1. The process of repair after fracture of the humerus of the growing rat has been studied by histological, histochemical and biochemical methods. 2. Both periosteal and surrounding mesenchymal cells take part in the process of repair. 3. The primary framework of collagen bridging the gap is mainly formed by the mesenchymal cells, while calcification and ossification of the framework is largely a function of the periosteum. 4. The mucopolysaccharide content rises rapidly in the first week after injury, and is followed by a rise in the collagen content during the second week. The deposition of calcium phosphate during the third and fourth weeks causes an apparent fall in the collagen content during that period. The collagen content tends to return to normal during the phase of remodelling in the fifth and sixth weeks. 5. The tensile strength of the healing bone bears a close relation to its collagen content.
A saw blade was made from two standard oscillating blades which were fixed to each other with channels between, so that cooling fluid could be directed to the saw teeth. The blade was connected to a standard arthroscopy pump which delivered a flow of 80 ml/min through the blade. The performance of this blade was compared with that of a standard saw blade, cutting ox-bone in the laboratory. Irrigation of the standard saw blade with saline delivered by a syringe only slightly diminished the maximum temperature. Pumped irrigation was more effective but required large volumes of fluid. The heat generated by the internally cooled saw blade was negligible and the temperatures achieved (19 degrees C to 34 degrees C) fell well below the critical level for bone death (44 degrees C to 47 degrees C).
1. The use of the Metals Research Macrotome for cutting 100 μ thick sections of fresh, unfixed specimens of arthritic human femoral heads and normal goat condyles is described. 2. A technique for isolating living cells from these slices by decalcification followed by enzymic digestion is reported. 3. The microscopic appearances of the fresh slices, the decalcified slices and the isolated cells as seen by incident or transmitted fluorescent lighting, by phase-contrast microscopy, by scanning electron microscopy and by histological and cytological techniques are illustrated. 4. These techniques might be applicable to the examination of biopsy specimens of pathological bone or to basic research on bone cells.
1. Previous immunological studies have shown that homografts of fresh marrow-free iliac bone are only weakly, if at all, antigenic. 2. In view of this finding an attempt was made to produce a foreign bone graft capable of forming new bone as readily as an iliac autograft by the following method. Living cells of high osteogenic potential and of autologous type were introduced into the graft by combining homologous fresh marrow-free iliac bone with the animal's own red marrow to form a fresh composite homograft-autograft of cancellous bone. 3. Such fresh composite homograft-autografts were inserted into a muscular site in Wistar rats and removed for microscopical examination at intervals of one to seven days and at two, six and twelve weeks after transplantation. 4. It is found that bone and marrow together as a fresh composite homograft-autograft form considerably more new bone than do either of the components of the graft transplanted separately. Homografts of fresh marrow-free iliac bone form, in general, a small amount of early phase and late phase new bone. Autografts of red marrow transplanted alone to a muscular site formed new bone in thirteen to thirty experiments (43 per cent). 5. The stimulus to osteogenesis, and the cellular source of osteoblasts, in marrow autografts is discussed in the light of present knowledge. The concept is suggested that after its transplantation there develops in marrow an inductive system leading to osteoblastic differentiation and bone formation. It is proposed that the necrosis of a portion of a marrow graft liberates osteogenic substances which are taken up by primitive wandering cells derived from littoral cells lining the vascular sinusoids of the surviving portions of the marrow which are induced, thereby, to differentiate as osteoblasts. 6. The cellular source of osteoblasts in a fresh composite homograft-autograft of cancellous bone is discussed. It is deduced that the new bone is derived mainly from the contained marrow of the graft, by mechanisms similar to those leading to osteoblastic differentiation in transplanted autografts of marrow. 7. The stimulus to the greater formation of new bone by fresh composite autograft-homografts than by autografts of marrow transplanted alone is discussed. Two explanations are suggested: 1) a more extensive necrosis of marrow in a composite homograft-autograft than in marrow transplanted alone; and 2) an inductive effect of bone upon marrow. 8. The new bone formed by autografts of fresh marrow-containing iliac bone, it is concluded, is derived not only from osteoblasts on the surfaces of the grafted bone but also from primitive wandering cells derived from littoral cells lining the vascular sinusoids of the surviving portions of its marrow. 9. Mechanisms which may play a role in the histogenesis of woven bone are discussed. 10. The significance of the relation of bone and marrow is considered briefly in the light of knowledge concerning the venous patterns of bone and marrow.
1. Based on studies in seventy-five patients, a technique is described for body surface activity measurements over localised skeletal lesions up to one month after injection of the λ-emitting isotopes Ca47 and Sr85. 2. The activity was high over skeletal lesions like fracture, metastatic cancer, eosinophilic granuloma, chondroma, osteomyelitis and Paget's disease. 3. The high isotope uptake is interpreted as evidence of an increased rate of bone tissue turnover. 4. These findings suggest that external counting of Ca47 and Sr85 may be used for quantitation of the rate of formation of normal and pathological bone tissue. A special application would be localisation and delineation of metastatic cancer in cases where radiographic evidence is uncertain or non-existent.
1. The antigenicity of homologous cortical and cancellous bone has been investigated in eighty-four rabbits. 2. The primary immune responses which occur in lymph nodes draining homografts of fresh tissues (Burwell and Gowland 1961, 1962) have been used as a histological indicator of the antigenicity of fresh homologous cortical bone freed from soft tissues. 3. The secondary immune responses which occur in lymph nodes draining homografts of fresh marrow-containing iliac bone (Burwell 1962 4. It is found that whereas fresh homologous cortical bone fails usually to produce cytological evidence of a primary response in the regional lymph nodes, fresh homologous cortical bone chips inserted into the drainage areas of lymph nodes sensitised previously to donor ..tissue evoke constantly cytological evidence of a secondary response. 5. Fresh homologous marrow-free iliac bone inserted into the drainage areas of lymph nodes sensitised previously to donor tissue does not produce detectable evidence of a secondary response. 6. Homografts of boiled marrow-containing iliac bone do not elicit a secondary response in lymph nodes previously sensitised to donor tissue. 7. Previous work has shown that homografts of frozen (–20 degrees Centigrade) marrow-containing iliac bone do not evoke a primary response in lymph nodes draining such grafts. In the present work it is shown that similar frozen homografts inserted into the drainage areas of lymph nodes previously sensitised to donor tissue evoked a secondary response in three of six lymph nodes. 8. Homografts offreeze-dried marrow-containing iliac bone fail usually to evoke a secondary response in lymph nodes sensitised to donor tissue. 9. Homografts of marrow-containing iliac bone treated by immersion in merthiolate solution before being inserted into the drainage areas of lymph nodes previously sensitised to tissue from the donor elicited a secondary response in three of five lymph nodes. 10. Knowledge concerning the antigenicity offresh and treated homologous bone is discussed in the light of recent work.
1. Experiments to examine the antigenicity of homologous bone tissues in rats are reported. The tissues studied included fresh marrow-free cortical bone blocks and chips, fresh, boiled, frozen and freeze-dried marrow-containing iliac bone, fresh iliac bone devoid of marrow, and fresh red marrow. 2. The various tissues were transplanted from hooded to Wistar rats. Three weeks later a skin graft from each donor was transplanted to its respective host to detect the presence of transplantation immunity, which was indicated by the early rejection of the skin graft. 3. Homografts of fresh cortical bone evoked transplantation immunity indicating that it contained transplantation antigens which were also in the skin. 4. Homografts of fresh marrow-containing iliac bone also evoked transplantation immunity, which was shown to be caused by the red marrow. 5. Fresh iliac homografts devoid of marrow did not elicit transplantation immunity. This suggests that iliac bone tissue may not contain transplantation antigens or that the small amount of iliac bone inserted was insufficient. 6. Microscopy of the grafts, removed after three weeks, showed that the inflammatory infiltrations around the bone homografts and autografts were not very different, but that the amount of new bone formed was different. The autografts produced a lot of new bone, the homografts only a little. 7. It is suggested that the immune response evoked in the host by the foreign graft impairs the formation of new bone by fresh homografts of cortical blocks, cortical chips and marrow-containing iliac bone. 8. The impairment of new bone formation by homografts of marrow-free iliac bone is discussed. Such bone grafts fail to evoke detectable transplantation immunity. Why these grafts do not form more new homologous bone than the other homografts studied, is not clear. 9. Homografts of boiled and frozen iliac bone do not evoke any detectable change in the sensitivity of the host to donor tissue. 10. Homografts of freeze-dried marrow-containing iliac bone elicit a slight but significant prolongation of the survival of skin homografts. The implication, in terms of modern immunological theory, is that in such grafts certain tissue antigens still persist.
We report the findings from independent prospective clinical and laboratory-based joint-simulator studies of the performance of ceramic femoral heads of 22.225 mm diameter in cross-linked polyethylene (XLP) acetabular cups. We found remarkable qualitative and quantitative agreement between the clinical and simulator results for the wear characteristics with time, and confirmed that ceramic femoral heads penetrate the XLP cups at only about half the rate of otherwise comparable metal heads. In the clinical study, 19 hips in 17 patients were followed for an average of 77 months. In the hip-joint simulator a similar prosthesis was tested for 7.3 million cycles. Both clinical and simulator results showed relatively high rates of penetration over the first 18 months or 1.5 million cycles, followed by a very much lower wear thereafter. Once an initial bedding-in of 0.2 mm to 0.4 mm had taken place the subsequent rates of penetration were very small. The initial clinical wear during bedding-in averaged 0.29 mm/year; subsequent progression was an order of magnitude lower at about 0.022 mm/year, lower than the 0.07 mm/year in metal-to-UHMWP Charnley LFAs. Our results show the excellent tribological features of alumina-ceramic-to-XLP implants, and also confirm the value of well-designed joint simulators for the evaluation of total joint replacements.
1. The response of the first regional lymph node to a homograft of fresh iliac cancellous bone inserted subcutaneously into the rabbit's ear three weeks after the introduction of a similar graft from the same donor into the same ear has been investigated in thirty rabbits. Fifteen rabbits which received second-set autografts of cancellous bone have also been studied. 2. The insertion of second-set homografts of fresh marrow-containing cancellous bone evokes an immune secondary response in the lymph nodes draining the grafts. 3. The increase in weight of the first regional lymph nodes on the side receiving second-set homografts is more rapid and of greater magnitude than that of nodes draining first-set homografts of cancellous bone. Second-set autografts evoke weight changes in the draining nodes similar to those in nodes draining first-set autografts of cancellous bone. 4. The histological changes which occur in the lymph nodes draining the second-set homografts (secondary response) are described and compared with those occurring in lymph nodes draining first-set homografts of cancellous bone (primary response). 5. In the primary response the distribution of large and medium lymphoid cells is throughout an activated sector of the cortex of the lymph node (Burwell and Gowland 1961), but in the secondary response these cells are found peripherally within the activated sector of the node. In both the primary and the secondary responses large and medium lymphoid cells are found in the medullary trabeculae of the lymph nodes. 6. The differences between the primary response of lymph nodes draining a tissue homograft (cancellous bone) and the primary response of lymph nodes draining classical antigens, and reported by other workers, are described. 7. Knowledge concerning the inflammatory response in the tissues of the host surrounding homografts of fresh cortical and cancellous bone implanted into animals previously sensitised to tissue from the respective donor is reviewed. 8. The late phase of new bone formation by homografts of fresh cancellous bone is discussed in the light of immunological studies.
1. The antigenicity of cancellous bone has been investigated in ninety-seven rabbits. 2. The immune responses of lymph nodes draining fresh homografts of cancellous bone (Burwell and Gowland 1961 3. The principal antigenic component of a fresh homograft of iliac cancellous bone is the nucleated cells of the red marrow. 4. Homologous marrow-free cancellous bone does not usually produce cytological evidence of an immune response in the lymph node draining the graft, unless new homograft bone formation occurs. 5. The treatment of marrow-containing cancellous bone by boiling, freezing at - 20 degrees Centigrade, freeze-drying, irradiation or by merthiolate solution impairs the transplantation antigenicity of the tissue as a homograft. 6. The immersion of cancellous bone in a glycerol-serum-Ringer solution which is then slowly cooled to - 79 degrees Centigrade, stored for one week and then rapidly thawed, allows considerable preservation of the antigenicity of the red marrow. 7. Knowledge concerning the antigenicity of fresh and treated homologous bone is discussed. 8. Evidence is presented to show that the large and medium lymphoid cell response of lymph nodes draining homografts is due principally to the T-antigens, rather than H-antigens, of the grafts. 9. The changes which occur in the first regional lymph nodes draining tissue homografts may provide another test system to assess the transplantation antigenicity of foreign tissues or extracts of foreign tissues other than bone.
Aims. To systematically review the efficacy of split tendon transfer surgery on gait-related outcomes for children and adolescents with cerebral palsy (CP) and spastic equinovarus foot deformity. Methods. Five databases (CENTRAL, CINAHL, PubMed, Embase, Web of Science) were systematically screened for studies investigating split tibialis anterior or split tibialis posterior tendon transfer for spastic equinovarus foot deformity, with gait-related outcomes (published pre-September 2022). Study quality and evidence were assessed using the Methodological Index for Non-Randomized
Aims. To determine whether obesity and malnutrition have a synergistic effect on outcomes from skeletal trauma or elective orthopaedic surgery. Methods. Electronic databases including MEDLINE, Global Health, Embase, Web of Science, ScienceDirect, and PEDRo were searched up to 14 April 2024, as well as conference proceedings and the reference lists of included studies.
Aims. This systematic review aims to identify 3D predictors derived from biplanar reconstruction, and to describe current methods for improving curve prediction in patients with mild adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Methods. A comprehensive search was conducted by three independent investigators on MEDLINE, PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library. Search terms included “adolescent idiopathic scoliosis”,“3D”, and “progression”. The inclusion and exclusion criteria were carefully defined to include clinical studies. Risk of bias was assessed with the Quality in Prognostic
Two hundred and eighty-three patients with tuberculosis of the thoracic and/or lumbar spine have been followed for 10 years from the start of treatment. All patients received PAS plus isoniazid daily for 18 months, either with streptomycin for the first three months (SPH) or no streptomycin (PH), by random allocation. There was also a second random allocation for all patients: in Masan to inpatient rest in bed (IP) for six months followed by outpatient treatment or to ambulatory outpatient treatment from the start (OP), and in Pusan to outpatient treatment with a plaster-of-Paris jacket (J) for nine months or to ambulatory treatment without any support (No J). A favourable status was achieved on their allocated regimen by 88% of patients at 10 years. Some of the remaining patients also attained a favourable status after additional chemotherapy and/or operation, and if these are included the proportion achieving such a status increases to 96%. There were five patients whose deaths were attributed to their spinal disease. A sinus or clinically evident abscess was present on at least one occasion in the 10-year period in 42% of the patients. Residual sinuses persisted at 10 years in two patients, at death at seven years in a third and at default in the seventh year in a fourth. Thirty-five patients had paraparesis at some time during the 10-year period, including two who died with paraplegia before five years. Complete resolution occurred in 26 patients (in six after additional chemotherapy and/or surgery). At 10 years two patients had severe paraplegia and one a moderate paraparesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
In two centres in Korea 350 patients with a diagnosis of tuberculosis of the thoracic and/or lumbar spine were allocated at random: in Masan to in-patient rest in bed (IP) for six months followed by out-patient treatment or to ambulatory out-patient treatment (OP) from the start; in Pusan to out-patient treatment with a plaster-of-Paris jacket (J) for nine months or to ambulatory treatment without any support (No J). All patients recieved chemotherapy with PAS with isoniazid for eighteen months, either supplemented with streptomycin for the first three months (SPH) or without this supplement (PH), by random allocation. The main analysis of this report concerns 299 patients (eighty-three IP, eighty-three OP, sixty-three J, seventy No J; 143 SPH, 156 PH). Pre-treatment factors were similar in both centres except that the patients in Pusan had, on average, less extensive lesions although in a greater proportion the disease was radiographically active. One patient (J/SPH) died with active spinal disease and three (all No J/SPH) with paraplegia. A fifth patient (IP/PH) who died from cardio respiratory failure also had pulmonary tuberculosis. Twenty-three patients required operation and/or additional chemotherapy for the spinal lesion. A sinus or clinically evident abscess was either present initially or developed during treatment in 41 per cent of patients. Residual lesions persisted in ten patients (four IP, two OP, one J, three No J; six SPH, four PH) at five years. Thirty-two patients had paraparesis on admission or developing later. Complete resolution occurred in twenty on the allocated regimen and in eight after operation or additional chemotherapy or both. Of the remaining four atients, all of whom had operation and additional chemotherapy, three died and one still had paraparesis at five years. Of 295 patients assessed at five years 89 per cent had a favourable status. The proportions of the patients responding favourably were similar in the IP (91 per cent) and OP (89 per cent) series, in the J (90 per cent) and No J (84 per cent) series and in the SPH (86 per cent) and PH (92 per cent) series.
Aims. To map literature on prognostic factors related to outcomes of revision total knee arthroplasty (rTKA), to identify extensively studied factors and to guide future research into what domains need further exploration. Methods. We performed a systematic literature search in MEDLINE, Embase, and Web of Science. The search string included multiple synonyms of the following keywords: "revision TKA", "outcome" and "prognostic factor". We searched for studies assessing the association between at least one prognostic factor and at least one outcome measure after rTKA surgery. Data on sample size, study design, prognostic factors, outcomes, and the direction of the association was extracted and included in an evidence map. Results. After screening of 5,660 articles, we included 166 studies reporting prognostic factors for outcomes after rTKA, with a median sample size of 319 patients (30 to 303,867). Overall, 50% of the studies reported prospectively collected data, and 61% of the studies were performed in a single centre. In some studies, multiple associations were reported; 180 different prognostic factors were reported in these studies. The three most frequently studied prognostic factors were reason for revision (213 times), sex (125 times), and BMI (117 times).