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Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 5 | Pages 40 - 41
1 Oct 2019


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 7 | Pages 852 - 859
1 Jul 2019
Reigstad O Holm-Glad T Korslund J Grimsgaard C Thorkildsen R Røkkum M

Aims

Plate and screw fixation has been the standard treatment for painful conditions of the wrist in non-rheumatoid patients in recent decades. We investigated the complications, re-operations, and final outcome in a consecutive series of patients who underwent wrist arthrodesis for non-inflammatory arthritis.

Patients and Methods

A total of 76 patients, including 53 men and 23 women, with a mean age of 50 years (21 to 79) underwent wrist arthrodesis. Complications and re-operations were recorded. At a mean follow-up of 11 years (2 to 18), 63 patients completed questionnaires, and 57 attended for clinical and radiological assessment.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 4 | Pages 720 - 722
1 Nov 1972
MacKinnon WB Lansdown EL

A case of total dislocation of the ilium after disruption through the tri-radiate cartilage in a girl of thirteen years is described. No previous description of this injury has been found


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 39-B, Issue 3 | Pages 502 - 507
1 Aug 1957
Murdoch G

1. In the course of 2,668 operations for suspected cartilage lesions 119 errors of diagnosis were revealed. 2. These errors are analysed and certain conclusions are drawn


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 4 | Pages 590 - 592
1 May 2004
Yaniv M Ezra E Wientroub S Segev E

A congenital, unilateral, fixed flexion deformity in a neonate was diagnosed as a congenital absence of the knee. A single cartilage mass, with fusion of the lower femoral and upper tibial ossification centres, was demonstrated by imaging studies. This condition has been reported in the literature only once before. Surgery on our patient, which was performed at the age of two years, consisted of separation of the fused cartilaginous anlage and gradual correction of the deformity using an Ilizarov frame


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 1 | Pages 68 - 74
1 Jan 2019
Klemt C Toderita D Nolte D Di Federico E Reilly P Bull AMJ

Aims

Patients with recurrent anterior dislocation of the shoulder commonly have an anterior osseous defect of the glenoid. Once the defect reaches a critical size, stability may be restored by bone grafting. The critical size of this defect under non-physiological loading conditions has previously been identified as 20% of the length of the glenoid. As the stability of the shoulder is load-dependent, with higher joint forces leading to a loss of stability, the aim of this study was to determine the critical size of an osseous defect that leads to further anterior instability of the shoulder under physiological loading despite a Bankart repair.

Patients and Methods

Two finite element (FE) models were used to determine the risk of dislocation of the shoulder during 30 activities of daily living (ADLs) for the intact glenoid and after creating anterior osseous defects of increasing magnitudes. A Bankart repair was simulated for each size of defect, and the shoulder was tested under loading conditions that replicate in vivo forces during these ADLs. The critical size of a defect was defined as the smallest osseous defect that leads to dislocation.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 40-B, Issue 2 | Pages 333 - 339
1 May 1958
Perkins HR Walker PG

A small proportion of the total phosphate in normal bone salt occurs in the form of pyrophosphate. The deposit formed in vitro on incubation of rachitic cartilage with a calcifying medium does not contain pyrophosphate unless ATP is added to the medium, in which case the proportion of pyrophosphate is of the same order as that found in normal bone


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 4 | Pages 558 - 560
1 May 2000
Mayr JM Pierer GR Linhart WE

We describe the reconstruction of a defect of the medial malleolus which was the result of an accident in a ten-year-old child. A graft from the iliac crest, with the apophyseal cartilage and perichondrium, was used for reconstruction of the medial malleolus, the growth plate and the adjacent metaphyseal defect, respectively. The soft-tissue defect was covered with a free scapular flap with microvascular anastomosis. Three years after the injury stability of the ankle is excellent with adequate growth of the reconstructed epiphyseal plate


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 3 | Pages 489 - 501
1 Aug 1960
Tupman GS

1. The results are reported of a series of operations designed to stimulate growth of the bones of the lower limb by the insertion of pegs of bone or ivory close to the epiphysial cartilage. 2. The evidence is that growth was stimulated in twelve of twenty-eight patients. 3. Growth is more likely to be stimulated if the operation is done on children between the chronological ages of six and twelve


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 32-B, Issue 3 | Pages 302 - 306
1 Aug 1950
Isserlin B

Joint débridement, by excision of synovial membrane, osteophytes, degenerate cartilage, loose bodies, and frequently the patella, has relieved the symptoms of osteoarthritis of the knee joint twenty-three times in a series of thirty-five operations reviewed after periods of one to nine years. The operation is considered a useful measure when symptoms resist conservative treatment


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 4 | Pages 49 - 49
1 Aug 2019


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 5 | Pages 4 - 10
1 Oct 2019
Tsoi K Samuel A Jeys LM Ashford RU Gregory JJ


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 36-B, Issue 3 | Pages 445 - 449
1 Aug 1954
Dixon TF Mulligan L Nassim R Stevenson FH

1. A metabolic study in a case of myositis ossificans progressiva is reported. 2. The serum showed an increased power of calcification of rachitic rat cartilage. 3. Estimations of alkaline phosphatase showed slightly raised values. 4. Surgical removal of a bony bar was followed by prolonged administration of ACTH and cortisone, but no effect on the calcium-phosphorus balance or on the re-ossification within the area of operation was observed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 3 | Pages 348 - 353
1 May 1988
Uyttendaele D De Schryver A Claessens H Roels H Berkvens P Mondelaers W

En-bloc resection, extracorporeal irradiation and re-implantation of the irradiated bone have been used to treat 15 patients suffering from primary malignant tumours of bone or cartilage and two with benign lesions. This treatment is an alternative to replacement by prosthesis or allograft bridging techniques. After a mean follow-up of over five years results are encouraging, despite some complications and the relatively long period before weight-bearing is allowed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 3 | Pages 493 - 504
1 Aug 1968
Brookes M Helal B

1. The venographic findings in clinical primary osteoarthritis are described. 2. Experimental venous engorgement, of the knee joint and of healing fibular fractures, results in accelerated bone formation and disturbed cartilage formation. 3. Changes in pH, ppCO. 2. , and PPO. 2. are indicated as the chemical means by which chondrogenesis and osteogenesis can be altered. 4. It is suggested that chronic venous stress in joints is a causal factor in primary osteoarthritis


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 8 | Pages 889 - 890
1 Aug 2019
Haddad FS Masri BA


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 1 | Pages 78 - 81
1 Jan 1994
Vanderwilde R Morrey B Melberg M Vinh T

The management of radial head fractures complicated by ligamentous disruption remains a matter of controversy. The use of a silicone radial head implant to provide temporary stability is thought to help to protect the ligaments during healing. The reported complications of long-term implantation of a silicone replacement include fracture, dislocation, synovitis, lymphadenitis and subchondral resorption. We now report one case in which an inflammatory process resulted in generalised cartilage degeneration. This has not previously been noted


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 2 | Pages 279 - 290
1 May 1974
Byers PD

1. Osteotomy for osteoarthritis of the hip induces a fibrin layer over the exposed bone which forms the basis of a fibrocellular protective mantle that can differentiate towards cartilage. 2. The process is accompanied by bone remodelling, which reduces sclerosis, resolves osteolytic foci and, in company with bone formation in the fibrous mantle, restores the subchondral plate. 3. Many important aspects of the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis and of its partial repair by osteotomy remain to be elucidated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 1 | Pages 56 - 63
1 Feb 1966
Mann TS

1. Five elderly patients who suffered acute synovitis of one or both knee joints are reported. 2. All showed radiological evidence in several joints of cartilage calcification. 3. It is suggested that the synovitis in each case was due to calcium irritation of the synovial membrane. 4. In three of the patients it is shown that the synovial fluid calcium content was raised during the acute attack. 5. In all patients acute symptoms were relieved by aspiration of the effusion


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 3 | Pages 530 - 538
1 Aug 1964
Crock HV

1. Sixteen patients with articular cartilage erosions after slight injury have been described, as have the results of their treatment. 2. The clinical features of this rarely diagnosed condition are discussed. Attention is drawn to "articular crepitus" and "synovial crepitus" as useful physical signs in establishing the diagnosis. 3. A radiographic sign of localised subarticular osteoporosis is reported and discussed. 4. The surgical treatment used was either shaving of the affected area of cartilage or a combination of shaving with drilling of the subchondral bone plate