Patients who have limb amputation for musculoskeletal
tumours are a rare group of cancer survivors. This was a prospective
cross-sectional survey of patients from five specialist centres
for sarcoma surgery in England. Physical
Accumulated evidence indicates that local cell origins may ingrain differences in the phenotypic activity of human osteoblasts. We hypothesized that these differences may also exist in osteoblasts harvested from the same bone type at periarticular sites, including those adjacent to the fixation sites for total joint implant components. Human osteoblasts were obtained from the acetabulum and femoral neck of seven patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty (THA) and from the femoral and tibial cuts of six patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Osteoblasts were extracted from the usually discarded bone via enzyme digestion, characterized by flow cytometry, and cultured to passage three before measurement of metabolic activity, collagen production, alkaline phosphatase (ALP) expression, and mineralization.Aims
Methods
Objectives. Ubiquitin E3 ligase-mediated protein degradation regulates osteoblast
We evaluated the long-term functional outcome in 118 patients treated for osteosarcoma or Ewing’s sarcoma in the extremities a minimum of five years after treatment. We also examined if impaired
Aims. Tibial plateau fractures are serious injuries about the knee that have the potential to affect patients’ long-term
We used prospective data from 862 total knee and 716 total hip replacements three years after surgery in order to derive and validate a reduced Western Ontario and McMasters University Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC)
We reviewed 52 children, born between 1974 and 1985 with spina bifida affecting L3 and L4, who had dislocated hips. Their motor
This study validates the short-form WOMAC
This prospective, longitudinal study documents the muscle strength and baseline
We reviewed a consecutive series of 33 infants who underwent surgery for obstetric brachial plexus palsy at a mean age of 4.7 months. Of these, 13 with an upper palsy and 20 with a total palsy were treated by nerve reconstruction. Ten were treated by muscle transfer to the shoulder or elbow, and 16 by tendon transfer to the hand. The mean postoperative follow-up was 4 years 8 months. Ten of the 13 children (70%) with an upper palsy regained useful shoulder
We assessed the functional outcome following fracture of the tibial plateau in 63 consecutive patients. Fifty-one patients were treated by internal fixation, five by combined internal and external fixation and seven non-operatively. Measurements of joint movement and muscle
Aims. The aim of this study was to compare the Push Ortho Thumb Brace
CMC and a custom-made orthosis in the treatment of patients with
primary osteoarthritis of the carpometacarpal joint of the thumb.
Our outcome measures were pain scores, tests of hand
1. The case notes of 140 patients with a total of 297 severed long flexor tendons in the thumb and fingers have been analysed. 2. Fifty-seven patients in whom tendon reconstructive surgery was performed have been examined and the results have been recorded by three methods. 3. Methods of assessing finger and tendon
The amount of anteroposterior laxity required for a good range of movement and knee
Hand
We compared two methods of reconstruction of the abductor mechanism in 15 patients after prosthetic replacement of the upper femur, to assess abductor strength and
The mammalian growth plate is a complex structure which is essential for the elongation of long bones. However, an understanding of how the growth plate
The use of a valgus brace can effectively relieve the symptoms of unicompartmental osteoarthritis of the knee. This study provides an objective measurement of
The surgical correction of scoliosis in adolescents involves considerable trauma to bone and muscle which, together with hypotensive anaesthesia, might be expected to compromise renal
1 . The extensor assembly of the fingers consists of the central tendon joined by three pairs of components: a) the retinacular ligaments, which link the movements of the interphalangeal joints; b) the "wing" tendons, a lumbrical on the radial side, and usually a palmar interosseous on the ulnar side; c) the phalangeal tendons, usually dorsal interossei. 2. The retinacular ligaments are relaxed in full extension of the proximal interphalangeal joints and are, in this position, unable to extend the distal joints fully. This is because the interphalangeal joint surfaces are eccentric. 3. The pull of the wing tendons alters the shape of the extensor expansion and transfers the pull of the long extensor tendon from the base of the middle phalanx to the base of the distal phalanx, thus enabling full extension of the distal joint to be powerfully achieved. 4. The action of the lumbrical muscle, as an extensor of the interphalangeal joint, is demonstrated by a diagram showing its site and length in the various positions of the finger, calculated from the known excursions of the tendons. This is consistent with the observations on action potentials. 5. The phalangeal tendons of the dorsal interossei have a bifid insertion, a) into the phalangeal tubercle at the base of the proximal phalanx, and b) into the transverse band, and hence to the central tendon. The muscle acts at one or both of these attachments, according to the positions of the metacarpo-phalangeal and interphalangeal joints, in its varying