We describe a case in which chronic oedema of a leg was due to pressure on the external iliac vein from an intrapelvic rheumatoid
A patient with polyostotic fibrous dysplasia had several fractures of the right lower limb. An above-knee amputation was eventually performed, followed by arthrodesis of the hip. Five years later the stump became painful and swelled with dramatic rapidity. Biopsy showed that this was not due to malignant change, but that an aneurysmal bone
We report three cases of spontaneous healing of aneurysmal bone
Rhomboid flaps were used rather than rotation flaps for skin cover after excision of mucous
A 35-year-old man was seen with pain in the back of the knee. MRI showed a mass in the anterior cruciate ligament. Biopsy indicated mucoid degeneration. Arthroscopic resection of the ligament was carried out, with relief of symptoms.
1. Two cases of swelling in the popliteal fossa due to a local hypertrophy of the semimembranosus muscle are described and two further cases thought to be of similar nature are noted. 2. The swelling was soft, not tender, fairly well circumscribed, and without signs of inflammation. Its most characteristic feature was an increase in size and hardening of the swelling during active flexion of the knee. 3. This condition should be considered in differential diagnosis of swellings of the popliteal fossa.
The clinical, radiographic and pathological features of eighty-eight cases of histologically verified intra-osseous ganglia in eighty-three patients are described. All were located in the subchondral bone adjacent to a joint and most frequently involved the hip, the ankle (medial malleolus), the knee and the carpal bones. Forty-seven of the eighty-three patients were male and all the patients were between fourteen and seventy-three years of age, with an average age of forty-one years. There are two fundamental types of intra-osseous ganglia, one apparently arising by penetration of juxta-osseous ganglion into the underlying bone, a mechanism proved in fourteen of our eighty-eight cases (16 per cent); in the remaining seventy-four cases, the ganglion cyst was primarily intra-osseous ("idiopathic"). The initial cause of the intramedullary mucoid degeneration is discussed. We believe that mechanical stress and repeated minor trauma near the surface of the bone may lead to intramedullary vascular disturbance with consequent foci of aseptic bone necrosis. The revitalisation of these areas causes fibroblastic proliferation, followed by mucoid degeneration of the connective tissue, possibly due to some unknown local factor. Curettage or excision is usually effective, and recurrence (only four cases) is exceptional.