recommendation for revision as the end point, the cumulative survival rate for prostheses was 91% at six years (95% CI +/- 6%), 73% (+/- 11%) at seven years, and 57% (+/- 20%) at eight years. The result of uncemented PCA hip replacement is satisfactory up to six years, but then increasing failure of the acetabular component appears to be due to polyethylene wear, leading to osteolysis, loosening and component migration. At first, failure is often asymptomatic; routine follow-up of uncemented hip replacement is essential, especially after five years.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 1 | Pages 83 - 87
1 Jan 1992
Kim Y Kim V

We reviewed 82 primary arthroplasties (in 71 patients) in which cementless porous-coated hip prostheses were used. The mean age of the patients at operation was 52 years (24 to 86); they were followed up for an average of 62.1 months (60 to 66). The diagnosis was avascular necrosis of the femoral head in 35%, fracture of the femoral neck in 24%, primary osteoarthritis in 16% and miscellaneous in 25%. The average preoperative Harris hip score was 56.7 points and the average postoperative score was 83.3 points. Eight hips (10%) had component loosening; four had been revised and four were awaiting revision. In 27 hips (33%) there was a radiolucent line wider than 2 mm in zones 1 and 7. In 55 hips (67%) there was calcar resorption of more than 10 mm. Twenty patients (28%) complained of thigh pain although they had no radiographic evidence of loosening of a component. Factors that may have contributed to the poor clinical and radiographic results were: 1) inadequate surface area for bone ingrowth, particularly on the lateral aspect of the upper part of the prosthesis, 2) poor initial fit of the stem in the metaphysis, which resulted in cantilever motion of the proximal part of the stem about the well-fixed distal stem, and 3) the collar of the prosthesis, which prevented it from subsiding to a naturally stable position and caused damage to the calcar.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 40-B, Issue 1 | Pages 75 - 81
1 Feb 1958
Duthie HL Hutchinson JR

1. Seventy-seven operations on the patella have been reviewed.

2. There is no evidence that arthritic changes in the femoral condyles are an inevitable sequel of complete excision of the patella.

3. There is a direct relationship between the severity of symptoms after complete excision of the patella and the extent of ossification in the quadriceps tendon.

4. Patello-femoral arthritis after partial excision of the patella may be due to faulty realignment of the patellar ligament and consequent tilting of the patellar remnant towards the femoral condyles.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 39-B, Issue 4 | Pages 659 - 673
1 Nov 1957
Hall JE

1. One hundred and seventy-three hips in 138 patients have been examined and studied in reference to the type of treatment received.

2. Shepherd's method of assessing the results of arthroplasty operations has been adapted to this series.

3. Satisfactory results were found in 77·9 per cent of all patients.

4. The value of straight longitudinal traction is questioned. Medial rotation appears to be an essential step in the reduction of the deformity.

5. Manipulation was found to be a relatively safe and effective method of reducing the deformity in patients seen soon after an acute episode, and should be reserved for them.

6. Complications were common after nailing operations, and included subtrochanteric fracture in three cases.

7. Avascular necrosis was the commonest cause of a poor result. The two types of avascular necrosis are discussed.

8. Avascular necrosis was found in 37 per cent of cases in which a manipulation was followed by a nailing operation.

9. Avascular necrosis was not found in any case in which a manipulation was combined with the use of Moore's pins, but such cases were kept under observation for a shorter time.

10. Avascular necrosis was found in 38·1 per cent of cases of cervical osteotomy.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 34-B, Issue 2 | Pages 173 - 180
1 May 1952
Robert Judet J

At the end of this short study we have to sum up our views about the use of the acrylic prosthesis for arthroplasty of the hip. Some fatalities and a proportion of bad or poor results make this operation one to be undertaken only by surgeons well trained in the surgery of the hip and only on patients who really need it. However, the tolerance of the tissues to acrylic resin and the fixation of the stem in the neck of the femur promise to be lasting. We know that a much longer time is necessary to confirm these general statements, which proceed from an experience of only five years and the study of six hundred cases.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 4 | Pages 518 - 520
1 Nov 1949
Dornan A


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1357 - 1360
1 Oct 2005
Hutchinson JRM Parish EN Cross MJ

Stiffness is an uncommon but potentially debilitating complication following total knee replacement (TKR). The treatment of this condition remains difficult and controversial. We present the results of 13 patients who underwent open arthrolysis for stiffness. The mean time between TKR and arthrolysis was 14 months. The mean follow-up was 7.2 years (2 to 10). The mean range of movement prior to arthrolysis was 55°. This increased to 91°, six months after arthrolysis (p < 0.005). The improved range of movement was maintained during the follow-up period. No patient has required revision of their components. We have found arthrolysis to be a useful and successful approach to post-TKR stiffness.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 3 | Pages 410 - 412
1 May 1996
Rawes ML Dias JJ

We have reviewed 30 patients who had been treated conservatively for acromioclavicular dislocation between 1979 and 1982 at an average of 12.5 years after the injury. All except one had a good outcome as did five others contacted by telephone. In all patients reviewed the acromioclavicular joint remained subluxed or dislocated.

With conservative treatment a good long-term outcome can be expected without restoration of the anatomical configuration of the joint.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 872 - 874
1 Nov 1993
Williams W McCullough C

We assessed 57 total hip arthroplasties in 34 adolescents with juvenile chronic arthritis using standard radiological techniques at an average of 4.7 years (20 months to 9 years) after surgery. The incidence of overall loosening was 24.6% (14 hips), but hips with a follow-up of more than five years had a loosening rate of 43.5% (10 hips; p < 0.01).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 2 | Pages 251 - 256
1 Mar 1992
Duparc J Massin P

We implanted 203 smooth-stemmed femoral components before January 1988. The femoral component used was anatomically shaped, fluted and made of titanium. Thirty-two hips were revised due to mid-thigh pain, and the femoral implant was found to be loose in all. In the 157 patients with a two-year follow-up, the Merle d'Aubigne and pain scores for completely cementless arthroplasties were similar to those for hybrid prostheses (cemented acetabular cup and cementless femoral stem). Of the 145 cases with two-year radiographic follow-up, 59 had extensive radiolucencies and 22 were unstable. The five-year cumulative survival rate was 77%. Implantation of this stem should be restricted to patients in whom cement fixation is contra-indicated.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1057 - 1060
1 Nov 1990
Macnicol M

From 1962 to 1986, 117,256 neonates were screened for congenital dislocation of the hip (CDH). When the primary physical examination was performed by the junior paediatric staff there was a persistent late diagnosis rate of 0.5 per 1000 live births. When the primary examination was undertaken by experienced orthopaedic personnel (1982 to 1984) the late diagnosis rate fell and fewer infants were splinted.