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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 1 | Pages 48 - 52
1 Feb 1981
Macnicol M Uprichard H Mitchell G

The work capacity of 26 women after a Chiari pelvic osteotomy for symptomatic unilateral subluxation of the hip was assessed using two simple exercise tests: the maximal walking speed during a 12-minute test and the time taken to climb stairs. A significant linear decline in walking speed occurred with increasing age, despite the operation, and only one patient over the age of 25 years was able to walk at a normal rate. Compared to the results in a control group of women of similar age the stair climbing time was increased in 54 per cent of the patients and showed a significant negative correlation with the maximal walking speed. Age-adjusted walking speed was closely associated with the degree of pain experienced but there was no relationship between observed function and conventional clinical assessment based on the range of movement and the radiographic appearances of the hip


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 1 | Pages 25 - 30
1 Feb 1980
Herring J Lundeen M Wenger D

Of 193 children with Perthes' disease at the Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Cripppled Children, 24 were found to have only minimal changes. The cases were grouped relative to the area of the femoral head involved, with 10 involving the anterior portion, seven the posteromedial, three the lateral, and four the central portion. Almost all hips lost some height as measured by the epiphysial index but all had good results by the Mose criteria irrespective of treatment. The anterior lesion is the same as that described by Catterall as Group 1. The three additional groups have a similar benign natural history but distinct radiographic features. The need for early recognition of these patterns is emphasised if unnecessary treatment is to be avoided. Possible correlations of these lesions with the segmental blood supply of the femoral head are proposed and an hypothesis relating the Catterall classifications to the blood supply is put forward


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 2 | Pages 166 - 172
1 May 1977
Kessel L Watson M

Ninety-seven patients suffering from painful arc syndrome of the shoulder were studied. Local anaesthetic and radiographic contrast investigations were carried out. One-third of the patients had lesions in the posterior part of the rotator cuff which resolved after injections of local anaesthetic and steroid. One-third had anterior lesions in the subscapularis tendon: almost all resolved under the same regime but two required division of the coraco-acromial ligament. The remaining third had lesions of the supraspinatus tendon, usually associated with degeneration of the acromio-clavicular joint: most of these failed to gain relief from the local anaesthetic and steroid. Twenty-two operations were performed either by a transcromial or by a deltoid splitting approach. Excision of the outer end of the clavicle and division of the coraco-acromial ligament abolished the pain in most cases


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 1 | Pages 85 - 88
1 Feb 1977
Arguelles F Gomar F Garcia A Esquerdo J

The effects of gamma irradiation on the growth plate have been studied in nineteen rabbits with a 1,000 rads/skin dose. The rabbits were killed after one to ninety days. The growth plates were studied by microscopic examination, thymidine-H3 autoradiography, and fluorescence with radiographic measurement. Changes were already detected after twenty-four hours at the cell mitosis level, which showed the sensitiveness of the chondrocyte itself. The lesions were clearly seen with the optical microscope after seven days, and they were most advanced between the fourteenth and twenty-first day after irradiation. Regeneration of the cartilage began in the fourth week and the histological appearance became normal after seventy days. Fluorescence with tetracycline showed a temporary retardation of growth, with consequent shortening of the affected limb


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 2 | Pages 202 - 211
1 May 1976
Schajowicz F Lemos C

The clinical, radiographic and pathological features are described of eight cases of a bone tumour which we propose to classify as "malignant osteoblastoma". It presents the characteristics of genuine osteoblastoma but of an aggressive pattern, with more abundant and often plump hyperchromatic nuclei, greater nuclear atypia, and numerous giant cells of osteoclastic type. This rare tumour is regarded as the malignant counterpart of osteoblastoma and appears to be only locally aggressive. It should be separated from conventional osteosarcoma not only because of its peculiar histological pattern, but also because of its different clinical and radiological features and better prognosis. Thus seven of the eight patients were alive and free of disease from one and a half to eleven years after the initial surgical treatment, which in only two cases included amputation. Excision or block resection is the preferred method of treatment


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 1 | Pages 53 - 58
1 Feb 1975
Parker B Walker G

Seventy-two posterior psoas transfer operations performed in forty-four children with lumbar myelomeningocele were reviewed one to eight years after operation in an attempt to assess its value. Muscle charting, an objective recording of the child's walking ability, and radiographic examination of the hips were done. Hip stability was improved: 49 per cent were stable at the time of psoas transfer and 94 per cent at review. Functional results depended mainly on the level of neurological activity present: 57 per cent of the children had an acceptable functional result. Usually, posterior psoas transfer should be done as soon after the age of nine months as the child's condition will allow. Over the age of two years it should be restricted to children with activity in the third and fourth segments of the lumbar cord


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 53-B, Issue 2 | Pages 288 - 295
1 May 1971
Stener B

1. A forty-nine-year-old man had a chondrosarcoma arising from the body of the seventh thoracic vertebra. The tumour protruded into the mediastinum and also into the spinal canal where it displaced the spinal cord. 2. At operation all the seventh thoracic vertebra and parts of the sixth and eighth were removed together with the tumour. The thoracic spine was reconstructed by inserting two iliac bone-blocks between the cut bodies of the sixth and eighth vertebrae and by wiring two strong "A. O." plates to the transverse processes of the third to the sixth and the eighth to the tenth vertebrae. 3. The patient was nursed in a plaster-of-Paris bed for three and a half months. 4. One year and three months after operation, the patient was walking and well, with no signs of recurrence or metastasis. Radiographs showed that a block-vertebra had been created from the iliac grafts and the two cut vertebrae


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 2 | Pages 392 - 400
1 May 1968
Hall-Craggs ECB

1. Experimental epiphysiodesis was performed on either the upper or lower epiphysial cartilage of one tibia of young rabbits, the other tibia serving as a control. 2. Subsequent growth was observed at each epiphysis by radiography. 3. After both operations the normal deceleration of growth rate of the uninjured epiphysis on the experimental side was reduced and this epiphysis made a greater contribution than its control to the final length of the bone. 4. Serial sections of the injured epiphysis revealed that the arrest of growth was due to the formation of a narrow bony bridge between the epiphysial and metaphysial bone. 5. The additional growth of the uninjured epiphysis appeared to have a direct relationship to the deficiency of growth at the epiphysis that had been injured by operation. 6. The results may indicate the existence of a local system of growth control


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 1 | Pages 24 - 27
1 Feb 1964
Stevens J Abrami G

1. It is now more than three years since a group of ninety-one patients with transcervical fracture of the neck of the femur were examined for osteoporosis at the time of injury using a histological or a radiographic technique, or a combination of both methods. 2. After patients with basal fractures were excluded, ninety fractures in eighty-eight patients were available for review and sixty-six (74 per cent) were adequately followed up. 3. In this series the fate of the fracture did not appear to be influenced by the presence or absence of osteoporosis, or by the degree of osteoporosis. 4. The incidence of osteoporosis increased with advancing age, but this increased incidence did not appear to be responsible for the greater proportion of failures after the age of sixty-five. 5. In this series of patients examination for osteoporosis was made by methods which were believed to be the best available at the time. The possibility that these are not absolutely reliable cannot be ruled out


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 1 | Pages 77 - 86
1 Feb 1961
Berk ME Tabatznik B

1. An unusual congenital anomaly of the cervical spine is described. This lesion caused a localised cervical kyphosis and resulted in the development of a mild tetraparesis. 2. The case reported is believed to be the first on record in the English literature of multiple posterior hemivertebrae in the cervical region. 3. The neck deformity was associated with an unusual combination of developmental anomalies–namely, brachyphalangy and bilateral congenital optic atrophy. 4. The importance of differentiating between congenital and acquired causes of kyphosis is emphasised. 5. The radiographic appearances of posterior hemivertebra are described, and the differential diagnosis is considered. 6. The development of the vertebral body, and the relationship between coronal cleft vertebra and posterior hemivertebra, are discussed. The possible role of a disturbance of vascular supply in pathogenesis is mentioned. 7. This report augments the growing literature on congenital skeletal anomalies occurring in combination with isolated congenital ocular defects


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 3 | Pages 626 - 632
1 Aug 1960
Bobechko WP Harris WR

1. Experimental avascular necrosis of the femoral head was produced in rabbits and the histological and radiographic changes were compared. 2. Avascular bone which was not re-ossified or altered in any way showed no change in density to x-rays. 3. Areas of avascular bone which were being repaired by the formation of appositional new bone showed an absolute increase in density in the radiographs. This is apparently due to simple increase in bulk of bone to be penetrated by the x-ray beam. On this basis, increasing density in radiographs of bone suspected of being dead is a sign of increasing re-ossification rather than of increasing necrosis. 4. Re-ossification of dead bone occurred rapidly in the absence of simultaneous resorption of necrotic trabeculae. It is thus suggested that the term "creeping substitution" is misleading and does not reflect accurately the histological findings, at least as they occur in rabbits


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 34-B, Issue 4 | Pages 624 - 629
1 Nov 1952
Taylor RG Wright PR

1. Six cases of posterior dislocation of the shoulder are described. 2. In four cases the diagnosis was made on clinical grounds. 3. The important clinical signs are the adducted and medially rotated position of the arm, a hard mass posteriorly below the acromion representing the displaced humeral head, and limitation of movement, especially abduction and lateral rotation. 4. In two cases the dislocation was not recognised at the first examination. This confirms the statement of previous authors that posterior dislocation is easily missed. 5. The value of the vertical projection in the radiography of suspected posterior dislocation is emphasised. 6. Reduction was accomplished without difficulty in five cases and the subsequent progress of these was uneventful. In the remaining case reduction was difficult and unstable, and the final recovery incomplete. It is considered that this patient would have been better treated by early open reduction


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 2 | Pages 234 - 244
1 May 1948
Barnes R

Twenty-two cases of paraplegia complicating injury of the cervical column have been reviewed. The vertebral injury may be due to flexion or hyperextension violence. Flexion injury—There are three types of flexion injury: 1) dislocation; 2) compression fracture of a vertebral body; 3) acute retropulsion of an intervertebral disc. Evidence is presented in support of the view that disc protrusion is the cause of the cord lesion when there is no radiographic evidence of bone injury, and in some cases at least when there is a compression fracture. Treatment is discussed and the indications for caliper traction and laminectomy are presented. Hyperextension injurv—There are two types of hyperextension injury: 1) dislocation; 2) injury to arthritic spines. Hyperextension injury of an arthritic spine is the usual cause of paraplegia in patients over fifty years of age. The mechanism of hyperextension injury is described. The possible causes of spinal cord injury, and its treatment, are discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 6 | Pages 868 - 875
1 Aug 2004
Okcu G Aktuglu K

We retrospectively reviewed 60 fractures of the tibial plafond treated by either an ankle-sparing diaphyseal-epiphyseal technique using the Ilizarov ring fixator or by an ankle-spanning technique using a monolateral articulated external fixator. The Ilizarov ring fixator was applied in 24 fractures and the monolateral articulated transarticular external fixator in 20. Both techniques were combined with limited open reduction and internal fixation of the articular surface if necessary. Between three and nine years after the injury, all patients returned for clinical and radiological assessment and evaluation of ankle function using the modified Mazur score. There were no significant differences between the two groups in terms of age, gender, mechanism of injury, type of fracture or length of follow-up. The mean functional ankle score was 86 points for the Ilizarov group and 82 points for the articulated fixator group. The difference was not significant (p = 0.07). There were no significant differences between the groups with regard to the radiographic score and late complications. Patients treated with the Ilizarov ring fixator had significantly better ankle and subtalar movement. We conclude that both techniques of external fixation are satisfactory methods of treatment for fractures of the tibial plafond, but that the total arc of movement of the joint is preserved better without bridging the ankle


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 6 | Pages 917 - 923
1 Nov 1996
Sangavi SM Szöke G Murray DW Benson MKD

Children who present late with hip dislocation may require femoral osteotomy after reduction, to correct valgus and anteversion deformity of the femoral neck. After these procedures proximal femoral growth is unpredictable. We have studied proximal femoral growth in 40 children who had been treated by femoral osteotomy. Preoperatively, the mean femoral neck-shaft angle was 5° greater on the affected side than on the contralateral side. Postoperatively, it was 28° less. There was progressive recorrection; after five years the angle was not significantly different from that on the contralateral side. In our series 70% of the capital epiphyses became abnormally shaped, taking the appearance of a ‘jockey’s cap’. All the growth plates became angulated but this corrected with time. Correction of the neck-shaft angle probably results from the more normal mechanical environment provided by reduction. The abnormal radiographic appearance of the epiphysis and growth plate is probably due to the rotation produced by the osteotomy


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 3 | Pages 365 - 368
1 Mar 2017
Park YH Jeong SM Choi GW Kim HJ

Aims

Morton’s neuroma is common condition of the forefoot, but its aetiology remains unclear. Our aim was to evaluate the relationship between the width of the forefoot and the development of a Morton’s neuroma.

Patients and Methods

Between January 2013 and May 2016, a total of 84 consecutive patients (17 men, 67 women) with a unilateral Morton’s neuroma were enrolled into the study. The involved and uninvolved feet of each patient were compared. A control group of patients with symptoms from the foot, but without a neuroma who were matched for age, gender, affected side, and web space location, were enrolled. The first to fifth intermetatarsal distance, intermetatarsal angle and intermetatarsal distance of involved web space on standing radiographs were assessed.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 7, Issue 3 | Pages 232 - 243
1 Mar 2018
Winkler T Sass FA Duda GN Schmidt-Bleek K

Despite its intrinsic ability to regenerate form and function after injury, bone tissue can be challenged by a multitude of pathological conditions. While innovative approaches have helped to unravel the cascades of bone healing, this knowledge has so far not improved the clinical outcomes of bone defect treatment. Recent findings have allowed us to gain in-depth knowledge about the physiological conditions and biological principles of bone regeneration. Now it is time to transfer the lessons learned from bone healing to the challenging scenarios in defects and employ innovative technologies to enable biomaterial-based strategies for bone defect healing. This review aims to provide an overview on endogenous cascades of bone material formation and how these are transferred to new perspectives in biomaterial-driven approaches in bone regeneration.

Cite this article: T. Winkler, F. A. Sass, G. N. Duda, K. Schmidt-Bleek. A review of biomaterials in bone defect healing, remaining shortcomings and future opportunities for bone tissue engineering: The unsolved challenge. Bone Joint Res 2018;7:232–243. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.73.BJR-2017-0270.R1.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 3 | Pages 392 - 397
1 May 1999
Tennant S Kinmont C Lamb G Gedroyc W Hunt DM

Conventional methods of imaging in the investigation of developmental dysplasia of the hip all have disadvantages, either in definition or in exposure to radiation. We describe a new open-configuration MR scanner which is unique in that it allows anaesthesia and access to the patient within the imaging volume for surgical procedures and application of casts. We performed 13 scans in eight anaesthetised infants. Dynamic imaging revealed two dislocated hips which were then visualised during reduction. Hip spicas were applied without removing the patient from the scanner. In one hip, an adductor tenotomy was carried out. In all patients, stressing the hips during dynamic imaging allowed an assessment of stability. This was particularly useful in two hips in which an analysis of stability in different positions facilitated the planning of femoral osteotomies. This method of imaging provides new and important information. It has great potential in the investigation of developmental dysplasia of the hip and, with ultrasound, may allow management without the need for radiography


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 2 | Pages 289 - 295
1 Mar 1999
Southwell DG Bechtold JE Lew WD Schmidt AH

Visualisation of periacetabular osteolysis by standard anteroposterior (AP) radiographs underestimates the extent of bone loss around a metal-backed acetabular component. We have assessed the effectiveness of standard radiological views in depicting periacetabular osteolysis, and recommend additional projections which make these lesions more visible. This was accomplished using a computerised simulation of radiological views and a radiological analysis of simulated defects placed at regular intervals around the perimeter of a cadaver acetabulum. The AP view alone showed only 38% of the defects over all of the surface of the cup and failed to depict a 3 mm lesion over 83% of the cup. When combined with the AP view, additional 45° obturator-oblique and iliac-oblique projections increased the depiction, showing 81% of the defects. The addition of the 60° obturator-oblique view further improved the visualisation of posterior defects, increasing the rate of detection to 94%. Based on this analysis, we recommend using at least three radiographic views when assessing the presence and extent of acetabular osteolysis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 5 | Pages 797 - 801
1 Sep 1994
Wilde P Torode I Dickens D Cole W

Over a nine-year period, 20 feet with persistently symptomatic talocalcaneal coalition were treated by resection of the bar. The 17 patients were all under 16 years of age. Excellent or good long-term results were achieved in the ten feet in which preoperative coronal CT had shown that the area of coalition measured 50% or less of the area of the posterior facet of the calcaneum. In these feet heel valgus was less than 16 degrees and there were no radiographic signs of arthritis of the posterior talocalcaneal joint. Talar beaking was present in 70% of these feet but it did not impair the clinical result. Fair or poor results were observed in the ten feet in which preoperative CT had shown the area of relative coalition to be greater than 50%. In these feet, heel valgus was greater than 16 degrees and most had narrowing of the posterior talocalcaneal joint and impingement of the lateral process of the talus on the calcaneum