Recent studies of the fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3) gene have established that achondroplasia and hypochondroplasia are allelic disorders of different mutations. To determine whether the genotype could be distinguished on the basis of the phenotype, we analysed height, arm span, and skeletal radiographs from 23 patients with achondroplasia and the G380R mutation of FGFR3 and eight with hypochondroplasia and the N540K mutation. Both conditions share the classical pathological features of micromelic short stature, reduced or unchanged interpedicular distances in the lumbar
We have measured the dynamic movement of the lumbar
There is a need for the accurate measurement of the outcome after knee surgery. The Oxford Knee Score is being increasingly used since it is reported to be short, simple, inexpensive and validated. We sent the questionnaire to 346 patients awaiting surgery to the hip or lumbar
A new technique of shoulder fusion is presented using a posterior approach. After removal of the articular cartilage, a Rush pin is introduced from the
Late-onset idiopathic scoliosis is associated with a rib hump in the thoracic region, and surgery is indicated when this deformity becomes unacceptable. Fifty patients with this deformity were treated by the Leeds procedure, which consists of segmental wiring to a kyphotically-contoured square-ended Harrington rod; this procedure not only derotates the
Cadaveric lumbar discs were injected with chymopapain and subjected to a series of mechanical tests over a period of up to 19 hours. Discs from the same
Eleven patients with metastases in the cervical spine had operations for severe pain due to a pathological fracture which, in eight of the cases, was unstable. Conservative treatment had either failed or was unsuitable. In the first five patients internal fixation with tension band wires and bone grafts was supported by a halo-brace. The method has evolved to the use of posterior instrumentation with laminar wires from two levels above the lesion to two levels below. Stability is increased by the use of bone cement with or without bone autografts applied to one side of the
A study of 130 scoliotic children with curves measuring 10 degrees or more has been performed in order to elucidate the importance of stature, growth and development. Girls with adolescent idiopathic curves measuring 15 degrees or more were taller than girls with smaller idiopathic curves and taller than those whose scoliosis was secondary to leg-length inequality (pelvic tilt scoliosis). No differences were observed as regards growth velocity or development. The increased standing height may be genetic but the uncoiling effect of the normal kyphosis to give a flat lateral profile is a more likely cause. The familial trend in idiopathic scoliosis may therefore be explained by the genetically determined shape of the
We used dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) to compare the bone mineral density (BMD) of nine children aged from 2 years 7 months to 13 years 5 months who had mild osteogenesis imperfecta with an age- and sex-matched control group. The patients had only mild clinical symptoms but DEXA detected highly significant differences in BMD between them and the controls. The mean BMD in the children with osteogenesis imperfecta was 76.7% of normal in the lumbar
Thirty patients with mild idiopathic scoliosis were reviewed between 7 and 17 years after spinal maturity. These patients were not treated surgically because they were cosmetically acceptable, and unlikely to progress further. Standardised radiographs taken at spinal maturity and at review were comparable, so any change represented true progression in a fully mature
Two hundred and fifty cases of myelodysplasia were reviewed in relation to spinal deformity. Approximately half of the children had, or were expected to develop, curves severe enough to need operations and only 10 per cent maintained completely undeformed
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
1. The late consequences of stable fractures of the thoracic and lumbar
1. The management of severe kyphosis of the lumbar
1. By unilateral resection of the posterior ends of the sixth to eleventh ribs including the costal parts of both costo-vertebral joints, progressive scoliosis can regularly be provoked in young rabbits. Rotation of the vertebrae is prominent in the experimental deformity. 2. Although severe progressive scoliosis can be provoked by a surgical procedure we do not yet know the deforming forces which are released by the operation, but the way lies open for accurate studies on these factors. 3. It seems possible that studies on experimental progressive scoliosis may provide us with new methods to counteract or cure scoliosis in children. The goal is a means to reverse the deforming forces during growth so that the child's
Of 37 consecutive patients suffering from tuberculosis of the lumbosacral
We report four children with sternomastoid contracture combined with torticolis secondary to congenital vertebral anomalies. Two had features of Klippel-Feil syndrome and a proximal release of the contracted sternomastoid produced good cosmetic correction initially. Progression of the deformity occurred subsequently without recurrence of sternomastoid contracture. One child had such mild deformity that it was merely observed. The fourth child was born with torticollis without sternomastoid tightness and a vertebral anomaly was later recognised. He slowly developed a sternomastoid contracture and his condition was considerably improved by sternomastoid release. This combination of causes of torticollis has not, as far as we know, been previously reported. The clinician should be aware of it and should also realise that radiographs of the very immature
We reviewed 77 unfused and 91 fused patients with idiopathic scoliosis who first attended between 1949 and 1965. Both groups were re-examined at least 10 years after reaching skeletal maturity, with attention to progression of the Cobb angle, increased in vertebral rotation, back pain and psychosocial problems. We found that spinal fusion protects the scoliotic
Thirty-four patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis were assessed by radiography and the integrated shape imaging system (ISIS) both before and after spinal surgery. Twenty-seven patients underwent Harrington instrumentation, after which lateral indices of curvature were significantly improved, but changes in the transverse plane were less pronounced. Sublaminar wiring was carried out in two patients whose thoracic lordosis was corrected by the surgery. Five patients whose severe deformity had persisted after previous spinal surgery underwent costoplasty, which resulted in a significant improvement in back shape measurements. We conclude that the cosmetic deformity of the back in scoliosis is only partially corrected by operations on the