Two cases of benign osteoblastic tumours of the spine, occurring in young patients, and presenting as expanding osteolytic lesions with some central calcification and ossification, are described. It is suggested that they represent a condition allied to, but usefully separated from,
1. Fluorotic bones and exostoses obtained from the skeletons of two subjects with advanced fluorosis have been examined microscopically. 2. The cortical bone showed normal, regular Haversian systems with normal canaliculi and lacunae. The exostoses also exhibited normal, regular Haversian systems but at places the reabsorption tunnels were large. 3. Special stains failed to show
Radiopharmaceuticals have been successfully used to detect occult neoplasms and infective lesions. Bone scans using 99mTc-labelled methylene diphosphonate located
We treated 13 children with histologically confirmed cystic tuberculosis of bone. Ten had solitary cystic lesions and three had the multicystic form. Signs and symptoms were related mainly to the joint adjacent to the cyst. Most lesions were in the metaphyses of long bones. They were radiolucent, round or oval, and resembled pyogenic infections, aneurysmal and simple bone cysts, cartilaginous tumours or
This review of 27 cases serves to emphasis that periosteal chondrosarcoma and periosteal osteosarcoma are two distinct entities. Clinically, periosteal chondrosarcoma is less painful than periosteal osteosarcoma and runs a slower course. Radiographically, periosteal chondrosarcoma tends to affect the metaphysis and contains granular or "popcorn" opacities; while periosteal osteosarcoma more often affects the mid-diaphysis and shows lytic lesions with some spicules of reactive bone perpendicular to the underlying cortex. Histologically, periosteal chondrosarcoma shows lobular well-differentiated cartilage with Grade I or II (rarely Grade III) malignancy; periosteal osteosarcoma has a chondroid matrix with some
The features are described of seven cases of "juxtacortical" chondrosarcoma, the term introduced by Jaffe for a rare but distinct entity and now accepted in the World Health Organisation classification as preferable to the term "periosteal" chondrosarcoma. In all cases the lesion involved the shaft of a long bone, most often the femur, and in two cases two different long bones were affected. Six of the seven patients were male and all were in the second decade. The characteristic appearance was that of a small tumour adjacent to the cortex with areas of spotty calcification often accompanied by radiating bone spicules perpendicular to the bone shaft and a typical Codman's triangle. Histologically all the tumours showed a cartilaginous lobular pattern, well limited on the surface and seldom infiltrating the cortex; areas of spotty calcification and enchondral ossification were often present but tumour
Migration of 65 Charnley stems implanted with modern cementing techniques was studied by roentgen stereophotogrammetry. There were 25 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and 40 with osteoarthritis (OA) followed up for two years. In 43 cases a bone sample for histomorphometric analysis was obtained from the femur during the operation. In 22 cases the mean subsidence of the prosthetic head was 0.40 mm and in 20 the mean posterior migration was 1.25 mm. There was no difference in migration between the two diagnostic groups (p = 0.8) after adjusting for variations in gender, age and weight. Male gender was associated with increased subsidence (p = 0.006). Histological examination showed that the RA series had more
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 arthrodesis of the knee; the graft is less osteogenic than the substance of the bones which form the joint, and it provides inefficient internal fixation. 5. A theory is suggested that compression, even in the presence of slight movement, acts by producing a fixed "hinge" without shearing movement; at this point a bridgehead of flexible
Skeletal scintigraphy, which has now been established as a useful and accurate method of detecting early skeletal metastases and assessing their response to treatment, has been investigated for its pathological basis. Histological examination of several hundred necropsy specimens, from sixty-eight patients who died from malignant disease, showed a significant increase of
1. Stable strontium in large amount in the diet of rats initially inhibits calcification and induces rickets. 2. Changes later become atypical and a complex series of epiphysial plate defects develops: formation of localised
1. In the experiments undertaken autogenous vesical mucosal transplants were made in guinea-pigs. The transplanted mucosa proliferates and forms a nodule. Central necrosis of the nodule and the secretion of the proliferating epithelium combine to form a cyst filled with a viscous fluid. 2. Before the cyst is well defined some of this fluid diffuses into the sub-epithelial connective tissue, producing areas of tissue oedema which later are transformed into translucent hyaloid islands. With further condensation of the collagen fibres, these areas are converted into primitive bone. The hyaloid islands act as a bone precursor. Bone always formed in the wall of the cyst within thirty days except in cases of sepsis or death of the transplant, when there was no osteogenesis. Homografts of vesical mucosa were found unreliable in their capacity to induce bone. 3. The results of the histochemical investigation and radiographic diffraction of the hyaloid areas suggest that the proliferating mucosa is the source of the inducing agent. 4. Bone can be induced only in sites where a primitive vascular connective tissue is growing and where there exists an adequate blood supply. 5. The rapid rate of osteogenesis can be seen in the radiographs of induced bone in radial defects. The electron-microscopic study of the induced bone at three weeks confirmed that
1. One hundred and seventy-nine cases of primary malignant bone tumour and giant-cell tumour seen at the Middlesex Hospital since 1925 are reviewed. Tumours arising from non-skeletal tissues in bone have been excluded. 2. The following histological classification is used. Osteosarcoma (osteoblast sarcoma): This tumour is not synonymous with osteogenic (bone-forming) sarcoma. The essential feature is the formation of
CERAMENT|G is an absorbable gentamicin-loaded biocomposite used as an on-site vehicle of antimicrobials for the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the sole effect of CERAMENT|G, i.e. without additional systemic antimicrobial therapy, in relation to a limited or extensive debridement of osteomyelitis lesions in a porcine model. Osteomyelitis was induced in nine pigs by inoculation of 104 colony-forming units (CFUs) of Aims
Methods
1. The clinical features, diagnosis and treatment of osteomalacia are discussed in relation to thirty-seven recently recognised cases. It is suggested that this disease is not uncommon in elderly women, among whom it is liable to be confused with senile osteoporosis. Osteomalacia may be distinguished by, firstly, the history, in which persistent skeletal pain of long duration and muscular weakness are typical of osteomalacia, but not of osteoporosis in which transient episodes of pain usually associated with a fracture are more characteristic. There is a high incidence of previous gastric surgery in the osteomalacia patients. Secondly, the physical examination shows skeletal tenderness in osteomalacia but this is not a particular feature of osteoporosis. A shuffling "penguin gait" suggests osteomalacia. Thirdly, the biochemistry shows a low plasma calcium and phosphate, and raised alkaline phosphatase levels commonly in osteomalacia but these are usually normal in osteoporosis. Reduced twenty-four-hour urinary calcium is characteristic of osteomalacia but not of osteoporosis. Fourthly, radiology will show diminished bone density which is common to both diseases, but if the changes are more marked in the peripheral bones than in the axial skeleton osteomalacia is suggested; the opposite is typical of osteoporosis. Skeletal deformity without fracture suggests osteomalacia, as do stress fractures and greenstick fractures in the elderly. Looser's zones are diagnostic of osteomalacia in which they are the most important radiological feature. Finally, histology will show the presence of excess
The purpose of this study was to clarify the clinical behaviour, prognosis, and optimum treatment of dedifferentiated low-grade osteosarcoma (DLOS) diagnosed based on molecular pathology. We retrospectively reviewed 13 DLOS patients (six men, seven women; median age 32 years (interquartile range (IQR) 27 to 38)) diagnosed using the following criteria: the histological coexistence of low-grade and high-grade osteosarcoma components in the lesion, and positive immunohistochemistry of mouse double minute 2 homolog (MDM2) and cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4) associated with MDM2 amplification. These patients were then compared with 51 age-matched consecutive conventional osteosarcoma (COS) patients (33 men, 18 women; median age 25 years (IQR 20 to 38)) regarding their clinicopathological features.Aims
Patients and Methods
The aim of this study was to identify factors that determine outcomes of treatment for patients with chondroblastic osteosarcomas (COS) of the limbs and pelvis. The authors carried out a retrospective review of prospectively collected data from 256 patients diagnosed between 1979 and 2015. Of the 256 patients diagnosed with COS of the pelvis and the limbs, 147 patients (57%) were male and 109 patients (43%) were female. The mean age at presentation was 20 years (0 to 90).Aims
Patients and Methods
To compare the therapeutic potential of tissue-engineered constructs (TECs) combining mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and coral granules from either Bone marrow-derived, autologous MSCs were seeded on Objectives
Materials and Methods
The number of patients undergoing arthroscopic surgery of the
hip has increased significantly during the past decade. It has now
become an established technique for the treatment of many intra-
and extra-articular conditions affecting the hip. However, it has
a steep learning curve and is not without the risk of complications.
The purpose of this systematic review was to determine the prevalence
of complications during and following this procedure. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses
guidelines were used in designing this study. Two reviewers systematically
searched the literature for complications related to arthroscopy
of the hip. The research question and eligibility criteria were
established Aims
Materials and Methods
Back pain is a common symptom in children and
adolescents. Here we review the important causes, of which defects
and stress reactions of the pars interarticularis are the most common
identifiable problems. More serious pathology, including malignancy
and infection, needs to be excluded when there is associated systemic
illness. Clinical evaluation and management may be difficult and
always requires a thorough history and physical examination. Diagnostic
imaging is obtained when symptoms are persistent or severe. Imaging
is used to reassure the patient, relatives and carers, and to guide
management. Cite this article: