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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 881 - 885
1 Nov 1993
Barrett D MacLean J Bettany J Ransford A Edgar M

Costoplasty can reduce the important cosmetic deformity of rib prominence in scoliosis but there are few objective reports of correction. We recorded the results of three objective methods of assessing back shape before and after short-segment costoplasty in 55 patients. We showed that significant improvement was maintained over a two-year follow-up period. Primary costoplasty at the time of scoliosis surgery (n = 35) achieved greater proportional correction than secondary costoplasty performed after fusion of the spine (n = 20). The rib segments removed at primary surgery provided enough bone for the autogenous graft; harvesting from the pelvis was unnecessary. We report a new classification of rib morphology which helps in planning the site and extent of costoplasty, and in predicting the possible correction


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 4 | Pages 534 - 538
1 Aug 1988
Hsu L Cheng C Leong J

Twenty-two patients with late onset Pott's paraplegia presenting at a mean of 18 years after initial symptoms were reviewed an average of seven years after treatment by anterior decompression and fusion. Fourteen patients had active disease, and in 12 of these, activity at the internal kyphus was the direct cause of the paraplegia. In the other two, a soft healing bony ridge was the cause. The eight patients with healed disease had hard bony ridges compressing the cord. The response to anterior decompression was faster, better and safer in patients with active disease: nine recovered completely and three significantly. In patients with healed disease, the anterior decompression was technically more difficult and the recovery less satisfactory. Significant complications included two cases with neurological deterioration, two with cerebrospinal fluid fistulae and four with neurapraxia of the cord


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 5 | Pages 557 - 568
1 Nov 1983
Gillespie R Torode I

Sixty-nine patients with congenital abnormality of the femur were reviewed. Their manifestation of femoral dysplasia ranged from an intact femur approximately 60 per cent of the length of the normal leg to a subtotal absence of the femur in which only the femoral condyles remained, often with a congenital fusion of the knee joint. Two groups were defined: Group I consisted of those with congenital hypoplastic femur in which the hip and knee could be made functional and where, in some patients at least, leg equalisation was possible; Group II consisted of those with true proximal focal femoral deficiency where the hip joint was never normal and the knee joint was always useless. The patients in each group were examined and evaluated with respect to clinical signs, surgical procedures performed, and prosthetic requirements and function. A protocol of treatment for both groups is suggested


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 64-B, Issue 4 | Pages 422 - 428
1 Aug 1982
Spierings E Braakman R

Thirty-seven patients treated for os odontoideum are reviewed. In 20 patients the treatment was conservative and in 17 consisted of occipitocervical or atlanto-axial fusion. Two patients died after the operation and another, who lived abroad, was lost to follow-up. The remaining 34 patients were followed up for an average of eight years: 19 improved, 14 were unchanged and one deteriorated. In the subgroup of 25 patients without cord signs, there were no significant differences between the two modes of treatment. Analysis of the radiological features of the upper cervical spine in 21 patients revealed a minimal sagittal diameter of less than 13 millimetres to be associated with a high risk of permanent cord damage. There was no correlation with the degree of instability per se. On the basis of this analysis, guidelines are suggested for the management of patients with an os odontoideum


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 1 | Pages 36 - 42
1 Feb 1979
McMaster M Macnicol M

Twenty-seven children with progressive infantile idiopathic scoliosis have been reviewed after long-term management. Twenty-two children had single thoracic curves which were diagnosed at an early age and treated in a modified Milwaukee brace until the age of ten years when the spine was corrected and fused. The mean correction after operation was 40 per cent of the initial degree of curvature seen in early childhood before treatment. Solid spinal fusion led to a further moderate loss in correction due to bending of the fusion mass before the spine became stable several years later. Five children had double structural curves and were treated only in a brace. This provided less satisfactory control of these curves but because of the minimal cosmetic deformity, extensive spinal fusion was avoided


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 4 | Pages 658 - 667
1 Nov 1967
Guirguis AR

1. A comparison of the results of sixty patients with Pott's paraplegia, half operated upon and half treated conservatively, showed that better results were achieved in a much shorter time in those treated surgically. 2. Extra-pleural antero-lateral decompression is the operation of choice in cases of Pott's paraplegia. 3. The operation should be done as soon as the general condition of the patient allows, and should not be left until the disease is quiescent. 4. The greatest improvement is found in those patients who are still ambulant. 5. Although the gain in patients with complete paraplegia may be small, relief from painful flexor spasms and the healing of bed-sores often justify surgical treatment. 6. Fusion of the vertebral bodies can be carried out at the same sitting using healthy ribs and sometimes cancellous bone, with satisfactory results


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 32-B, Issue 3 | Pages 325 - 333
1 Aug 1950
MacNab I

Spondylolisthesis without a defect in the neural arch, the "pseudo-spondylolisthesis" of Junghanns, usually affects the fourth lumbar vertebra. The essential lesion is an increase in the angle between tile inferior facets and the pedicles which allows subluxation at the inferior joints. The forward displacement averages less than one centimetre. It commonly produces a clinical picture of backache and sciatica, but may present with. a "drop foot," and in unusual instances compression of the cauda euluina may occur. Patients seen in the early stages without signs of nerve root compression are best treated by localised spinal fusion. Late fusion may afford no relief because of secondary changes in the spine, but these patients obtain some benefit from a corset. Laminectomy is indicated for severe symptoms in patients who show signs of nerve root compression; it should be followed by spinal fusion


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 197 - 203
1 Mar 1997
McMaster MJ

Fifteen patients with ankylosing spondylitis who had developed a severe flexion deformity of the cervical spine which restricted their field of vision to their feet, were treated by an extension osteotomy at the C7/T1 level. The operation was performed under general anaesthesia with the patient in the prone position and wearing a halo-jacket. Three had internal fixation using a Luque rectangle and wiring. Their mean age was 48 years. Before operation the mean cervical kyphosis was 23°; this was corrected to a mean of 31° of lordosis, a mean correction of 54°. All the patients were able to see straight ahead. One patient with normal neurology soon after operation became quadraparetic after one week; two others had unilateral palsy of the C8 root, which improved. There was subluxation at the site of osteotomy in four patients, and two of them developed a pseudarthrosis which required an anterior fusion


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 4 | Pages 507 - 515
1 Apr 2018
Nnadi C Thakar C Wilson-MacDonald J Milner P Rao A Mayers D Fairbank J Subramanian T

Aims

The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the performance and safety of magnetically controlled growth rods in the treatment of early onset scoliosis. Secondary aims were to evaluate the clinical outcome, the rate of further surgery, the rate of complications, and the durability of correction.

Patients and Methods

We undertook an observational prospective cohort study of children with early onset scoliosis, who were recruited over a one-year period and followed up for a minimum of two years. Magnetically controlled rods were introduced in a standardized manner with distractions performed three-monthly thereafter. Adverse events which were both related and unrelated to the device were recorded. Ten children, for whom relevant key data points (such as demographic information, growth parameters, Cobb angles, and functional outcomes) were available, were recruited and followed up over the period of the study. There were five boys and five girls. Their mean age was 6.2 years (2.5 to 10).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 6 | Pages 982 - 989
1 Nov 1991
McMaster M

Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in 152 patients was treated by Luque L-rod instrumentation and early mobilisation without external support. This series was compared with a matched group of 156 patients treated by Harrington instrumentation and immobilised in an underarm jacket for nine months. All the operations in both groups were performed by one surgeon and the patients were followed prospectively for more than two years. Correction of the scoliosis in the frontal plane was similar in both groups. However, the normal sagittal contour was better maintained with Luque rods, especially in the thoracolumbar and lumbar regions, and provided less loss of correction than with Harrington rods. Neither method significantly derotated the scoliosis. All the patients with Luque instrumentation developed a solid fusion despite breakage of the sublaminar wires at one or two levels in 4.9%. There were no major neurological complications with either type of instrumentation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 5 | Pages 833 - 839
1 Sep 1998
Oner FC van der Rijt RR Ramos LMP Dhert WJA Verbout AJ

We have studied the intervertebral discs adjacent to fractured vertebral bodies using MRI in 63 patients at a minimum of 18 months after injury. There were 75 thoracolumbar fractures of which 26 were treated conservatively and 37 by posterior reduction and fusion with an AO internal fixator. We identified six different types of disc using criteria based on the morphology and the intensity of the MRI signal. The inter- and intraobserver variability of this system was good. Most of the discs showed predominantly morphological changes with no variation in signal intensity. Some disc types were associated with progressive kyphosis in patients treated conservatively. In those managed by operation, recurrent kyphosis appeared to result from creeping of the disc in the central depression of the bony endplate rather than from disc degeneration. Changes in the disc space after posterior fixation should not be seen as a form of chronic instability but as a redistribution of the disc tissue in the changed morphology of the space after fractures of the endplate


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 1 | Pages 100 - 106
1 Jan 2003
Sundararaj GD Behera S Ravi V Venkatesh K Cherian VM Lee V

We present a prospective study of patients with tuberculosis of the dorsal, dorsolumbar and lumbar spine after combined anterior (radical debridement and anterior fusion) and posterior (instrumentation and fusion) surgery. The object was to study the progress of interbody union, the extent of correction of the kyphosis and its maintenance with early mobilisation, and the incidence of graft and implant-related problems. The American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) score was used to assess the neurological status. The mean preoperative vertebral loss was highest (0.96) in the dorsal spine. The maximum correction of the kyphosis in the dorsolumbar spine was 17.8°. Loss of correction was maximal in the lumbosacral spine at 13.7°. All patients had firm anterior fusion at a mean of five months. The incidence of infection was 3.9% and of graft-related problems 6.5%. We conclude that adjuvant posterior stabilisation allows early mobilisation and rehabilitation. Graft-related problems were fewer and the progression and maintenance of correction of the kyphosis were better than with anterior surgery alone. There is no additional risk relating to the use of an implant either posteriorly or anteriorly even when large quantities of pus are present


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 4 | Pages 737 - 742
1 Jul 1998
Suseki K Takahashi Y Takahashi K Chiba T Yamagata M Moriya H

It has been thought that lumbar intervertebral discs were innervated segmentally. We have previously shown that the L5-L6 intervertebral disc in the rat is innervated bilaterally from the L1 and L2 dorsal root ganglia through the paravertebral sympathetic trunks, but the pathways between the disc and the paravertebral sympathetic trunks were unknown. We have now studied the spines of 17 rats to elucidate the exact pathways. We examined serial sections of the lumbar spine using immunohistochemistry for calcitonin gene-related peptide, a sensory nerve marker. We showed that these nerve fibres from the intervertebral disc ran through the sinuvertebral nerve into the rami communicantes, not into the corresponding segmental spinal nerve. In the rat, sensory information from the lumbar intervertebral discs is conducted through rami communicantes. If this innervation pattern applies to man, simple decompression of the corresponding nerve root will not relieve discogenic pain. Anterior interbody fusion, with the denervation of rami communicantes, may be effective for such low back pain


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 5 | Pages 795 - 803
1 Nov 1986
Knutson K Lindstrand A Lidgren L

A prospective nation-wide study of knee arthroplasty has been under way in Sweden since October 1975. By the end of 1983, 4505 arthroplasties for osteoarthritis and 3495 for rheumatoid arthritis had been recorded and reviewed one, three and six years after the operation. Using actuarial methods, the probability of the prosthesis remaining in situ after six years was calculated. In osteoarthritis this probability ranged from 65% for hinged prostheses to 90% for medial compartment prostheses. Two-and three-compartment prostheses produced intermediate results with 87% survival. In rheumatoid arthritis the probability varied from 72% for medial compartment prostheses to 90% for two- and three-compartment prostheses. The main reason for failure was loosening of the components, the second most common was infection. The probability of revision for infection by six years was 2% in osteoarthritis and 3% in rheumatoid arthritis. Most revisions were to a three-compartment prosthesis. Knee fusion at primary revision was required in 2% of the cases at six years


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 2 | Pages 157 - 159
1 Mar 1983
Williams L Wientroub S Getty C Pincott Gordon I Fixsen J

Three amputated legs with tibial dysplasia were studied by radiography, arteriography and anatomical dissection. The radiographic appearances were the same as the Type 1b tibial dysplasia described by Jones, Barnes and Lloyd-Roberts (1978) in that the tibiae were absent but the lower femoral epiphyses were normal. However, our anatomical findings differed from those of Jones et al. since no bony or cartilaginous anlage of the proximal tibia was found in any of the three legs. The pattern of vascular anomaly was identical in the three legs and similar to the findings of Hootnick et al. (1980) in congenital short fibula. Congenital fusion of the subtalar joint was a constant finding. These results support the hypothesis that the arterial and skeletal systems are vulnerable to a teratogenic insult in the fifth week of embryonic life. The bony and arterial anomalies should be borne in mind by the surgeon attempting reconstructive surgery for this condition


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 64-B, Issue 1 | Pages 36 - 43
1 Feb 1982
Yong-Hing K MacEwen G

A survey was conducted to document the results of bracing and spinal fusion for scoliosis associated with osteogenesis imperfecta. Observations were made of 121 patients who underwent treatment by bracing or spinal fusion and who had been treated by 51 orthopaedic surgeons in 14 countries. The average curve before bracing measured 43 degrees. The braces were ineffective in stopping progression even in small curves. We were unable to determine whether braces slowed the rate of progression of curvature. The average age at fusion was 15 years 7 months, the average curve before operation measured 74 degrees, and the average correction was 36 per cent. The high incidence of complications was related to the size of the curve before spinal fusion, the use of Harrington instrumentation, and the presence of associated kyphosis. In the absence of pseudarthrosis or kyphosis, late bending of the fused spine did not seem to occur


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 2 | Pages 155 - 158
1 May 1979
Rybka V Raunio P Vainio K

Forty-one arthrodeses of the shoulder in thirty-nine patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis (thirty women, nine men) have been reviewed. Using internal fixation and external splints the position of the shoulder was maintained in 55 degrees of abduction, 25 degrees of horizontal flexion and enough internal rotation to allow the patient to reach the mouth. The mean period of immobilisation in a thoracobrachial splint was nine weeks, and 90 per cent of the shoulders had solid bony fusion at review. After arthrodesis the total range of scapulothoracic movement improved by about 60 per cent, giving results rated as excellent in fifteen cases (36 per cent), as good in thirteen (32 per cent) and as fair in thirteen (32 per cent). Arthrodesis can be recommended as an easy, cheap and reliable method of treating a shoulder which has been severely destroyed by rheumatoid arthritis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 1 | Pages 16 - 23
1 Feb 1964
Menelaus MB

1. Thirty-five children suffering from a mild illness with narrowing of an intervertebral disc have been studied. 2. Backache was the presenting symptom in only a small proportion of children, vague aching in the legs being almost as common at the onset. 3. Stiffness of the affected part of the spine is often present, but there may be no abnormal signs in the back. 4. Radiographs reveal a narrowed disc space with adjacent bony changes. There is usually progressive narrowing of the disc space which may go on to fusion of the affected vertebrae. Less commonly there is reconstitution of the affected disc. 5. The symptoms and signs quickly subside with immobilisation in recumbency and this treatment should be continued until the blood sedimentation rate returns to normal. 6. Adults who have suffered from discitis in childhood are probably more prone to develop backache. 7. The etiology remains uncertain


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 39-B, Issue 2 | Pages 358 - 394
1 May 1957
Trueta J

1. The results of a study of the characteristics of the vessels found in forty-six human femoral heads during the growth period are described. 2. Of the three different sources of blood entering the human adult femoral head it was found that from birth to about three to four years the vessels of the ligamentum teres do not contribute to the nourishment of the head. 3. After the fourth year the metaphysial vessels decrease in importance until they finally disappear, leaving the head with only one source of blood through the lateral epiphysial vessels; the ligamentum teres is not yet contributing to the circulation of the head. 4. After about eight or nine years it was found that the vessels of the ligamentum teres contribute to the blood supply of the head while the metaphysial blood flow is still arrested. 5. Finally, at puberty, after a period of activity of the metaphysial vessels, epiphysial fusion takes place, bringing together the three sources of blood characteristic of the adult


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 7, Issue 4 | Pages 28 - 31
1 Aug 2018