The costo-clavicular ligament is always ruptured in dislocation at the sterno-clavicular joint. Anterior, superior or posterior displacement of the medial end of the clavicle may occur. Acute dislocation usually responds to conservative treatment and operation is seldom required.
We have treated six patients with
We reviewed 15 patients, nine girls and six boys, with
We report two cases of bilateral
Seven children with
When using a staged approach to eradicate
Prosthetic joint infections (PJIs) of the hip and knee are associated with significant morbidity and socioeconomic burden. We undertook a systematic review of the current literature with the aim of proposing criteria for the selection of patients for a single-stage exchange arthroplasty in the management of a PJI. A comprehensive review of the current literature was performed using the OVID-MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library databases and the search terms: infection and knee arthroplasty OR knee revision OR hip arthroplasty OR hip revision, and one stage OR single stage OR direct exchange. All studies involving fewer than ten patients and follow-up of less than two years in the study group were excluded as also were systematic reviews, surgical techniques, and expert opinions.Aims
Material and Methods
Seven patients with
We have treated 45 patients (47 ankles) for
Five children with
We describe our medium-term results for the management of
1. A study of 2,200 patients receiving electro-convulsive therapy showed that fifty-three sustained fractures or dislocationsâan incidence of 2·4 per cent. Of the fifty-three injuries, twenty-one occurred in the spine, fifteen in the neck of femur, fifteen in the upper end of humerus, one in the coracoid process; one dislocated jaw required anaesthesia for its reduction (other cases of transient dislocation of the jaw are excluded). 2. The incidence, site, and type of spinal fractures are recorded, and the relation of the fracture to the first convulsion is noted. No late changes were found in the spines of patients examined two years or more after treatment. A neutral position of the spine during the convulsion is believed to diminish the risk of fracture. 3. Fracture of the neck of the femur is a serious injury in these patients. In one case the injury was bilateral. 4. The fifteen cases of fracture-dislocation of the upper humerus are analysed. They included two cases of posterior dislocation of the humeral head; the possible mechanism of this is explained and a method of prevention suggested. 5. Fifty-three patients with
Twenty-nine bone defects caused by
We present seven children with atlantoaxial rotatory fixation (AARF) of more than three months’ duration after an injury to the upper cervical spine. The deformity was irreducible by skull traction. MRI and MR angiography (MRA) of the vertebral arteries were performed in four children. The patients were neurologically intact. Thrombosis of the ipsilateral vertebral artery was noted in two patients. The deformity was gradually corrected and stabilised after transoral release of the atlantoaxial complex, skull traction and posterior atlantoaxial fusion. Soft-tissue interposition and contractures within the atlantoaxial complex prevented closed reduction. MRI and MRA of the vertebral arteries were useful in elucidating the pathology of
1. In
We report a prospective study of 49 patients who had arthroscopic subacromial decompression for
Nine children with