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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 4 | Pages 659 - 663
1 Nov 1948
Charnley J

1. It is suggested that slow recovery and post-operative effusion after meniscectomy may often be due to "scar friction" when the incision in the synovial membrane is in contact with the non-articular surface of the femoral condyle. 2. The advantages of a horizontal incision are discussed, particularly with regard to early recovery. 3. The results of one hundred and three cases of meniscectomy are analysed. An attempt to trace the cause of incompletely successful results in 25 per cent. of cases failed to show any relation to minor coincident lesions discovered at operation, or to the amount of meniscus removed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 1 | Pages 52 - 55
1 Jan 1988
Goddard N Gosling P

We investigated the relationship between the pain experienced by 50 patients with osteoarthritis of the hip and the resting intra-articular pressure of the synovial fluid. We found a significant linear correlation between these factors, greater pain being experienced by patients with higher pressures. In 20 cases we showed that the pressure rises in extension and medial rotation and is least in flexion and mid-abduction. These results help to explain the benefits of rotation osteotomy of the hip and of psoas release. They also help explain the natural resting position of the hip in patients with an acute effusion and the fixed deformities associated with late osteoarthritis of the hip


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 4 | Pages 635 - 639
1 Jul 1991
Futami T Kasahara Y Suzuki S Ushikubo S Tsuchiya T

We used ultrasonography to examine 36 children suffering from transient synovitis and 12 children with early Perthes' disease. Widening of the joint space was revealed by ultrasonography in all affected hips with either disease. In the patients with transient synovitis, capsular distension was attributed to synovial effusion, while in the patients with Perthes' disease it was produced by thickening of the synovial membrane. Neither capsular distension nor thickening of the joint cartilage was seen in the contralateral normal hip in the patients with transient synovitis, but they were common in early Perthes' disease. Ultrasonography may provide significant diagnostic clues to differentiate early Perthes' from transient synovitis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 5 | Pages 808 - 811
1 Nov 1986
Kallio P Ryoppy S Kunnamo I

A prospective study was made of 119 children with transient synovitis or any other cause for synovial effusion and elevated intra-articular pressure. During a follow-up of one year not one case of Perthes' disease was diagnosed and the late clinical and radiographic changes were minimal with moderate overgrowth of the femoral head in 33% and widening of the joint space in 14.2%. Our results do not support the widely accepted concept that Perthes' disease develops as a result of the period of elevated intra-articular pressure found in transient synovitis. Further research into this and Perthes' disease should follow the premise that they are two different diseases without any aetiological connection


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 2 | Pages 263 - 271
1 May 1972
McMaster M

1. Opinion is divided as to the value of synovectomy of the knee in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. 2. Between 1964 and 1970 thirty synovectomies of the knee were performed in twenty-seven children, who have now been kept under review for one to eight years. Three have required a second operation. 3. The operative findings at various stages are presented and discussed, with special reference to the effect on growth of the limb. 4. Synovectomy is a useful procedure which should be reserved for cases where effusion persists despite nine months of conservative treatment and performed before signs of bone erosion appear


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 3 | Pages 460 - 467
1 Aug 1972
Solomon L Berman L

1. Twenty-two cases of synovial rupture of the knee have been studied. This condition may complicate any chronic synovitis of the knee in which a tense intra-articular effusion is subjected to increased tension during flexion and extension of the joint. 2. Two types of rupture have been seen; a herniation of the synovial membrane into the popliteal fossa and down the leg, and an acute synovial tear with extravasation of joint contents between the muscle planes of the calf. 3. The diagnosis of this condition, the differentiation of the types of rupture and their treatment are discussed. 4. The acute rupture usually responds to simple bed-rest; the large synovial herniations often need removal and repair of the posterior capsule


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 4 | Pages 516 - 519
1 Nov 1978
Browett J Gibbs A Copeland S Deliss L

A prospective trial has been carried out to determine the value of suction drainage in the operation of meniscectomy. One hundred operations were analysed, in half of which drains had been used. The use of the drain could not be shown to result in any sustained advantages. The demand for analgesics after the operation was reduced but not to a statistically significant level. The size of the early effusion was significantly reduced, but this benefit was lost when the knee was mobilised. The return of power to the quadriceps and of movement to the knee were not hastened. The average volume of fluid drained was 134 millilitres and it has been shown that forty-eight hours is a suitable time for removal of the drain. The use of suction drainage is not advocated for the uncomplicated operation of meniscectomy


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 4 | Pages 654 - 656
1 Jul 1995
Tauro B

The appearance and the biochemical, cytological and bacteriological findings were studied in synovial fluid obtained from the knees of 72 patients from south-west India. We report a group of 12 patients with 'eosinophilic synovitis'. In these patients, all below the age of 20 years with an acute onset of severe pain in the knee, there was a large effusion with painful limitation of movement. Their blood leucocyte count averaged 11,200 per mm3 with a mild eosinophilia of 6%. Biochemical examination of synovial fluid was normal, but cytology showed an increase in leucocytes ranging from 1200 to 20,500 (mean 9525) with between 75% and 90% of eosinophils in eight patients and 60% to 75% in four. All the patients responded well to a course of diethylcarbamazine


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 3 | Pages 379 - 382
1 May 1990
Egund N Nilsson L Wingstrand H Stromqvist B Pettersson H

Computed tomography was performed on 40 patients with recent hip trauma. Radiographs of 25 showed a fracture of the femoral neck with slight displacement; 24 of these had intra-articular fluid and 20 had a lipohaemarthrosis on the CT scan. In 15 patients, radiographs at the time of admission were normal but suspicion of fracture remained. A fracture was later verified in five patients, four of whom had lipohaemarthrosis on admission. In the remaining 10 patients no fracture could be detected; only one patient had a hip joint effusion but no free fat. Thus all 24 patients with lipohaemarthrosis had an intracapsular fracture of the hip. We suggest CT for patients with hip trauma and negative radiographs. The presence of a lipohaemarthrosis of the hip strongly suggests an intra-articular fracture of either the femoral neck or the acetabulum


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 3 | Pages 308 - 309
1 May 1983
Rushton N Dandy D Naylor C

Thirty-nine patients underwent reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament with carbon-fibre and a MacIntosh repair; all had a negative pivot shift test after operation. Some patients had persistent pain, mild effusion and synovial thickening; in 10 of these patients the symptoms warranted arthroscopic examination and biopsy at a mean of 16.9 months after the repair. Arthroscopy revealed that the carbon-fibre had not induced the formation of a "new ligament" and that the repair was merely covered by a thin, fibrous sheath. Histological investigations confirmed this finding, with only a suggestion of a fibroblastic response to carbon-fibre found in two patients. Particles of carbon-fibre were found scattered through the knees. Synovitis and breakdown of the skin over subcutaneous carbon-fibre complicated treatment. Failure of the carbon-fibre to bond to bone was detected radiographically


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 2 | Pages 200 - 203
1 Mar 1994
Fujikawa K Ohtani T Matsumoto H Seedhom B

We describe a new method for the reconstruction of ruptures of the patellar ligament or the quadriceps tendon, using the flexible open-weave polyester Leeds-Keio prosthetic ligament. Of 25 operations performed since 1985, we were able to review 18 patients (19 knees) with a mean follow-up of 3.5 years (3 to 6.5). No patient had required immobilisation of the knee after operation and the average period to return to normal activities without a walking aid was 10.5 weeks. The average range of motion was 146 degrees, and four patients could squat fully in the Japanese style. There was an extension lag (< 10 degrees) in only four patients; eight patients had some patellar crepitus which was mildly painful in three. There were no cases of infection, persistent joint effusion or rerupture of the extensor apparatus


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 6 | Pages 884 - 889
1 Nov 1991
Kallio P Lequesne G Paterson D Foster B Jones

We used ultrasonography to study 26 hips with slipped capital femoral epiphyses. In recently slipped epiphyses the ultrasound image revealed a step at the anterior physeal outline (mean 6.4 mm), diminished distance between the anterior acetabular rim and the femoral metaphysis (mean 4.3 mm) and an effusion. As metaphyseal remodelling progressed the physeal step decreased. The femoral neck appeared straighter in hips which had been symptomatic for longer than three weeks. It was possible to measure posterior epiphyseal displacement without projectional errors and the method was accurate in diagnosing minimal slip and in staging displacement. The suggested criteria are, less than 7 mm for a mild slip, 7 to 11 mm for a moderate slip and more than 11 mm for a severe slip. We recommend ultrasonography for the diagnosis, staging and follow-up management of slipped upper femoral epiphysis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 4 | Pages 464 - 471
1 Aug 1983
Fowles J Olweny C Katongole-Mbidde E Lukanga-Ndawula A Owor R

Of 290 Ugandan children and adolescents with proven Burkitt's lymphoma 11 had lesions in the long bones or the pelvis. These started in the medulla as small osteolytic foci which coalesced and penetrated the cortex causing subperiosteal new bone formation in layers or spicules, and giving rise to large soft-tissue masses. Common sites were the femoral and tibial diaphyses and the metaphyses around the knee. Five were in the epiphyses. Other sites were the pelvis, humerus and ulna. One patient had a lymphomatous synovial effusion of the knee. In the lower limbs the lesions were often bilateral and symmetrical. Five patients had pathological fractures. Radiologically the lesions mimicked Ewing's sarcoma, osteosarcoma, osteomyelitis, acute leukaemia, syphilis and yaws, but clinically they were relatively painless, an important differential diagnostic feature. In the five patients with sustained remissions after chemotherapy the lesions and fractures healed well and the growth plates were undamaged


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 7 | Pages 370 - 379
30 Jun 2021
Binder H Hoffman L Zak L Tiefenboeck T Aldrian S Albrecht C

Aims

The aim of this retrospective study was to determine if there are differences in short-term clinical outcomes among four different types of matrix-associated autologous chondrocyte transplantation (MACT).

Methods

A total of 88 patients (mean age 34 years (SD 10.03), mean BMI 25 kg/m2 (SD 3.51)) with full-thickness chondral lesions of the tibiofemoral joint who underwent MACT were included in this study. Clinical examinations were performed preoperatively and 24 months after transplantation. Clinical outcomes were evaluated using the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Subjective Knee Form, the Brittberg score, the Tegner Activity Scale, and the visual analogue scale (VAS) for pain. The Kruskal-Wallis test by ranks was used to compare the clinical scores of the different transplant types.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 64-B, Issue 4 | Pages 477 - 480
1 Aug 1982
McLennan J

Thirty-five patients were treated for Type III fractures of the intercondylar eminence of the tibia and were followed up for two to seven years. There were 20 Type IIIA fractures and 15 Type IIIB fractures. The avulsed fragment was reduced by operative arthroscopy and maintained either by extension and immobilisation in a cast or by crossed percutaneous pin fixation. Involvement of the medial collateral ligament or lateral meniscus was confirmed by valgus stress radiographs and by arthroscopy. Primary surgical repair through a separate incision was required in a significant number of patients. At follow-up, few patients suffered ligamentous instability, lack of extension, atrophy of the quadriceps, pain or effusion, and symptoms were minimal. Patients requiring surgical repairs of collateral ligaments or of peripheral detachments of the meniscus generally required a longer period of rehabilitation. Arthroscopic reduction and percutaneous pin fixation provided an effective treatment and significantly decreased the time spent in hospital and the morbidity experienced after alternative treatments


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 3 | Pages 364 - 368
1 Apr 2000
Horii M Kubo T Hirasawa Y

We carried out radial MRI in 30 hips with moderate osteoarthritis and in ten normal hips. On a scout view containing the entire acetabular rim, 12 vertical radial slices were set at 15° intervals. Different appearances were observed in different parts of the joint. In the weight-bearing portion, from 45° anterosuperior to 45° posterosuperior, ‘attenuation’ (n = 16) and ‘disappearance’ (n = 25) were observed as abnormalities of the labrum with ‘capsular stripping’ (n = 29) and ‘extraosseous high signal lesion’ (n = 27) as capsular abnormalities, seen more often in the anterosuperior portion. In all 12 planes there were osteophytes on the acetabular edge (n = 24), femoral head (n = 22) and/or at the central acetabulum (n = 6), a bone cyst on the acetabulum (n = 18) and/or the femoral head (n = 9), irregularity of the articular cartilage (n = 30), and an effusion (n = 28). Our findings indicate that radial MRI may be a useful non-invasive diagnostic method for demonstrating pathology in moderate osteoarthritis of the hip


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1309 - 1316
1 Jul 2021
Garg B Bansal T Mehta N

Aims

To describe the clinical, radiological, and functional outcomes in patients with isolated congenital thoracolumbar kyphosis who were treated with three-column osteotomy by posterior-only approach.

Methods

Hospital records of 27 patients with isolated congenital thoracolumbar kyphosis undergoing surgery at a single centre were retrospectively analyzed. All patients underwent deformity correction which involved a three-column osteotomy by single-stage posterior-only approach. Radiological parameters (local kyphosis angle (KA), thoracic kyphosis (TK), lumbar lordosis (LL), pelvic tilt (PT), sacral slope (SS), C7 sagittal vertical axis (C7 SVA), T1 slope, and pelvic incidence minus lumbar lordosis (PI-LL)), functional scores, and clinical details of complications were recorded.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1060 - 1066
1 Sep 2003
Henderson IJP Tuy B Connell D Oakes B Hettwer WH

In order to determine the usefulness of MRI in assessing autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) the first 57 patients (81 chondral lesions) with a 12-month review were evaluated clinically and with specialised MRI at three and 12 months. Improvement 12 months after operation was found subjectively (37.6 to 51.9) and in knee function levels (from 85% International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS) III/IV to 61% I/II). The International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) scores showed an initial deterioration at three months (56% IKDC A/B) but marked improvement at 12 months (88% A/B). The MRI at three months showed 82% of patients with at least 50% defect fill, 59% with a normal or nearly normal signal at repair sites, 71% with a mild or no effusion and 80% with a mild or no underlying bone-marrow oedema. These improved at 12 months to 93%, 93%, 94% and 91%, respectively. The overall MR score at 12 months suggested production of normal or nearly normal cartilage in 82%, corresponding to a subjective improvement in 81% of patients and 88% IKDC A/B scores. Second-look surgery and biopsies in 15 patients (22 lesions) showed a moderate correlation of MRI with visual scoring; 70% of biopsies showed hyaline and hyaline-like cartilage. Thus, MRI at 12 months is a reasonable non-invasive means of assessment of ACI


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1103 - 1110
1 Jun 2021
Tetreault MW Hines JT Berry DJ Pagnano MW Trousdale RT Abdel MP

Aims

This study aimed to determine outcomes of isolated tibial insert exchange (ITIE) during revision total knee arthroplasty (TKA).

Methods

From 1985 to 2016, 270 ITIEs were performed at one institution for instability (55%, n = 148), polyethylene wear (39%, n = 105), insert fracture/dissociation (5%, n = 14), or stiffness (1%, n = 3). Patients with component loosening, implant malposition, infection, and extensor mechanism problems were excluded.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 945 - 949
1 Nov 1993
Maffulli N Binfield P King J Good C

We made a prospective arthroscopic study of 106 skeletally mature male sportsmen with an average age of 28.35 years (16.8 to 44) who presented with an acute haemarthrosis of the knee due to sporting activities. We excluded those with patellar dislocations, radiographic bone injuries, extra-articular ligamentous lesions or a previous injury to the same joint. The anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) was intact in 35 patients, partially disrupted in 28 and completely ruptured in 43. In the patients with an ACL lesion, associated injuries included meniscal tears (17 patients), cartilaginous loose bodies (6), and minimal osteochondral fractures of the patella (2), the tibial plateau (3) or the femoral condyle (9). We found no age-related trend in the pattern of ACL injuries. Isolated injuries included one small osteochondral fracture of the patella, and one partial and one total disruption of the posterior cruciate ligament. Three patients had cartilaginous loose bodies, and no injury was detected in five. Acute traumatic haemarthrosis indicates a serious ligament injury until proved otherwise, and arthroscopy is needed to complement careful history and clinical examination. All cases with a tense effusion developing within 12 hours of injury should have an aspiration. If haemarthrosis is confirmed, urgent admission and arthroscopy are indicated