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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 1 | Pages 47 - 55
1 Feb 1979
Digby J Kersley J

Thirty patients with non-tuberculous pyogenic osteomyelitis of the spine are reported in all of whom the diagnosis was confirmed bacteriologically, histologically or serologically. The clinical and radiological features and investigations are analysed. Back pain, localised to the level involved, was the predominant symptom. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was raised in all cases, and a characteristic sequence of radiological features is described


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 2 | Pages 334 - 340
1 May 1972
Chaplin DM Harrison MHM

1. Two cases of pseudomalignant osseous tumour of soft tissue are reported and added to the nineteen cases in the literature. 2. The clinical and histological features are described and distinguished from myositis ossificans, osteogenic sarcoma in soft tissue and parosteal fasciitis. 3. In one case the non-malignant nature of the lesion has been confirmed by its spontaneous regression


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 3 | Pages 478 - 484
1 Aug 1966
Morton KS Bartletf LH

1. Three cases of a benign osteoblastic lesion of bone are described. An outstanding feature of each was the hyperostosis of adjacent bones or synovitis in an adjacent joint. 2. The clinical, radiological and histological features resembled osteoid osteomata more than benign osteoblastoma in each case. 3. The significance of this observation is questioned in relation to the pathogenesis of osteoid osteoma


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 3 | Pages 542 - 548
1 Aug 1960
Hutchison J Park WW

1. A case of chondromyxoid fibroma of the tibia is reported. 2. Initial removal by curettage was followed by regrowth of residual foci; these were removed by a second curettage three years later. Re-examination after a further three years shows no evidence of regrowth, and suggests that cure has been achieved. 3. Some histological features of the neoplasm are briefly described


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 4 | Pages 643 - 646
1 Jul 1999
De Maeseneer M De Boeck H Shahabpour M Hoorens A Oosterlinck D Van Tiggelen R

We report a patient with a subperiosteal ganglion cyst of the tibia which was imaged by radiography, arthrography, CT and MRI. The images were correlated with the arthroscopic surgical and histological findings. Spiculated formation of periosteal new bone on plain radiographs led to the initial suspicion of a malignant tumour. Demonstration of the cystic nature of the tumour using cross-sectional imaging was important for the precise diagnosis. Communication between the ganglion cyst and the knee was shown by a delayed arthrographic technique, and the presence of this communication was confirmed at arthroscopy and surgically


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 2 | Pages 38 - 41
1 Apr 2019


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 44-B, Issue 3 | Pages 520 - 527
1 Aug 1962
Stevens J Freeman PA Nordin BEC Barnett E

1. Recently described histological and radiographic methods of diagnosing osteoporosis have been applied to patients with transcervical and intertrochanteric fractures of the femur. 2. Both methods indicate a higher incidence of osteoporosis in such patients than in a control series, especially in older women with intertrochanteric fractures. 3. A discrepancy between the results of biopsy and radiographic examination was encountered, the explanation of which is not yet clear


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 1 | Pages 162 - 168
1 Jan 1991
Casadei R Ricci M Ruggieri P Biagini R Benassi S Picci P Campanacci M

Chondrosarcomas arising from soft tissues are rare. Two different varieties are described, myxoid and mesenchymal. We have collected nine cases of the tumour, five myxoid and four mesenchymal, from a review of 513 cases of chondrosarcoma seen between 1904 and 1988. We report the principal clinical, radiographical and histological differences between the two varieties and discuss their surgical treatment and prognosis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 2 | Pages 248 - 249
1 May 1976
Stuart D

The localisation of acute haematogenous pyogenic osteomyelitis following a local injury is well known. Whilst there is often a history of trauma in patients developing bone and joint tuberculosis, its role is obscure. Two patients are reported who developed histologically proven tuberculosis in the vicinity of closed fractures during the healing process. These two patients make a total of four so far reported


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 2 | Pages 256 - 265
1 May 1965
de Valderrama JAF Matthews JM

1. The case history of a haemophiliac in whom a large haematoma of the thigh was treated by amputation of the limb is described. 2. Examination of the available radiographs and of the histology led to the conclusion that the cyst was subperiosteal in origin. 3. Evidence is presented to support the hypothesis that haemophilic pseudotumours are always associated with subperiosteal haemorrhage, and that those haemophilic cysts which are confined to muscle have little or no effect on the adjacent bone


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 4 | Pages 726 - 730
1 Nov 1964
Mikhail IK

1. Two cases are reported in which there was diffuse fibro-fatty overgrowth or tumour formation involving the adipose tissue of the median nerve. In each the diagnosis was confirmed by operation and histological examination. 2. The first case is an example of the developmental abnormality usually referred to as "macrodystrophia lipomatosa." The second case should be termed fibrolipoma. 3. The literature is reviewed; no case of fibrolipoma has been recorded


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 1 | Pages 141 - 150
1 Feb 1964
Kingma MJ Hampe JF

1. The behaviour of various types of cortical bone graft has been studied in rabbits by histological and injection techniques. 2. The results suggest that penetration of the graft by blood vessels plays an important part in the incorporation of autogenous and homogenous grafts. 3. Autogenous and homogenous grafts are both incorporated–the latter more slowly than the former–but heterogenous grafts are rejected. The reasons for this rejection are discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 3 | Pages 455 - 458
1 May 1993
Inoue K Nishioka J Hukuda S Shichikawa K Okabe H

We studied the histology of the cement-bone interface and the regenerated synovium in ten aseptically loosened arthroplasties in rheumatoid patients. In two patients we found rheumatoid nodules at the cement-bone interface and marked lymphoplasmacytic infiltration in another three. Failed joints in osteoarthritic patients did not show these changes, and it seems likely that the presence of abundant immunocompetent cells was due to the background disease. We speculate that rheumatoid inflammation contributed to the process of loosening


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1178 - 1180
1 Nov 2001
Kamineni S Briggs TWR Saifuddin A Sandison A

Osteofibrous dysplasia is a rare condition usually affecting the tibiae and fibulae of males in the first two decades of life. Involvement at the ulna has also been reported in some cases. We describe an extensive, rapidly progressive lesion of the ulna in a three-year-old girl. The progression of the disease accelerated after a local marginal removal, and required extensive resection of the ulna with reconstruction using a fibular autograft. The particular features of this case are the change in the aggressive nature of the condition, which has not been previously reported. We believe that this is only the second recorded case of histologically proven involvement of the ulna


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 3 | Pages 513 - 519
1 Aug 1974
Aufdermaur M

In the necropsy material presented there were, among 100 spinal injuries occurring during the past eight years, twelve in juveniles up to eighteen years of age. In all cases, the growth zone of the cartilaginous end-plate of the spine was fractured. The special histological architecture of the growth zones with their loosened fibrous lamellae might play a decisive role in the localisation of the lesions. The clinical importance of this type of injury and the radiological findings are discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 3 | Pages 493 - 498
1 Aug 1966
Harmon TP Morton KS

1. The case histories of four siblings affected by osteogenic sarcoma are described. 2. The lesions appeared over a period of twelve years. The ages of the patients at the onset of symptoms were fifteen, twenty, eleven and twenty-two years. 3. The diagnosis of osteogenic sarcoma was in each case established by radiological and histological methods. 4. Two patients survived for eight and sixteen years after treatment and both are still alive and well


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 1 | Pages 61 - 67
1 Feb 1961
Tudway RC

1. Nine patients treated for osteogenic sarcoma by elective radical irradiation are reviewed. Five of the nine patients have survived for from three to fourteen years, but one patient has metastases. 2. These results are compared with those from primary amputation. 3. The importance of histological grading in prognosis is emphasised. 4. It is concluded that radical irradiation should be considered in place of primary amputation for osteogenic sarcoma in the upper limb


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 1 | Pages 126 - 136
1 Feb 1960
Jarry L Uhthoff HK

This paper describes a procedure of activating osteogenesis by the use of the "petal" technique. The osteogenetic effect of these "petals" has been established in experimentally produced fractures and pseudarthroses in rats by radiographical, biomechanical, mechanical and histological examinations. The conventional concept of the osteogenetic activity of bone transplants is discussed. The authors feel that this method will find its clinical application in the operative treatment of pseudarthroses and, in selected cases, of fractures that are known for their tendency to unite slowly


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 35-B, Issue 1 | Pages 113 - 124
1 Feb 1953
Saunders JH Sissons HA

1 . The repair of a simple crush injury was studied in rats, in both normally innervated and completely denervated muscle. In each case the histological findings at periods from two hours to thirty-two weeks are described. 2. The denervated muscle showed active and effective repair. 3. A comparison with the findings in normally innervated muscle establishes that the cellular processes of repair do not depend on connections with the central nervous system


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 4 | Pages 575 - 578
1 Nov 1978
Gray D Katz J Speak K

Calvaria from six-day-old infant mice were grown on a grid culture in a chemically defined medium under varying oxygen tensions. Quantitative isotope studies demonstrated a linear association between bone resorption and oxygen tension in the physiological range. This result was supported by histological, histochemical and vital staining experiments. The clinical finding of osteoporosis in areas of hyperaemia could therefore be attributed to a rise in oxygen tension causing increased bone resorption