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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 1 | Pages 69 - 73
1 Jan 1988
Aldegheri R Trivella G Renzi-Brivio L Tessari G Agostini S Lavini F

We report our experience of lengthening by over 30% a total of 117 lower limbs in achondroplastic patients. We have compared four methods: transverse osteotomy, oblique osteotomy, callotasis of the shaft and chondrodiatasis of the epiphysis. Chrondrodiatasis of the femur and callotasis of the tibia are the techniques which gave fewest complications


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 2 | Pages 272 - 274
1 Mar 1992
Churchill M Brookes M Spencer J

We perfused 16 human femora with a 50% barium sulphate suspension and studied the intra-osseous vessels by microfocal radiography and histology. There were few anastomoses between the vessels of the greater trochanter and those of the adjacent cancellous bone of the shaft. Ischaemia of the trochanter may contribute to nonunion after trochanteric osteotomy


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 6 Supple A | Pages 43 - 48
1 Jun 2020
D’Lima DP Huang P Suryanarayan P Rosen A D’Lima DD

Aims

The extensive variation in axial rotation of tibial components can lead to coronal plane malalignment. We analyzed the change in coronal alignment induced by tray malrotation.

Methods

We constructed a computer model of knee arthroplasty and used a virtual cutting guide to cut the tibia at 90° to the coronal plane. The virtual guide was rotated axially (15° medial to 15° lateral) and with posterior slopes (0° to 7°). To assess the effect of axial malrotation, we measured the coronal plane alignment of a tibial tray that was axially rotated (25° internal to 15° external), as viewed on a standard anteroposterior (AP) radiograph.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 1 | Pages 72 - 77
1 Feb 1975
Devas M Shah V

Link arthroplasty is a system of joint replacement in which the joint is left almost intact with no great removal of bone. It is based on a two-piece self-locking hinge slotted into the metacarpal head and phalangeal shaft. The operation is simple and no special instruments are needed. The preliminary follow-up of fifty-four metacarpo-phalangeal joint replacements showed thirty-five good and sixteen fair results


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 9, Issue 3 | Pages 26 - 29
1 Jun 2020


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 40-B, Issue 2 | Pages 208 - 218
1 May 1958
Truswell AS

A minority of cases of osteopetrosis show in addition syndactyly and distal phalangeal anomalies. The seven cases that have been reported with this combination have had an unusual degree of density and thickening of the skull vault, face and mandible, and of the shafts of the metacarpals, metatarsals, proximal phalanges and clavicles. It is submitted that these features constitute a distinct morphological variety of osteopetrosis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 1 | Pages 176 - 181
1 Feb 1963
Carroll SE

The nutrient foramina in seventy-one adult humeri were examined. The foramina were most concentrated in a small area on the medial aspect of the distal half of the middle third of the shaft. Non-union commonly occurs in this same region. The site of the entrance of the nutrient artery to the humerus is predictable with fair reliability. Certain practical applications have been indicated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 2 | Pages 187 - 192
1 May 1975
Helal B

An oblique osteotomy in the distal half of the metatarsal shaft is described for the treatment of metatarsalgia due to prolapse of one or more of the middle three metatarsal heads. Thirty-eight patients who have had this operation have been followed up for a period of from two to five years. The operation is simple, recovery is rapid and symptoms have been well relieved


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 3 | Pages 358 - 361
1 May 1992
Rosson J Simonis R

We treated 24 patients with nonunion of tibial shaft fractures by locked intramedullary nailing, 18 by open and six by closed techniques. Union was achieved in 22 patients, failing only in two patients with active infection. Locked nailing prevented recurrence of deformity and allowed the patients to mobilise without external support. Supplementary bone grafting was essential only for major defects


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 6 Supple A | Pages 116 - 122
1 Jun 2020
Bedard NA Cates RA Lewallen DG Sierra RJ Hanssen AD Berry DJ Abdel MP

Aims

Metaphyseal cones with cemented stems are frequently used in revision total knee arthroplasty (TKA). However, if the diaphysis has been previously violated, the resultant sclerotic canal can impair cemented stem fixation, which is vital for bone ingrowth into the cone, and long-term fixation. We report the outcomes of our solution to this problem, in which impaction grafting and a cemented stem in the diaphysis is combined with an uncemented metaphyseal cone, for revision TKA in patients with severely compromised bone.

Methods

A metaphyseal cone was combined with diaphyseal impaction grafting and cemented stems for 35 revision TKAs. There were two patients with follow-up of less than two years who were excluded, leaving 33 procedures in 32 patients in the study. The mean age of the patients at the time of revision TKA was 67 years (32 to 87); 20 (60%) were male. Patients had undergone a mean of four (1 to 13) previous knee arthroplasty procedures. The indications for revision were aseptic loosening (80%) and two-stage reimplantation for prosthetic joint infection (PJI; 20%). The mean follow-up was four years (2 to 11).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 4 | Pages 534 - 536
1 Aug 1986
Clement D Colton C

Forty-four children, treated conservatively for fracture of the shaft of a femur, were studied radiographically to assess the consequent increase in longitudinal growth of the bone. Overgrowth averaged 8.1 mm and was shown to be significantly greater in boys than in girls. Overgrowth did not appear to be influenced by the age of the patient, the type of injury, the type or site of the fracture, the amount of overlap of the fragments or by the handedness of the patient


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 1, Issue 5 | Pages 167 - 174
31 May 2020
Marson BA Craxford S Deshmukh SR Grindlay D Manning J Ollivere BJ

Aims

To analyze outcomes reported in trials of childhood fractures.

Methods

OVID MEDLINE, Embase, and Cochrane CENTRAL databases were searched on the eighth August 2019. A manual search of trial registries, bibliographic review and internet search was used to identify additional studies. 11,476 studies were screened following PRISMA guidelines. 100 trials were included in the analysis. Data extraction was completed by two researchers for each trial. Study quality was not evaluated. Outcomes reported by trials were mapped onto domains in the World Health Organization (WHO) International Classification of Function framework.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 1 | Pages 28 - 32
1 Jan 2000
Sundaresh DC Gopalakrishnan D Shetty N

In our practice sequestration of the shafts of long bones in children because of acute osteomyelitis continues to be a problem. Conventional procedures for bone grafting are likely to fail. Vascularised grafts with microvascular anastomosis are technically demanding with a high rate of failure. Transfer of the rib on its vascular pedicle to achieve anterior fusion in the thoracic spine is now well established and the length of the pedicle available is adequate to allow grafting of a diaphyseal defect in the humerus. We describe the successful use of this procedure in two patients


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 6 | Pages 709 - 715
1 Jun 2020
Abdelsamie KR Elhawary I Ali H Ali M EL-Shafie M Dominic Meek RM

Aims

Femoral revision component subsidence has been identified as predicting early failure in revision hip surgery. This comparative cohort study assessed the potential risk factors of subsidence in two commonly used femoral implant designs.

Methods

A comparative cohort study was undertaken, analyzing a consecutive series of patients following revision total hip arthroplasties using either a tapered-modular (TM) fluted titanium or a porous-coated cylindrical modular (PCM) titanium femoral component, between April 2006 and May 2018. Clinical and radiological assessment was compared for both treatment cohorts. Risk factors for subsidence were assessed and compared.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 5 | Pages 751 - 754
1 Nov 1986
Roberts J

A study of 79 children with malunion of forearm fractures is presented. Age at the time of injury, the site of the fracture and the degree and direction of angulation at union were correlated with loss of forearm rotation at review 3.5 to 6 years later. Some guidelines are proposed for the acceptability of angular deformity at union, importance being placed on the avoidance of radial deviation of the radius, and the maintenance of the interosseous gap between the shafts of the radius and ulna


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 5 | Pages 804 - 807
1 Sep 1993
Wright T Miller G Vander Griend R Wheeler D Dell P

Nine patients with nonunited humeral shaft fractures were treated by open reduction and internal fixation with an intramedullary fibular bone graft and a compression plate. Fixation of the screws was enhanced by passing them through the fibula as well as the two humeral cortices (quadricortical fixation). Eight of the nine fractures united at an average of 3.5 months. Tests on cadaver bones showed that quadricortical fixation was as strong as methylmethacrylate augmentation and significantly better than bicortical fixation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 5 | Pages 789 - 793
1 Sep 1993
Radford P Needoff M Webb J

We made a randomised prospective comparison of the Dynamic Hip Screw and the Gamma locking nail for the internal fixation of 200 petrochanteric femoral fractures in elderly patients. There was less intraoperative blood loss and a lower rate of wound complications in the patients treated by the Gamma nail. They had, however, a high incidence of femoral shaft fracture which we relate in part to implant design. We do not recommend the use of the Gamma nail for these fractures


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 67-B, Issue 5 | Pages 732 - 735
1 Nov 1985
Milgrom C Giladi M Stein M Kashtan H Margulies J Chisin R Steinberg R Aharonson Z

In a prospective study of 295 male Israeli military recruits a 31% incidence of stress fractures was found. Eighty per cent of the fractures were in the tibial or femoral shaft, while only 8% occurred in the tarsus and metatarsus. Sixty-nine per cent of the femoral stress fractures were asymptomatic, but only 8% of those in the tibia. Even asymptomatic stress fractures do, however, need to be treated. Possible explanations for the unusually high incidence of stress fractures in this study are discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 1 | Pages 122 - 131
1 Feb 1959
Smith JEM

The place of internal fixation in the treatment of fractures of the shafts of the radius and ulna in adults is discussed, and the results in 130 fractures treated by internal fixation are reviewed. Non-union was found to be the most frequent and serious complication after internal fixation. The incidence of non-union can be greatly reduced if operation is delayed for at least one week, and preferably two to three weeks after injury. Evidence is presented to support the value of delayed operation in the promotion of union of fractures


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 9, Issue 6 | Pages 302 - 310
1 Jun 2020
Tibbo ME Limberg AK Salib CG Turner TW McLaury AR Jay AG Bettencourt JW Carter JM Bolon B Berry DJ Morrey ME Sanchez-Sotelo J van Wijnen AJ Abdel MP

Aims

Arthrofibrosis is a relatively common complication after joint injuries and surgery, particularly in the knee. The present study used a previously described and validated rabbit model to assess the biomechanical, histopathological, and molecular effects of the mast cell stabilizer ketotifen on surgically induced knee joint contractures in female rabbits.

Methods

A group of 12 skeletally mature rabbits were randomly divided into two groups. One group received subcutaneous (SQ) saline, and a second group received SQ ketotifen injections. Biomechanical data were collected at eight, ten, 16, and 24 weeks. At the time of necropsy, posterior capsule tissue was collected for histopathological and gene expression analyses (messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein).