Valgus extension osteotomy (VGEO) is a salvage procedure for ‘hinge abduction’ in Perthes’ disease. The indications for its use are pain and fixed deformity. Our study shows the clinical results at maturity of VGEO carried out in 48 children (51 hips) and the factors which influence subsequent remodelling of the hip. After a mean follow-up of ten years, total hip replacement has been carried out in four patients and
Eighty-three Guepar valgus-hinge prostheses and 30 prostheses with collinear femoral and the tibial components were inserted in 97 patients at Vancouver General Hospital between March 1975 and May 1978. One hundred and nine arthroplasties were reviewed between January 1979 and April 1980, after an average follow-up of 19 months. It was found that the amount of bone resected made
Forty-one arthrodeses of the shoulder in thirty-nine patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis (thirty women, nine men) have been reviewed. Using internal fixation and external splints the position of the shoulder was maintained in 55 degrees of abduction, 25 degrees of horizontal flexion and enough internal rotation to allow the patient to reach the mouth. The mean period of immobilisation in a thoracobrachial splint was nine weeks, and 90 per cent of the shoulders had solid bony fusion at review. After
Eighty-three Waildius arthroplasties, performed by one surgeon as a salvage operation on the knee joint between 1966 and 1972, were independently reviewed. The fifty-seven living patients with sixty-seven arthroplasties were interviewed and examined and the clinical records of the deceased patients were inspected. Sixty-seven arthroplasties (81 per cent) were successful and sixteen failed (19 per cent). Acrylic cement was used to secure the prosthesis on eight occasions only. There were two primary infections (24 per cent) and two delayed (24 per cent). Major loosening occurred in three arthroplasties (36 per cent). Minor loosening was compatible with a good result. Arthrodesis was successful on the two occasions on which it became necessary to remove the implant. There were no disasters. On the basis of these results it is considered that the Walidius arthroplasty can justifiably be offered as an alternative to primary
1. The treatment of contractures at the hip secondary to poliomyelitis by Soutter's muscle slide or by Yount's fasciotomy gives excellent results. So does high femoral osteotomy, but it is not superior to the other two and should therefore be kept in reserve as a supplementary operation for the completion of correction of a deformity so gross as not to be wholly remediable by division of the soft parts. 2. Subluxation of the hip occurs only if the paralysis comes on during the first eighteen months of life and is a product not of severe paralysis but of unbalanced and often slight weakness of muscles. Correction of the invariable valgus deformity of the femoral neck by osteotomy is followed by relapse; acetabuloplasty too is unreliable. The most promising remedy seems to be some form of acetabuloplasty combined with transplantation of an iliopsoas of adequate strength into the greater trochanter. The indications for
1. Recurrence of deformity after operations for drop foot is often associated with opening of the front of the ankle joint: this has previously been regarded as a complication of the operation. 2. This study of sixty paralytic drop feet treated conservatively reveals that this laxity was in fact present in no less than 43 per cent. 3. The laxity is most commonly found when the calf muscle is strong and it can occur within a year of the onset of the paralysis. It is not always prevented by wearing a toe-raising spring. 4. Such anterior laxity may well be a common cause of failure of many of the standard operations for drop foot. 5. Before operation for drop foot is undertaken a lateral radiograph of the ankle should be taken in forced plantar-flexiori. If this demonstrates anterior laxity any standard operation is unlikely to succeed unless the anterior fibres of the collateral ligaments are protected from strain by simultaneous tendon transplantation or unless the ankle is included in the
We treated four patients with periacetabular malignant tumours by pelvic reconstruction with a free vascularised fibular graft after resection of the tumour. The mean follow-up period was 32 months (9 to 39). The diagnosis was chondrosarcoma in three patients and osteosarcoma in one. In two patients total resection of the hemipelvis was required and in the other two less, but still massive, resection was undertaken. All were treated with an immediate free vascularised fibular graft which included
1. The risk of injury to the sciatic nerve during closed ischio-femoral
We have implanted 76 biaxial total wrist prostheses as a primary procedure in patients with rheumatoid arthritis of the wrist. A total of 66 was reviewed at a mean follow-up time of 52 months. Pain was relieved in 67% of the surviving wrist replacements. On the basis of the Hospital for Special Surgery scoring system, 49 wrists (74%) were graded as fair to excellent. More than half of the 27 patients who had an
The incidence of venous thromboembolism after elective knee surgery has previously been studied almost exclusively in patients receiving total knee replacements, in whom the risk of a deep vein thrombosis is approximately 60%. We report the results of ipsilateral ascending venography in 312 patients undergoing a wide variety of elective knee operations under tourniquet ischaemia, none of whom received any specific prophylaxis against thromboembolism. Total knee replacement was confirmed to carry a high risk with ipsilateral deep vein thrombosis in 56.4% and symptomatic pulmonary embolism in 1.9%. By contrast, arthroscopy was associated with a low incidence of venous thrombosis (4.2%). Meniscectomy, arthrotomy, patellectomy, synovectomy and
1. Fifty dislocations and fracture-dislocations of the pelvis have been reviewed. 2. Complications were unusual. Two patients with rupture of the bladder died; two with rupture of the urethra survived. Of eight patients with retroperitoneal haemorrhage four died; the treatment advised is controlled blood transfusion maintaining a blood-pressure of not more than 100 mm. 3. Two types of pelvic disruption should be distinguished: 1) pubic injury with sacro-iliac dislocation; 2) pubic injury with fracture near the sacro-iliac joint. The first is twice as common as the second. 4. In each type, displacement is maintained by extension of the hip and outward roll of the limb. This may be controlled by the Watson-Jones plaster method but the pelvic sling technique is preferred and was used in all cases in this series. 5. The prognosis in fracture-dislocations is very good; nearly all patients went back to heavy work. 6. The prognosis in sacro-iliac dislocations is not so good; only half the patients went back to heavy work and there was often persistent sacro-iliac pain. Sacro-iliac
We have assessed the long-term results after operative and non-operative treatment of undisplaced and displaced calcaneal fractures. At a mean of 6.5 years, we reviewed 70 patients with a calcaneal fracture who were divided into four groups: group 1, 18 patients with undisplaced fractures and a normal Böhler’s angle (BA) who had been treated non-operatively; group 2, 23 with intra-articular fractures and a BA <
10° who had been treated non-operatively; group 3, 13 with intra-articular fractures and a BA >
10° who had been treated surgically; and group 4, 16 with intra-articular fractures and a BA <
10° who had been treated surgically. The results were assessed by a clinical score considering pain, return to work, return to physical activity, change in shoe-wear and the requirement for subtalar
The clinical features of nine new patients with dysplasia epiphysialis hemimelica are reported, with a long-term follow-up on a further seven patients who were described in the earliest case reports of this disease. Each of these 16 patients had only one leg involved, but 12 had multiple epiphyses affected. The distal femur, distal tibia and talus were the commonest sites and most patients presented with painless swelling or deformity. Wasting of the muscles of the affected leg was a common finding, and was occasionally disproportionate to the degree of disuse. One patient had the unique combination of involvement of the lateral and medial halves of different epiphyses in the same limb and another had unusual metaphysial changes. Diagnosis was often delayed despite typical radiographic appearances. There was no evidence for a genetic component in the aetiology nor was any common environmental factor identified. Treatment by local excision was generally effective for lesions in the vicinity of the knee, but some patients with involvement of the talus required
1. The technique of compression-arthrodesis of the knee joint is described. 2. Fifteen consecutive cases are reported in which clinical union was detected at the first inspection from twelve days to six weeks after operation. By this method the total period of disability is reduced to three months. 3. Three mechanical factors which might be responsible for this very early clinical union are examined: compression is believed to be the main factor, although fixation is also important. 4. A fallacy is exposed in the use of bone grafts for
We assessed the intermediate functional results of eight patients after wide resection of the proximal humerus for malignant bone tumour. We used a free vascularised fibular graft as a functional spacer and a sling procedure to preserve passive scapulohumeral movement. Scapulohumeral
1. A series of 106 central slip injuries has been reviewed. 2. Although the boutonnière deformity in many cases may be no more than a cosmetic defect, this survey has shown that in some instances it can constitute a slowly progressive lesion, with considerable disability and gross deformity of a digit. 3. Conservative treatment seems to be superior to operation, at least in those patients seen within six weeks of injury. Treatment by splintage alone yielded in this series a 75 per cent success rate, whereas operation showed only 50 per cent success. 4. When a sizeable fragment of bone has been avulsed from the middle phalanx, suture of the fragment in position is indicated and gives remarkably satisfactory results. 5. Injuries with soft-tissue loss over the proximal interphalangeal joint may yield successful results after suture or plastic repair of the tendon, and wound closure by split-skin grafts or local rotation flaps. 6. Poor results tend to occur in cases complicated by phalangeal fracture or by multiple hand injuries, and it may be advisable to defer the repair of the central slip until recovery from the other injuries has been completed. 7. With gross disruption of the proximal interphalangeal joint primary
1 . Twenty-one cases of poliomyelitis and twenty cases of brachial plexus injury in which muscle transplantations had been performed to restore elbow flexion have been reviewed. The average follow-up period was four and a half years. 2. The results were graded objectively and subjectively. They were better when passive extension of the elbow was limited; such limitation always occurs after Steindler's operation, but infrequently after pectoral transplantation. 3. The results of pectoral transplantation are good when there is no significant shoulder paralysis; if there is shoulder weakness
The aim of our study was to determine the current incidence and outcome of infected total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in our unit comparing them with our earlier audit in 1986, which had revealed infection rates of 4.4% after 471 primary TKAs and 15% after 23 revision TKAs at a mean follow-up of 2.8 years. In the interim we introduced stringent antibiotic prophylaxis, and the routine use of occlusive clothing within vertical laminar flow theatres and 0.05% chlorhexidine lavage during arthroplasty surgery. We followed up 931 primary TKAs and 69 revision TKAs for a mean of 6.5 years (5 to 8). Patients were traced by postal questionnaire, telephone interview or examination of case notes of the deceased. Nine (1%) of the patients who underwent primary TKA, and four (5.8%) of those who underwent revision TKA developed deep infection. Two of nine patients (22.2%) who developed infection after primary TKA were successfully treated without further surgery. All four of the patients who had infection after revision TKA had a poor outcome with one amputation, one chronic discharging sinus and two arthrodeses. Patients who underwent an
This study aimed to explore whether intraoperative nerve monitoring can identify risk factors and reduce the incidence of nerve injury in patients with high-riding developmental dysplasia. We conducted a historical controlled study of patients with unilateral Crowe IV developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). Between October 2016 and October 2017, intraoperative nerve monitoring of the femoral and sciatic nerves was applied in total hip arthroplasty (THA). A neuromonitoring technician was employed to monitor nerve function and inform the surgeon of ongoing changes in a timely manner. Patients who did not have intraoperative nerve monitoring between September 2015 and October 2016 were selected as the control group. All the surgeries were performed by one surgeon. Demographics and clinical data were analyzed. A total of 35 patients in the monitoring group (ten male, 25 female; mean age 37.1 years (20 to 46)) and 56 patients in the control group (13 male, 43 female; mean age 37.9 years (23 to 52)) were enrolled. The mean follow-up of all patients was 13.1 months (10 to 15).Aims
Patients and Methods