Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 921 - 940 of 5473
Results per page:
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 2 | Pages 254 - 256
1 Mar 1987
Wingstrand H Egund N Forsberg L

Sonography was successfully used to diagnose an effusion in the hips of three adults with septic arthritis and four with aseptic synovitis. The effusions were confirmed by aspiration. All the patients had markedly increased intracapsular pressure which, in the extended position, exceeded the systolic blood pressure and could well compromise the blood supply to the head of femur. Aspiration reduced pain and intracapsular pressure, as did flexion of the hip to 45 degrees


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 31-B, Issue 2 | Pages 222 - 226
1 May 1949
Foley WB

1. An operation is described for ischio-femoral extra-articular arthrodesis of the hip joint by posterior open approach, based on the techniques of Trumble and Brittain. 2. The operation has the advantages of affording adequate exposure of the sciatic nerve trunk and permitting visual control of the alignment and penetration of the chisel and graft. 3. The operation has been performed successfully without serious shock or subsequent complications in eighteen cases, mostly of tuberculosis of the hip


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 2 | Pages 268 - 283
1 May 1963
Wilkinson JA

1. Breech malposition and hormonal joint laxity produce atraumatic posterior dislocations in the hip joints of young rabbits. 2. Experimental studies were shown to cause the development of a limbus and other softtissue changes similar to those found in human congenital dislocations. 3. The development of femoral retroversion and anteversion in the presence of joint laxity is described. 4. The co-existence of breech malposition and hormonal joint laxity in utero, and their importance as prime factors in the etiology of congenital dislocation of the hip, are discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 5 | Pages 718 - 721
1 Sep 1996
Hung S Kurokawa T Nakamura K Matsushita T Shiro R Okazaki H

Femoral lengthening has been associated with narrowing of the joint space at the hip. We have studied the joint space before lengthening in 20 patients with a short femur due to a femoral-shaft fracture (15) or distal femoral epiphyseal injury (5). Their mean age at injury was 16 years (3 to 27) and the mean shortening was 5.4 cm (1.1 to 14). We found that the hip joint space of the shortened femur was significantly narrower (p < 0.001) than that on the normal side, with a mean narrowing ratio of 15.5% (−5 to +43). The narrowing ratio was directly related to the period spent non-weight-bearing (p < 0.001), but not to the amount of femoral shortening. We have shown that the joint space of the hip in patients with post-traumatic femoral shortening was narrowed even before femoral lengthening had been started


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 2 | Pages 186 - 189
1 Mar 1990
Dahlstrom H Friberg S Oberg L

We used ultrasound to investigate the anatomy and stability of the hip during the phase of joint stabilisation after closed reduction of unilateral late CDH in 15 infants aged from two to 15 months. Conservative treatment by splintage in abduction led to complete stability in all hips in from three to 13 weeks. Immediately after reduction, interposed soft tissue caused lateralisation of the femoral head, but this progressively disappeared, and the initially smaller femoral head on the dislocated side regained normal size. Ultrasonic evaluation of the hip in late CDH is a valuable and safe tool; it reduces the need for radiographic examination and improves treatment by visualising the actual pathology. The more frequent use of ultrasound can reduce the need for open reduction in the age group that we studied


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 4 | Pages 720 - 731
1 Nov 1968
Ring PA

1. A complete replacement arthroplasty of the hip is described in which both components are inherently stable. 2. The arthroplasty does not require the use of acrylic cement. 3. It is appropriate for the treatment of the severely arthritic hip in which arthrodesis is not indicated, and for the mobilisation of two stiff and painful hips at any age. 4. It can be performed on both sides at the same time. 5. It produces a stable, pain-free and mobile joint in a high proportion of cases, and has appeared not to deteriorate over periods of up to four years


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 3 | Pages 294 - 295
1 Mar 2018
Sprowson† AP Jensen C Ahmed I Parsons N Partington P Emmerson K Carluke I Asaad S Pratt R Muller S Reed MR


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 5 | Pages 761 - 766
1 Nov 1988
Maistrelli G Fusco U Avai A Bombelli R

We have reviewed the results of 106 intertrochanteric osteotomies performed for osteonecrosis of the femoral head. The average age at operation was 47.5 years. At two years from operation 71% of the hips had a clinically satisfactory result and at final follow-up, an average of 8.2 years after operation, 58% continued to have excellent or good rating. Twenty-four hips had needed total replacement or arthrodesis because of pain. Patients aged less than 55 did better than those operated on after that age, and hips with an idiopathic or post-traumatic aetiology did considerably better than alcohol-induced or steroid-induced cases. In view of these findings we believe that in the younger adult, in the absence of metabolic bone disease or advanced joint destruction, intertrochanteric osteotomy should be considered for the treatment of osteonecrosis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 4 | Pages 690 - 693
1 Nov 1965
Onji Y Kurata Y Kido H

1. A method of hip fusion with the aid of a straight intramedullary nail through the ilium and the femur is presented. 2. If properly done, no external fixation is necessary and the patient can be allowed up with crutches ten days after the operation. 3. The method has been used on eighteen hips between 1958 and 1960. There was one case of delayed union due to faulty technique and one case of exacerbation of an old tuberculous infection. Otherwise the follow-up study of the patients revealed good bony fusion in all cases, with no pain in the back or knee


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 6 | Pages 878 - 885
1 Aug 2002
Düppe H Danielsson LG

Between 1956 1999, 132 601 living children were born in and Malmö, and screened for neonatal instability of the hip. All late diagnosed patients have been followed and re-examined clinically and radiologically. During the first years of screening, less than five per 1000 living newborn infants were treated. This figure increased to 35 per 1000 in 1980, but later diminished again to about six per 1000 annually after 1990. The number of referred cases decreased from 45 per 1000 in 1980 to between 10 to 15 per 1000 from 1990. During the period of high rates of referral and treatment a larger number of paediatricians were involved in the screening procedure than during the periods with low rates of referral and treatment. Altogether 21 patients (0.16 per 1000) with developmental dislocation of the hip were diagnosed late, after one week. At follow-up, 18 were free from symptoms and 15 considered to be radiologically normal


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 3 | Pages 434 - 437
1 Apr 2004
Faraj S Atherton WG Stott NS

Reimers’ hip migration percentage is commonly used to document the extent of subluxation of the hip in children with spasticity. In this study, two measurers, with six months paediatric orthopaedic experience, measured the migration percentage on 44 pelvic radiographs of children with cerebral palsy, aged between two and eight years. Unknown to the measurers, each radiograph was duplicated, giving 22 non-identical radiographs (44 hips) which were measured twice at time 0 and twice six weeks later. The intra-measurer, intra-sessional absolute differences between the first and second measurements ranged from 0% to 23%, with median values of 2.5% to 3.6%. The intra-sessional median absolute differences were not statistically different between the two measurers and measuring sessions (p = 0.42, Kruskal-Wallis test). The inter-sessional absolute differences for measurements made by the same measurers ranged from 0% to 18% with a median absolute difference of 1.7% to 3.2%. Overall, only 5% of the intra-measurer measurement differences, within and between sessions, were above 13%. Repeated measurements by one measurer over time must, therefore, vary by more than 13% in order to be 95% confident of a true change. The inter-measurer error was higher with median absolute differences between the two measurers’ measurements of the same hip of 3.25% to 5% (0% to 26%) and a 95. th. upper confidence interval of 21% to 23%. Averaging the four separate measurements over the two sessions reduced the inter-measurer error to a median absolute difference of 2.8%, but did not improve the 95. th. upper confidence interval, which measured 22.4%. Such inter-measurer errors may be clinically unacceptable


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 1 | Pages 163 - 166
1 Jan 1999
Nivbrant B Karlsson K Kärrholm J

We analysed synovial fluid from 88 hips, 38 with osteoarthritis and 12 with well-functioning and 38 with loose hip prostheses. The levels of TNF-α, IL-1ß (71 hips) and IL-6 (45 hips) were measured using the ELISA technique. Joints with well-functioning or loose prostheses had significantly increased levels of TNF-α compared with those with osteoarthritis. Hips with aseptic loosening also had higher levels of IL-1ß but not of IL-6 compared with those without an implant. The levels of TNF-α and IL-1ß did not differ between hips with stable and loose prostheses. Higher levels of TNF-α were found in hips with bone resorption of type II and type III (Gustilo-Pasternak) compared with those with type-I loosening. The level of cytokines in joint fluid was not influenced by the time in situ of the implants or the age, gender or area of the osteolysis as measured on conventional radiographs. Our findings support the theory that macrophages in the joint capsule increase the production of TNF-α at an early phase probably because of particle load and in the absence of clinical loosening. Since TNF-α has an important role in the osteolytic process, the interfaces should be protected from penetration of joint fluid


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 1 | Pages 68 - 74
1 Jan 1986
Vishwakarma G Khare A

Arthroplasty of the hip using an interposed multi-layered cap of amniotic membrane is reported in 28 patients with tuberculous arthritis. The disease had been present from one to seven years, and five patients had multiple discharging sinuses. Follow-up was from 30 to 46 months. Amniotic tissue caused no inflammatory reaction, or obvious rejection, and 25 patients were free of symptoms, with a good range of movement and a stable joint. The three failures were caused by dislocation, fracture of the femoral neck and extra-articular bone formation respectively. Amniotic arthroplasty seems to be capable of providing a painless, mobile and stable joint in patients with tuberculosis of the hip


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 6 | Pages 924 - 929
1 Nov 1996
Koizumi W Moriya H Tsuchiya K Takeuchi T Kamegaya M Akita T

We reviewed 33 patients (35 hips) after open reduction of congenital dislocation of the hip using Ludloff’s medial approach. The mean age at the time of operation was 14 months (5 to 29) and at the time of final follow-up 20.1 years (15 to 24) giving a mean duration of follow-up of 19.4 years (14 to 23). We evaluated the radiological results by the Severin classification and the extent of avascular necrosis using the criteria of Kalamchi. At the latest review 16 hips (45.7%) were in Severin groups I or II (acceptable results) and 19 (54.3%) in Severin groups III, IV or V (unacceptable results). There was evidence of avascular necrosis in 15 hips (42.9%). The radiological results began to become worse at about the age of ten years when type-II avascular changes presented. We conclude that Ludloff’s medial approach for open reduction is unsatisfactory for the treatment of congenital dislocation since about half of our patients required additional operations


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 5 | Pages 597 - 603
1 May 2014
Nomura T Naito M Nakamura Y Ida T Kuroda D Kobayashi T Sakamoto T Seo H

Several radiological methods of measuring anteversion of the acetabular component after total hip replacement (THR) have been described. These studies used different definitions and reference planes to compare methods, allowing for misinterpretation of the results. We compared the reliability and accuracy of five current methods using plain radiographs (those of Lewinnek, Widmer, Liaw, Pradhan, and Woo and Morrey) with CT measurements, using the same definition and reference plane. We retrospectively studied the plain radiographs and CT scans in 84 hips of 84 patients who underwent primary THR. Intra- and inter-observer reliability were high for the measurement of inclination and anteversion with all methods on plain radiographs and CT scans. The measurements of inclination on plain radiographs were similar to the measurements using CT (p = 0.043). The mean difference between CT measurements was 0.6° (-5.9° to 6.8°). Measurements using Widmer’s method were the most similar to those using CT (p = 0.088), with a mean difference between CT measurements of -0.9° (-10.4° to 9.1°), whereas the other four methods differed significantly from those using CT (p < 0.001). This study has shown that Widmer’s method is the best for evaluating the anteversion of the acetabular component on plain radiographs. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014; 96-B:597–603


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 4 | Pages 615 - 619
1 Jul 1995
Fraser R Bourke H Broughton N Menelaus M

We reviewed 16 patients with spina bifida and unilateral dislocation of the hip at an average age of 17 years. Nine had a high neurological level (thoracic to L3) and seven a low lesion (L4 to sacral). We assessed the influence of unilateral dislocation of the hip on leg-length discrepancy, hip pain, hip stiffness and pressure sores of the ischial tuberosity. In non-walking patients with high-level lesions, unilateral dislocation gave little functional disability and did not appear to require reduction. In walking patients with low-level lesions, leg-length discrepancy led to a poor gait and functional problems which could be prevented by reduction of the dislocation. In all patients with low lesions, surgery was successful in maintaining reduction; in two of five patients with high lesions it was unsuccessful


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1618 - 1624
1 Dec 2006
Bhandari M Matta J Ferguson T Matthys G

We aimed to identify variables associated with clinical and radiological outcome following fractures of the acetabulum associated with posterior dislocation of the hip. Using a prospective database of 1076 such fractures, we identified 109 patients with this combined injury managed operatively within three weeks and followed up for two or more years. The patients had a mean age of 42 years (15 to 79), 78 (72%) were male, and 84 (77%) had been involved in motor vehicle accidents. Using multivariate analysis the quality of reduction of the fracture was identified as the only significant predictor of radiological grade, clinical function and the development of post-traumatic arthritis (p < 0.001). All patients lacking anatomical reduction developed arthritis whereas only 25.5% (24 patients) with an anatomical reduction did so (p = 0.05). The quality of the reduction of the fracture is the most important variable in forecasting the outcome for patients with this injury. The interval to reduction of the dislocation of the hip may be less important than previously described


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 1 | Pages 148 - 148
1 Jan 2003
GOTFRIED Y


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 4 | Pages 603 - 606
1 Aug 1988
Eskola A Santavirta S Konttinen Y Tallroth K Hoikka V Lindholm S

We report the results of cementless total joint replacement in 18 patients with old tuberculosis of the hip, performed, on average, 34 years after the onset of infection. Mean follow-up was 3.5 years. Only seven of the patients had antituberculous drugs during or after the operation. Using the Mayo hip score, 15 patients had excellent or good results and two had a fair rating. One patient had the prosthesis removed more than one year postoperatively for late haematogenous staphylococcal infection and had a poor rating. All the patients had relief of hip-related pain. Despite the absence of any reactivation of tuberculosis in our series, we recommend the use of specific prophylaxis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 4 | Pages 385 - 392
1 Nov 1977
Hardinge K Williams D Etienne A MacKenzie D Charnley J

Fifty-four hips converted to low friction arthroplasty between 1965 and 1975 have been reviewed one to eleven years after operation. In many cases malposition had led to degenerative changes in the opposite hip, the lumbar spine or the knee, often with severe loss of function due to pain. It was found that total replacement could give useful relief of pain and improved function, though the range of movement obtained was not as good as in primary replacement. An outstanding feature was the correction of inequality of leg length. In general, the results were much better in cases of ankylosis acquired in adult life than in cases of spontaneous fusion after sepsis in childhood. The most important complication was a single case of sciatic palsy