We aimed to establish the short- and long-term efficacy of corticosteroid injection for coccydynia, and to determine if betamethasone or triamcinolone has the best effect. During 2009 to 2016, we treated 277 patients with chronic coccydynia with either one 6 mg betamethasone or one 20 mg triamcinolone cortisone injection. A susequent injection was given to 62 (26%) of the patients. All were reviewed three to four months after injection, and 241 replied to a questionnaire a mean of 36 months (12 to 88) after the last injection. No pain at the early review was considered early success. When the patient had not been subsequently operated on, and indicated on the questionnaire that they were either well or much better, it was considered a long-term success.Aims
Methods
Ten children who had clinically stable hips at birth were radiographed at one month because they had factors predisposing to hip dislocation. In all cases one or both hips gave rise to a suspicion of dysplasia, though clinical abnormalities were slow to appear. Four of these hips subsequently dislocated. We believe that infants with late presentation of acetabular dysplasia and clinical abnormality belong to a different
This systematic review asked which patterns of complications are associated with the three reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (RTSA) prosthetic designs, as classified by Routman et al, in patients undergoing RTSA for the management of cuff tear arthropathy, massive cuff tear, osteoarthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis. The three implant design philosophies investigated were medial glenoid/medial humerus (MGMH), medial glenoid/lateral humerus (MGLH), and lateral glenoid/medial humerus (LGMH). A systematic review of the literature was performed via a search of MEDLINE and Embase. Two reviewers extracted data on complication occurrence and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). Meta-analysis was conducted on the reported proportion of complications, weighted by sample size, and PROMs were pooled using the reported standardized mean difference (SMD). Quality of methodology was assessed using Wylde’s non-summative four-point system. The study was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42020193041).Aims
Methods
Widespread periarticular new-bone formation (myositis ossificans) was studied in 45 patients with brain damage who were in long-term coma. Thirty-six of these patients displayed myositis ossificans around at least one major joint. The development of myositis ossificans was shown to be independent of the sex and age of the patient and also of the
Skeletal age was estimated by examination of radiographs of the carpus in 182 children suffering from Perthes' disease after the reliability of the Greulich and Pyle Atlas had been checked for a control group of British children. A striking tendency to delayed skeletal maturation was shown in the children with Perthes' disease. This trait was also found in ninety-three unaffected siblings of the patients. The velocity of skeletal ageing as the disease progressed was estimated. In some patients the carpal skeleton failed to mature at all for periods of up to three years and the term "skeletal standstill" is applied to this phenomenon. The significance of these findings is discussed and it is suggested that the maturation defect may have
1. The
1. The pedigree of a family in which lobster claw foot and triphalangeal thumb occurred together is presented. The affected members of two generations are described. The clinical appearances and radiological abnormalities are described in detail. Results of surgical treatment of the forefoot cleft are presented. 2. Lobster clawing of the foot is discussed with particular reference to associated hand and finger abnormalities. Triphalangeal thumb is discussed. The current and probably acceptable theory of the
1 . Attention is drawn to the not infrequent occurrence of downward subluxation of the shoulder joint accompanying fractures of the upper end of the humerus. 2. Such cases fall into early or late groups according to the time of onset of the subluxation. 3. The subluxation often disappears spontaneously, but it may persist and cause disability. It cannot safely be disregarded. 4. The
Thirty-one patients who had been treated surgically for lumbar spinal stenosis between 1968 and 1978 at the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital have been personally reviewed. In 28 patients (90 per cent) degenerative change in the lumbar spine had been the principal
1. The literature on pigmented villonodular synovitis has been reviewed and a series of eighty additional cases is reported. 2. The condition usually presents either as a nodule in a finger or knee, or as a diffuse lesion in a knee. The lesions, although benign, sometimes erode or invade the tissue of adjacent bones. 3. Distinction from malignant synovioma can be made on the basis of the macroscopic appearance of the lesion at operation (relationship to joints or tendon sheaths: villonodular appearance: pigmentation), and by histological examination. 4. Treatment of the nodular form by excision is satisfactory but extensive synovectomy for diffuse lesions of the knee gives poor results. 5. The
1. Four cases of polyostotic fibrous dysplasia are presented. 2. All are males, all show cutaneous pigmentation, and in two there has been precocious puberty. 3. The literature has been reviewed, and present conceptions of the pathology and
We studied the possible role of melatonin deficiency in experimentally-induced scoliosis. A total of 90 chickens underwent pinealectomy on the third day after hatching: 30 were treated with serotonin, 30 with melatonin and 30 received no therapy (control group). Scoliosis developed in all the control group, in 22 of the serotonin group, and in only 6 of the melatonin group. The six melatonin-treated chickens with scoliosis had less severe spinal deformities than those in the serotonin-treated group. There were lower blood melatonin concentrations in chickens with scoliosis than in those without. Our findings suggest that melatonin deficiency contributes to the
As a proven and comprehensive molecular technique, metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) has shown its potential in the diagnosis of pathogens in patients with periprosthetic joint infection (PJI), using a single type of specimen. However, the optimal use of mNGS in the management of PJI has not been explored. In this study, we evaluated the diagnostic value of mNGS using three types of specimen with the aim of achieving a better choice of specimen for mNGS in these patients. In this prospective study, 177 specimens were collected from 59 revision arthroplasties, including periprosthetic tissues, synovial fluid, and prosthetic sonicate fluid. Each specimen was divided into two, one for mNGS and one for culture. The criteria of the Musculoskeletal Infection Society were used to define PJI (40 cases) and aseptic failure (19 cases).Aims
Methods
Three hundred and nineteen patients who had chondromalacia patellae and persistent patellofemoral pain after six months of conservative management underwent arthroscopy and arthroscopic surgery. The results in four
Specific antisera to collagen Types I, II and III and proteoglycan were used to investigate the distributions of these molecules in normal human intervertebral discs. Immunofluorescent staining indicated the presence of small amounts of Type III collagen located pericellularly in normal adult intervertebral discs. This finding had not been demonstrated previously by other methods. Similar specimens of intervertebral discs from 17 patients with scoliosis of varying
Two hundred and fifty cases of myelodysplasia were reviewed in relation to spinal deformity. Approximately half of the children had, or were expected to develop, curves severe enough to need operations and only 10 per cent maintained completely undeformed spines. The most frequent deformity was scoliosis which could be subdivided into congenital and developmental types. The latter was of mixed
We have studied the medium- and long-term effects of femoral intramedullary nailing in 34 children. There was a high incidence of abnormality at the proximal end of the femur, including coxa valga, arrest of growth of the greater trochanter and thinning of the neck of the femur, because of damage to the trochanterocervical growth plate. These disorders affected 30% of the patients, mostly under the age of 13 years (p <
0.05), and were seen more frequently when the nail had been introduced through the piriform fossa. Other factors, such as the side, gender,
Degenerative spondylolisthesis is most common at the L4/L5 level and in women. There are several possible reasons for its predilection at this site, but there is no satisfactory explanation for the predominance in women. We considered that pregnancy was a possible influence. We reviewed the records and radiographs of 949 women and 120 men aged 50 years and over who had attended a spinal surgeon for low back pain over a five-year period. We found that women who had borne children had a significantly higher incidence of degenerative spondylolisthesis than nulliparous women (28% v 16.7%; p = 0.043). The men had a 7.5% incidence, significantly less than nulliparous women (p = 0.031). Our results suggest that pregnancy is an important factor in the
We reviewed the results of 277 intertrochanteric valgus-extension osteotomies performed between 1973 and 1975 for primary or secondary osteoarthritis. The average age of the patients was 51 years and follow-up varied from 11 to 15 years. At the latest evaluation 67% of the hips were good or excellent on the Merle D'Aubigne scale. Better results were obtained in patients under 40 years of age with unilateral involvement and a mechanical (secondary)