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Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 6, Issue 7 | Pages 423 - 432
1 Jul 2017
van der Stok J Hartholt KA Schoenmakers DAL Arts JJC

Objectives

The aim of this systematic literature review was to assess the clinical level of evidence of commercially available demineralised bone matrix (DBM) products for their use in trauma and orthopaedic related surgery.

Methods

A total of 17 DBM products were used as search terms in two available databases: Embase and PubMed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta Analyses statement. All articles that reported the clinical use of a DBM-product in trauma and orthopaedic related surgery were included.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 2 | Pages 249 - 257
1 May 1967
Braakman R Vinken PJ

Bilateral interlocking of the articular facets of the cervical spinal column results from excessive flexion. Unilateral interlocking (hemiluxation) results from simultaneous excessive flexion and rotation. Patients with hemiluxation of the cervical spine often have only mild complaints and the clinical signs may be slight. The diagnosis is made radiologically, but it is often overlooked. Various forms of treatment may give good results. In recent hemiluxation, reduction is advisable to promote recovery of radicular symptoms. The effect of reduction on spinal cord symptoms is uncertain. Manual reduction under general anaesthesia is usually successful, with the possible exception of some cases of interlocking at C.6-C.7, or C.7-T.1. Skull traction with weights of 5 to 10 kilograms even when prolonged is hardly ever successful; with weights of 10 kilograms or more there is a chance of success. Surgical reduction is not always necessary. A hemiluxation of more than two weeks' standing may still be reduced but non-operative methods offer little chance of success. In this series there has been no aggravation of the neurological deficit after reduction. Although hemiluxation shows a tendency to spontaneous stabilisation it is wise in our opinion to apply some form of fixation. The selection of the method of fixation depends on the neurological picture and on the estimated degree of instability. The latter depends on the presence or absence of additional damage to the interlocked and adjacent vertebrae. Manual reduction by means of traction in the longitudinal axis of the cervical spine under general anaesthesia with muscle relaxation, followed by immobilisation in a plaster jacket (Minerva type) for three months is successful in many cases. If surgical stabilisation is considered necessary an attempt at manual reduction should be made before operation so that when the patient is placed on the table the cervical spinal canal has regained its normal shape. In general, sufficient stability will have been achieved after approximately three months, so that for hemiluxations of more than three months duration surgical treatment will only rarely be necessary. Figure 11 shows the methods of treatment that we advise


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 7, Issue 4 | Pages 298 - 307
1 Apr 2018
Zhang X Bu Y Zhu B Zhao Q Lv Z Li B Liu J

Objectives

The aim of this study was to identify key pathological genes in osteoarthritis (OA).

Methods

We searched and downloaded mRNA expression data from the Gene Expression Omnibus database to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) of joint synovial tissues from OA and normal individuals. Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopaedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) pathway analyses were used to assess the function of identified DEGs. The protein-protein interaction (PPI) network and transcriptional factors (TFs) regulatory network were used to further explore the function of identified DEGs. The quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) was applied to validate the result of bioinformatics analysis. Electronic validation was performed to verify the expression of selected DEGs. The diagnosis value of identified DEGs was accessed by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 7, Issue 4 | Pages 282 - 288
1 Apr 2018
Beckmann NA Bitsch RG Gondan M Schonhoff M Jaeger S

Objectives

In order to address acetabular defects, porous metal revision acetabular components and augments have been developed, which require fixation to each other. The fixation technique that results in the smallest relative movement between the components, as well as its influence on the primary stability with the host bone, have not previously been determined.

Methods

A total of 18 composite hemipelvises with a Paprosky IIB defect were implanted using a porous titanium 56 mm multihole acetabular component and 1 cm augment. Each acetabular component and augment was affixed to the bone using two screws, while the method of fixation between the acetabular component and augment varied for the three groups of six hemipelvises: group S, screw fixation only; group SC, screw plus cement fixation; group C, cement fixation only. The implanted hemipelvises were cyclically loaded to three different loading maxima (0.5 kN, 0.9 kN, and 1.8 kN).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 4 | Pages 719 - 735
1 Nov 1969
Ahuja M

1. A review of the literature on the normal variations in bone mass in a given population in relation to age, sex, nutritional and genetic background shows several lacunae in our knowledge. Consequently, the separation of milder degrees of osteoporosis is difficult and the definition of osteoporosis itself is uncertain. 2. This paper presents a necropsy study to determine variations in the bone mass that occur with age and sex in a normal Indian population in the Delhi area. Two hundred persons between nine months and seventy-six years of age who died by accident and with no evidence of chronic disease were studied. 3. The parameters of bone mass employed were : apparent bone density, ash per millilitre of bone, cortical thickness and visual grading of porosity of bone in macerated specimens. The first lumbar vertebra, the iliac crest, the fourth rib and the femoral shaft were the bones evaluated. 4. After an initial rise up to the third decade, the apparent bone density and ash per millilitre showed a progressive and significant decline with age in all the three trabecular bones: vertebra, iliac crest and rib. Although these values were in general lower in the females than in males at all ages, and the rate of decrease with age was faster in them than in males, it was only in the rib that a statistically significant difference between the sexes could be established with respect to decrease with age. 5. Decreases in apparent bone density and ash per millilitre of the vertebral bone with age were associated with an increase with age in the porosity as assessed by visual grading. 6. In the case of the femur no significant change was demonstrable with age in any of the parameters used in the present study. 7. From a comparison of the values for apparent density and ash per millilitre with grading of macerates and histological preparations, it is suggested that osteoporosis may be said to be present in this population if the apparent bone density is less than 020 and 046 in the vertebra and the iliac crest respectively or ifthe ash per millilitre is less than 0l2 in the vertebra. 8. The study has revealed that 44 per cent of persons studied in this sample over the age of fifty exhibit significant osteoporosis. It is considered possible that nutritional factors such as protein-calorie malnutrition may be responsible for this relatively high incidence


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 4 | Pages 810 - 823
1 Nov 1960
Roaf R

1. Compression forces are mainly absorbed by the vertebral body. The nucleus pulposus, being liquid, is incompressible. The tense annulus bulges very little. On compression the vertebral end-plate bulges and blood is forced out of the cancellous bone of the vertebral body into the perivertebral sinuses. This appears to be the normal energy-dissipating mechanism on compression. 2. The normal disc is very resistant to compression. The nucleus pulposus does not alter in shape or position on compression or flexion. It plays no active part in producing a disc prolapse. On compression the vertebral body always breaks before the normal disc gives way. The vertebral end-plate bulges and then breaks, leading to a vertical fracture. If the nucleus pulposus has lost its turgor there is abnormal mobility between the vertebral bodies. On very gentle compression or flexion movement the annulus protrudes on the concave aspect–not on the convex side as has been supposed. 3. Disc prolapse consists primarily of annulus; it occurs only if the nucleus pulposus has lost its turgor. It then occurs very easily as the annulus now bulges like a flat tyre. 4. I have never succeeded in producing rupture of normal spinal ligaments by hyperextension or hyperflexion. Before rupture occurs the bone sustains a compression fracture. On the other hand horizontal shear, and particularly rotation forces, can easily cause ligamentous rupture and dislocation. 5. A combination of rotation and compression can produce almost every variety of spinal injury. In the cervical region subluxation with spontaneous reduction can be easily produced by rotation. If disc turgor is impaired this may occur with an intact anterior longitudinal ligament and explains those cases of tetraplegia without radiological changes or a torn anterior longitudinal ligament. The anterior longitudinal ligament can easily be ruptured by a rotation force and in my experience the so-called hyperextension and hyperflexion injuries are really rotation injuries. 6. Hyperflexion of the cervical spine or upper thoracic spine is an anatomical impossibility. In all spinal dislocations a body fracture may or may not occur with the dislocation, depending upon the degree of associated compression. In general, rotation forces produce dislocations, whereas compression forces produce fractures


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 3 | Pages 331 - 337
1 Mar 2018
Inui H Nobuhara K

Aims

We report the clinical results of glenoid osteotomy in patients with atraumatic posteroinferior instability associated with glenoid dysplasia.

Patients and Methods

The study reports results in 211 patients (249 shoulders) with atraumatic posteroinferior instability. The patients comprised 63 men and 148 women with a mean age of 20 years. The posteroinferior glenoid surface was elevated by osteotomy at the scapular neck. A body spica was applied to maintain the arm perpendicular to the glenoid for two weeks postoperatively. Clinical results were evaluated using the Rowe score and Japan Shoulder Society Shoulder Instability Score (JSS-SIS); bone union, osteoarthrosis, and articular congruity were examined on plain radiographs.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 7, Issue 1 | Pages 27 - 30
1 Feb 2018


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 3 | Pages 378 - 386
1 Mar 2018
Campanacci DA Totti F Puccini S Beltrami G Scoccianti G Delcroix L Innocenti M Capanna R

Aims

After intercalary resection of a bone tumour from the femur, reconstruction with a vascularized fibular graft (VFG) and massive allograft is considered a reliable method of treatment. However, little is known about the long-term outcome of this procedure. The aims of this study were to determine whether the morbidity of this procedure was comparable to that of other reconstructive techniques, if it was possible to achieve a satisfactory functional result, and whether biological reconstruction with a VFG and massive allograft could achieve a durable, long-lasting reconstruction.

Patients and Methods

A total of 23 patients with a mean age of 16 years (five to 40) who had undergone resection of an intercalary bone tumour of the femur and reconstruction with a VFG and allograft were reviewed clinically and radiologically. The mean follow-up was 141 months (24 to 313). The mean length of the fibular graft was 18 cm (12 to 29). Full weight-bearing without a brace was allowed after a mean of 13 months (seven to 26).


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 4 | Pages 516 - 521
1 Apr 2017
Willeumier JJ van der Hoeven NMA Bollen L Willems LNA Fiocco M van der Linden YM Dijkstra PDS

Aims

This study aims to assess first, whether mutations in the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and Kirsten rat sarcoma (kRAS) genes are associated with overall survival (OS) in patients who present with symptomatic bone metastases from non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and secondly, whether mutation status should be incorporated into prognostic models that are used when deciding on the appropriate palliative treatment for symptomatic bone metastases.

Patients and Methods

We studied 139 patients with NSCLC treated between 2007 and 2014 for symptomatic bone metastases and whose mutation status was known. The association between mutation status and overall survival was analysed and the results applied to a recently published prognostic model to determine whether including the mutation status would improve its discriminatory power.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 7, Issue 1 | Pages 3 - 7
1 Feb 2018
Donnelly TD Woolf DK Farrar NG


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 4_Supple_B | Pages 41 - 48
1 Apr 2017
Fernquest S Arnold C Palmer A Broomfield J Denton J Taylor A Glyn-Jones S

Aims

The aim of this study was to examine the real time in vivo kinematics of the hip in patients with cam-type femoroacetabular impingement (FAI).

Patients and Methods

A total of 50 patients (83 hips) underwent 4D dynamic CT scanning of the hip, producing real time osseous models of the pelvis and femur being moved through flexion, adduction, and internal rotation. The location and size of the cam deformity and its relationship to the angle of flexion of the hip and pelvic tilt, and the position of impingement were recorded.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 2 | Pages 247 - 255
1 Feb 2018
Albergo JI Gaston CLL Parry MC Laitinen MK Jeys LM Tillman RM Abudu AT Grimer RJ

Aims

The aim of this study was to analyse a group of patients with non-metastatic Ewing’s sarcoma at presentation and identify prognostic factors affecting the development of local recurrence, in order to assess the role of radiotherapy.

Patients and Methods

A retrospective review of all patients with a Ewing’s sarcoma treated between 1980 and 2012 was carried out. Only those treated with chemotherapy followed by surgery and/or radiotherapy were included. Patients were grouped according to site (central or limb) for further analysis of the prognostic factors.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 6, Issue 6 | Pages 38 - 40
1 Dec 2017


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 2 | Pages 346 - 361
1 May 1961
Caldwell RA Collins DH

1. Radiological, chemical and histological examinations have been made of the lumbar vertebral bodies in 100 necropsies on patients dying in a general hospital, with a view to determining the range of variation of calcium content and radiographic density in normal and osteoporotic bone. 2. Radiographs were made of sagittal mid-line vertebral body slabs uniformly one centimetre in thickness, and the radiographic density of these specimens was measured in relation to an aluminium step-wedge of one to ten units. Radio-opacity of different vertebrae ranged from four to ten units. The specimen radiographs also clearly revealed the trabecular structure and the lateral profile of the bones. 3. Calcium was chemically estimated and expressed as weight of the element per unit volume of the whole bone mass (that is, of anatomical bone including soft marrow tissue). It ranged from 38 to 102 milligrams per cubic centimetre of bone. In 75 per cent of the cases the range was 50-84 milligrams per cubic centimetre. High calcium values were mostly encountered in young adults, and the calcium per unit volume tended to diminish with age; but a wide range of calcium was still encountered in the older subjects and a better correlation with age was achieved by radiographic density. Both calcium content and radiographic density tended to be higher in the male than in the female bones at all ages. 4. The results of both calcium and radiographic density showed a smooth distribution curve, though skewed through the inclusion in the series of more older people with less mineralised bones; the absence of a double peak in these curves suggests that the examinations were made on a homogeneous population and does not indicate a separate pathological group of osteoporotic subjects. 5. Arbitrary standards must be used to distinguish osteoporotic from normal bones, since neither radiological measurement or chemical assay, nor histological assessment, reveals a point at which the two groups can be separated. In the present series it seemed to us satisfactory to regard as abnormal all bones showing a radiographic density of five or less step-wedge units, and by this standard nineteen of the 100 cases (eight male, eleven female) were deemed to be osteoporotic. Histological examination excluded other forms of bone rarefaction. 6. The regression of calcium on the density measurements proved to be statistically significant and was not affected either by age or by the number of days in bed during the last illness. A small difference between the sexes was apparent, there being slightly less calcium in female than in male bones of equal radiographic density. Provided this is taken into account, the radiographic density scale can be used to predict the calcium content of vertebral bone specimens and should prove a rapid and accurate method in a survey of osteoporosis in post-mortem room material


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 1_Supple_A | Pages 37 - 45
1 Jan 2017
Stefl M Lundergan W Heckmann N McKnight B Ike H Murgai R Dorr LD

Aims

Posterior tilt of the pelvis with sitting provides biological acetabular opening. Our goal was to study the post-operative interaction of skeletal mobility and sagittal acetabular component position.

Materials and Methods

This was a radiographic study of 160 hips (151 patients) who prospectively had lateral spinopelvic hip radiographs for skeletal and implant measurements. Intra-operative acetabular component position was determined according to the pre-operative spinal mobility. Sagittal implant measurements of ante-inclination and sacral acetabular angle were used as surrogate measurements for the risk of impingement, and intra-operative acetabular component angles were compared with these.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 6, Issue 6 | Pages 36 - 38
1 Dec 2017


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 6, Issue 6 | Pages 31 - 33
1 Dec 2017


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 1_Supple_A | Pages 46 - 49
1 Jan 2017
Su EP

Nerve palsy is a well-described complication following total hip arthroplasty, but is highly distressing and disabling. A nerve palsy may cause difficulty with the post-operative rehabilitation, and overall mobility of the patient. Nerve palsy may result from compression and tension to the affected nerve(s) during the course of the operation via surgical manipulation and retractor placement, tension from limb lengthening or compression from post-operative hematoma. In the literature, hip dysplasia, lengthening of the leg, the use of an uncemented femoral component, and female gender are associated with a greater risk of nerve palsy. We examined our experience at a high-volume, tertiary care referral centre, and found an overall incidence of 0.3% out of 39 056 primary hip arthroplasties. Risk factors found to be associated with the incidence of nerve palsy at our institution included the presence of spinal stenosis or lumbar disc disease, age younger than 50, and smoking. If a nerve palsy is diagnosed, imaging is mandatory and surgical evacuation or compressive haematomas may be beneficial. As palsies are slow to recover, supportive care such as bracing, therapy, and reassurance are the mainstays of treatment.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2017;99-B(1 Supple A):46–9.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 6, Issue 3 | Pages 33 - 35
1 Jun 2017