The imaging techniques available to aid the diagnosis of ruptures of tendo Achillis, the rotator cuff and the tendon of
1. The complications following standard tendon transfer to provide active correction of drop foot in Chinese patients with leprosy are reviewed. 2. An alternative method of foot drop correction is described in which reactivation of the remaining distal stump of the
Most cases of club foot (congenital talipes equinovarus) respond to non-operative treatment but resistant cases may need surgery. It is broadly accepted that lengthening of tendo Achillis, the tendon of
1. Nineteen patients with spina bifida, myelomeningocele or lipoma of the cauda equina have been reviewed. Convex pes valgus was found in twenty-five feet. All patients had a neuromuscular imbalance between the evertors and invertors of the foot. 2. Results of release procedures only and of those which combine release procedures with tendon transfers are compared; they show that there is no consistently satisfactory operation for correction of the deformity when it exists with neuromuscular imbalance. 3. An operation in which release procedures are combined with the transfer of the peroneus brevis to the
1. The results of thirty-nine operations for correction of drop-foot in thirty-three patients with leprosy are discussed. 2. The procedure used was circumtibial, subcutaneous, two-tailed, tendon-to-tendon transfer of the
1. Pain at the front of the radial side of the wrist may be caused by various lesions of the tendon and sheath of the flexor carpi radialis tendon. 2. The diagnosis may be established by testing resisted movement at the wrist and by the effect of injecting local anaesthetic into the tendon sheath. 3. In women over the age of fifty the lesion is associated with osteoarthritis of the joint between the scaphoid and the trapezium. 4. Osteoarthritis of the joint between the scaphoid and the trapezium is found in about 25 per cent of women over the age of fifty. 5. If the pain is not relieved by simple conservative measures it can usually be cured by incision of the tendon sheath. 6. The histological changes in the tendon sheath are similar to those found in tenovaginitis of the abductor pollicis longus and
The accessory navicular is occasionally the source of pain and local tenderness over the instep. If conservative measures fail, surgical treatment may be required and the results of 62 operations to one or both feet in 47 patients are reported. Twenty-six patients were treated by the Kidner operation, in which the main insertion of the
A histochemical analysis was made of 103 muscle biopsies taken from 62 patients with idiopathic club feet. Any reduction in the diameter of the muscle fibres associated with wasting of the calf muscle was recorded. Histochemical abnormalities existing in these biopsies were revealed by comparison with normal biopsies obtained from the normal legs of 13 children with unilateral deformities. No significant difference was found between the diameter of the muscle fibres taken from normal and affected legs aged under six months. This indicates that wasting of the calf muscle is due to a reduction in the number of fibres rather than their size. The muscle structure was normal excluding denervation and reinnervation. The soleus muscle in patients aged under six months contained 61 per cent Type 1 fibres in the affected legs, compared to 44.3 per cent in normal legs. Similar values were found in the normal and abnormal
Arthroplasty has become increasingly popular to treat end-stage ankle arthritis. Iatrogenic posterior neurovascular and tendinous injury have been described from saw cuts. However, it is hypothesized that posterior ankle structures could be damaged by inserting tibial guide pins too deeply and be a potential cause of residual hindfoot pain. The preparation steps for ankle arthroplasty were performed using the Infinity total ankle system in five right-sided cadaveric ankles. All tibial guide pins were intentionally inserted past the posterior tibial cortex for assessment. All posterior ankles were subsequently dissected, with the primary endpoint being the presence of direct contact between the structure and pin.Aims
Methods
The December 2023 Children’s orthopaedics Roundup360 looks at: A comprehensive nonoperative treatment protocol for developmental dysplasia of the hip in infants; How common are refractures in childhood?; Femoral nailing for paediatric femoral shaft fracture in children aged eight to ten years; Who benefits from allowing the physis to grow in slipped capital femoral epiphysis?; Paediatric patients with an extremity bone tumour: a secondary analysis of the PARITY trial data; Split tibial tendon transfers in cerebral palsy equinovarus foot deformities; Liposomal bupivacaine nerve block: an answer to opioid use?; Correction with distal femoral transphyseal screws in hemiepiphysiodesis for coronal-plane knee deformity.
1. The distribution of the permanent paresis and paralysis in the muscles of 203 lower limbs affected by poliomyelitis is analysed and related to the destruction of motor nerve cells in the grey matter of the lumbo-sacral cord. 2. The tibialis anterior and
Children with spinal dysraphism can develop various musculoskeletal deformities, necessitating a range of orthopaedic interventions, causing significant morbidity, and making considerable demands on resources. This systematic review aimed to identify what outcome measures have been reported in the literature for children with spinal dysraphism who undergo orthopaedic interventions involving the lower limbs. A PROSPERO-registered systematic literature review was performed following PRISMA guidelines. All relevant studies published until January 2023 were identified. Individual outcomes and outcome measurement tools were extracted verbatim. The measurement tools were assessed for reliability and validity, and all outcomes were grouped according to the Outcome Measures Recommended for use in Randomized Clinical Trials (OMERACT) filters.Aims
Methods
The April 2023 Foot & Ankle Roundup360 looks at: Outcomes following a two-stage revision total ankle arthroplasty for periprosthetic joint infection; Temporary bridge plate fixation and joint motion after an unstable Lisfranc injury; Outcomes of fusion in type II os naviculare; Total ankle arthroplasty versus arthrodesis for end-stage ankle osteoarthritis; Normal saline for plantar fasciitis: placebo or therapeutic?; Distraction arthroplasty for ankle osteoarthritis: does it work?; Let there be movement: ankle arthroplasty after previous fusion; Morbidity and mortality after diabetic Charcot foot arthropathy.
1. We have described what happens to patients a number of years after injury of the sciatic nerve or of its divisions; there were 329 who had been under observation for periods ranging from three to eighteen years. The neurological recovery was recorded in every case and, more important, the behaviour of the limb as appreciated by the patient. 2. Although it was generally true that good neurological recovery and good function went together there were remarkable discrepancies. Isolated paralysis of the medial popliteal or of the lateral popliteal nerve was often compatible with good function, though patients with lateral popliteal paralysis usually needed toe-raising apparatus. Even total sciatic paralysis sometimes gave little trouble. 3. Of the various types of injury, clean wounds and traction lesions led to rather better than average return of function. 4. Some degree of pain was present in about half the cases, and over-response–exaggerated and painful response to an ordinary stimulus–was present in one-third of the cases. 5. Repair of the posterior tibial nerve was rarely worth while; no less than eight out of twelve patients with this type of injury exhibited over-response. 6. One-third of the patients showed vasomotor and trophic disorders: coldness of the affected limb, erythema, thinness or pigmentation of the skin, changes in the nails or oedema. 7. Pressure sores were the most serious consequence of sciatic nerve injury and at some time or other were present in 14 per cent of our patients. The cause was deformity rather than insensibility of the sole. 8. Of the various palliative operations Lambrinudi's tarsal arthrodesis gave such disappointing results that we doubt whether the operation is worth doing. Tenodesis, revived as a time-saving expedient during the war, was a failure. For lateral popliteal paralysis anterior transplantation of
To compare changes in gait kinematics and walking speed 24 months after conventional (C-MLS) and minimally invasive (MI-MLS) multilevel surgery for children with diplegic cerebral palsy (CP). A retrospective analysis of 19 children following C-MLS, with mean age at surgery of 12 years five months (seven years ten months to 15 years 11 months), and 36 children following MI-MLS, with mean age at surgery of ten years seven months (seven years one month to 14 years ten months), was performed. The Gait Profile Score (GPS) and walking speed were collected preoperatively and six, 12 and 24 months postoperatively. Type and frequency of procedures as part of MLS, surgical adverse events, and subsequent surgery were recorded.Aims
Methods
1. The amount of orthopaedic surgery which is possible in patients with leprosy is immense. It is likely to decline with improved medical care as deformity rarely begins after the start of medical treatment. In spite of prolonged chemotherapy, skin smears often remain positive for more than five years and lifelong treatment may be necessary. 2. In Hong Kong the disease affects mainly those in the best working years of their lives and at an age when they should be best able to understand the benefits that treatment confers. Education of the public must be one of the main points of disease control. This education should extend to enable patients with anaesthetic extremities to learn the limitations that the disease places upon their activities. Thus they will be less liable to injure themselves and better able to prevent minor injuries from becoming serious. Ulceration only occurs in areas lacking protective sensation but, although bilateral anaesthesia is common, bilateral ulceration is not often seen. 3. In patients with diminished sensation or with paralysed muscle groups there is usually enlargement of the nerves but this may be difficult to detect. 4. Clawing of the fingers is best treated by standard surgical procedures but opposition transplant in the combined median and ulnar nerve paralysis of leprosy is less satisfactory. Any transplant must prevent hyperextension at the metacarpo-phalangeal joint and this is best done by providing a double insertion for the transplant. If the soft tissues between the first and second metacarpals are contracted it is better to perform osteotomy of the base of the first metacarpal bone rather than to perform the standard operation of soft-tissue release and skin grafting. 5. The value of