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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 2 | Pages 178 - 184
1 May 1981
Dekel S Francis M

Osteomyelitis was induced in the tibiae of rabbits by injecting a suspension of Staphylococcus aureus and sodium tetradecylsulphate, a sclerosing agent. These rabbits were then divided into two groups: one group remained untreated and the other was fed a diet containing sodium salicylate. Two and four weeks after induction of osteomyelitis the tibiae taken from untreated rabbits with osteomyelitis and incubated in vitro released significantly more prostaglandin E and F than the control uninjected or uninfected tibiae. Tibiae taken from rabbits treated with sodium salicylate showed minimal radiographic changes and a significantly decreased release of prostaglandin E and F compared to the untreated rabbits. Prostaglandins are known to be potent bone resorbing agents and the results of this study suggest that they may also be involved in the destruction of bone which is characteristic of osteomyelitis. The treatment of rabbits with osteomyelitis using anti-inflammatory drugs, which block synthesis of prostaglandins, in addition to antibiotics, may prevent the destruction of bone and possible sequestration thereby decreasing the risk of chronic disease


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1232 - 1236
1 Sep 2017
Dahill M McArthur J Roberts GL Acharya MR Ward AJ Chesser TJS

Aims

The anterior pelvic internal fixator is increasingly used for the treatment of unstable, or displaced, injuries of the anterior pelvic ring. The evidence for its use, however, is limited. The aim of this paper is to describe the indications for its use, how it is applied and its complications.

Patients and Methods

We reviewed the case notes and radiographs of 50 patients treated with an anterior pelvic internal fixator between April 2010 and December 2015 at a major trauma centre in the United Kingdom. The median follow-up time was 38 months (interquartile range 24 to 51).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 1 | Pages 8 - 15
1 Feb 1964
Da Roza AC

1. An analysis has been made of the clinical features and investigations in ninety-five cases of primary intraspinal tumours. 2. Loss of muscle power was the commonest symptom, and was often ignored until late in the course of the disease. 3. Two-thirds of the patients had no pain in the spinal region, although five of these had either extensive growths or radiographical evidence of bone erosion by tumour. 4. One-third of the patients had urinary symptoms, and two of them had acute retention initially attributed to prostatic obstruction. 5. In eighteen cases posture and gait were abnormal. The case histories of five of these patients are recorded, and they emphasise the importance of recognising lumbar spasm and hamstring tightness in young patients as signs of a cauda equina neoplasm. 6. All patients had some detectable sensory, motor, or reflex changes, and these were mostly bilateral. 7. Radiography, and cerebrospinal fluid manometry and analysis, were helpful in establishing the diagnosis. 8. Hysteria should not be diagnosed until all efforts have been made to prove otherwise


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 Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 2 | Pages 176 - 182
1 Feb 2018
Petrie MJ Blakey CM Chadwick C Davies HG Blundell CM Davies MB

Aims

Fractures of the navicular can occur in isolation but, owing to the intimate anatomical and biomechanical relationships, are often associated with other injuries to the neighbouring bones and joints in the foot. As a result, they can lead to long-term morbidity and poor function. Our aim in this study was to identify patterns of injury in a new classification system of traumatic fractures of the navicular, with consideration being given to the commonly associated injuries to the midfoot.

Patients and Methods

We undertook a retrospective review of 285 consecutive patients presenting over an eight- year period with a fracture of the navicular. Five common patterns of injury were identified and classified according to the radiological features. Type 1 fractures are dorsal avulsion injuries related to the capsule of the talonavicular joint. Type 2 fractures are isolated avulsion injuries to the tuberosity of the navicular. Type 3 fractures are a variant of tarsometatarsal fracture/dislocations creating instability of the medial ray. Type 4 fractures involve the body of the navicular with no associated injury to the lateral column and type 5 fractures occur in conjunction with disruption of the midtarsal joint with crushing of the medial or lateral, or both, columns of the foot.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 875 - 880
1 Nov 1993
Hernigou P Bachir D Galacteros F

In ten patients with sickle-cell disease, we used a new technique of cement injection for the treatment of 16 painful hips with a radiographic crescent line or flattening of the articular surface due to avascular necrosis. The necrotic bone and overlying cartilage are elevated by the injection to restore the sphericity of the femoral head. Five days after the operation, full weight-bearing was allowed with the help of crutches for three weeks. The time in hospital averaged eight days; the average blood loss was 100 ml. There was early pain relief and postoperative radiographs showed improvement in the shape of the femoral head. At a mean follow-up of 5 years (3 to 7), 14 of the 16 hips were still improved although some gave slight pain. Only two hips had required revision to total hip arthroplasty, at one year and two years respectively. The increasing longevity of patients with sickle-cell disease means that avascular necrosis will be an increasing problem. Total hip replacement has a poor prognosis because of the risks of infection, high blood loss, and early loosening. Cement injection does not have these problems and allows for earlier, more conservative surgery


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 5 | Pages 681 - 687
1 Sep 1993
Soballe K Toksvig-Larsen S Gelineck J Fruensgaard S Hansen E Ryd L Lucht U Bunger C

We allocated randomly 27 patients undergoing 28 primary uncemented total hip replacements (THR) to receive prosthetic components of similar design with either plasma-sprayed titanium alloy (Ti) coating (n = 13) or hydroxyapatite (HA) coating (n = 15). After some exclusions, 15 of the patients (15 THR; 7 with HA- and 8 with Ti-coating) were followed by roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis at 3, 6 and 12 months to measure migration of the femoral component. Twenty-six of the patients (26 THR) were followed clinically and by conventional radiography. All the femoral components had migrated at 3 months. From 3 to 12 months, the migration of Ti-coated components continued whereas the HA-coated components had stabilised. At 12 months there was significantly less migration of the HA-coated components (p < 0.05). The maximum subsidence was 0.2 mm in both groups. The Harris hip score was equal in the two groups preoperatively but at follow-up it was better in the HA-coated group (p < 0.05) and visual analogue scale scores showed that they had less pain (p < 0.05)


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 2 | Pages 197 - 204
1 Feb 2018
Gaspar MP Pham PP Pankiw CD Jacoby SM Shin EK Osterman AL Kane PM

Aims

The aims of this study were to compare the mid-term outcomes of patients with late-stage arthritis of the wrist treated with proximal row carpectomy (PRC) and dorsal capsular interposition (DCI) arthroplasty with a matched cohort treated with routine PRC alone.

Patients and Methods

A total of 25 arthritic wrists (24 patients) with pre-existing degenerative changes of the proximal capitate and/or the lunate fossa of the radius were treated with PRC + DCI over a ten-year period. This group of patients were matched 1:2 with a group of 50 wrists (48 patients) without degenerative changes in the capitate or lunate fossa that were treated with a routine PRC alone during the same period. The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 56.8 years (25 to 81), and the demographics and baseline range of movement of the wrist, grip strength, Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (QuickDASH) score, and Patient-Rated Wrist Evaluation (PRWE) score were similar in both groups.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 5 | Pages 601 - 606
1 May 2017
Narkbunnam R Amanatullah DF Electricwala AJ Huddleston III JI Maloney WJ Goodman SB

Aims

The stability of cementless acetabular components is an important factor for surgical planning in the treatment of patients with pelvic osteolysis after total hip arthroplasty (THA). However, the methods for determining the stability of the acetabular component from pre-operative radiographs remain controversial. Our aim was to develop a scoring system to help in the assessment of the stability of the acetabular component under these circumstances.

Patients and Methods

The new scoring system is based on the mechanism of failure of these components and the location of the osteolytic lesion, according to the DeLee and Charnley classification. Each zone is evaluated and scored separately. The sum of the individual scores from the three zones is reported as a total score with a maximum of 10 points. The study involved 96 revision procedures which were undertaken for wear or osteolysis in 91 patients between July 2002 and December 2012. Pre-operative anteroposterior pelvic radiographs and Judet views were reviewed. The stability of the acetabular component was confirmed intra-operatively.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 5 | Pages 607 - 613
1 May 2017
Mäkinen TJ Abolghasemian M Watts E Fichman SG Kuzyk P Safir OA Gross AE

Aims

It may not be possible to undertake revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) in the presence of massive loss of acetabular bone stock using standard cementless hemispherical acetabular components and metal augments, as satisfactory stability cannot always be achieved. We aimed to study the outcome using a reconstruction cage and a porous metal augment in these patients.

Patients and Methods

A total of 22 acetabular revisions in 19 patients were performed using a combination of a reconstruction cage and porous metal augments. The augments were used in place of structural allografts. The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 70 years (27 to 85) and the mean follow-up was 39 months (27 to 58). The mean number of previous THAs was 1.9 (1 to 3). All patients had segmental defects involving more than 50% of the acetabulum and seven hips had an associated pelvic discontinuity.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 1 | Pages 45 - 55
1 Jan 1987
Engh C Bobyn J Glassman A

Total hip replacement using porous-coated cobalt-chrome femoral implants designed for biological fixation has been evaluated in 307 patients after two years and in 89 patients after five years. Histological study of 11 retrieved specimens showed bone ingrowth in nine and fibrous tissue fixation in two. Fixation by bone ingrowth occurred in 93% of the cases in which a press fit of the stem at the isthmus was achieved, but in only 69% of those without a press fit. The clinical results at two years were excellent. The incidence of pain and limp was much lower when there was either a press fit of the stem or radiographic evidence of bone ingrowth. Factors such as age, sex, and the disease process did not influence the clinical results. Most cases showed only slight resorptive remodelling of the upper femur, but in a few cases with a larger, more rigid stem, more extensive bone loss occurred. The results after five years showed no deterioration with time. Fixation by the ingrowth of bone or of fibrous tissue both appeared to be stable, but bone ingrowth gave better clinical results


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 3 | Pages 350 - 354
1 May 1983
Connor J Horan F Beighton P

The clinical features of nine new patients with dysplasia epiphysialis hemimelica are reported, with a long-term follow-up on a further seven patients who were described in the earliest case reports of this disease. Each of these 16 patients had only one leg involved, but 12 had multiple epiphyses affected. The distal femur, distal tibia and talus were the commonest sites and most patients presented with painless swelling or deformity. Wasting of the muscles of the affected leg was a common finding, and was occasionally disproportionate to the degree of disuse. One patient had the unique combination of involvement of the lateral and medial halves of different epiphyses in the same limb and another had unusual metaphysial changes. Diagnosis was often delayed despite typical radiographic appearances. There was no evidence for a genetic component in the aetiology nor was any common environmental factor identified. Treatment by local excision was generally effective for lesions in the vicinity of the knee, but some patients with involvement of the talus required arthrodesis around the ankle. The long-term prognosis appears to be good and so far only two of these patients have developed premature osteoarthritis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 1 | Pages 68 - 72
1 Jan 1997
Stewart MPM Kelly IG

We made a prospective study of 58 consecutive Neer II total shoulder replacements in 49 rheumatoid patients. Cemented glenoid and press-fit humeral components had been used. After a mean follow-up of 9.5 years (7 to 13), 11 patients (15 shoulders) had died, one shoulder had been arthrodesed and five patients (five shoulders) had been lost to follow-up. Of the remaining 37 shoulders 29 were painfree or had only slight discomfort, four had pain on unusual activity, and four had moderate or severe pain. There were satisfactory improvements in the mean range of active elevation (53° to 75°) and external rotation (5° to 38°); satisfactory performance of the activities of daily living had been maintained throughout follow-up. Radiographs showed loosening in ten shoulders of nine glenoid and nine humeral components but of these only three had significant symptoms. Three loose glenoid components and two loose humeral components required revision. We consider that the Neer total shoulder replacement provides a reasonable medium to long-term outcome in rheumatoid arthritis, but recommend that the humeral component should be routinely cemented


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 1 | Pages 89 - 91
1 Feb 1981
Molander M Wallin G Wikstad I

Thirty-five patients (28 children and seven adults) were reviewed six months to 22 years after sustaining the common childhood fracture of the intercondylar eminence of the tibia. The aim was to assess both short-term and long-term results and prognosis by clinical and radiological examination and to discover whether conservative treatment was adequate for those severe fractures where a fragment of the tibial crest had been totally displaced. All the less severe fractures and 14 of the 17 severe fractures were treated conservatively. Early improvement occurred in more patients when the knee was immobilised in extension rather than in flexion, but long-term results were similar. Seven patients had slight discomfort, two of whom had had operative treatment. Radiographs of all patients showed a projection at the fracture site but its size did not correlate with the extent of displacement of the fragment nor with the degree of discomfort suffered; in the severe group a smaller projection developed after open reduction and after immobilisation in extension than after immobilisation in flexion. There was no instability due to functional lengthening of the cruciate ligaments and no increased incidence of degenerative change


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 1 | Pages 107 - 116
1 Feb 1979
Schajowicz F Clavel Sainz M Slullitel J

The clinical, radiographic and pathological features of eighty-eight cases of histologically verified intra-osseous ganglia in eighty-three patients are described. All were located in the subchondral bone adjacent to a joint and most frequently involved the hip, the ankle (medial malleolus), the knee and the carpal bones. Forty-seven of the eighty-three patients were male and all the patients were between fourteen and seventy-three years of age, with an average age of forty-one years. There are two fundamental types of intra-osseous ganglia, one apparently arising by penetration of juxta-osseous ganglion into the underlying bone, a mechanism proved in fourteen of our eighty-eight cases (16 per cent); in the remaining seventy-four cases, the ganglion cyst was primarily intra-osseous ("idiopathic"). The initial cause of the intramedullary mucoid degeneration is discussed. We believe that mechanical stress and repeated minor trauma near the surface of the bone may lead to intramedullary vascular disturbance with consequent foci of aseptic bone necrosis. The revitalisation of these areas causes fibroblastic proliferation, followed by mucoid degeneration of the connective tissue, possibly due to some unknown local factor. Curettage or excision is usually effective, and recurrence (only four cases) is exceptional


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 3 | Pages 375 - 382
1 Aug 1978
Dowling J Atkinson Dowson D Charnley J

In laboratory tests, the ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene used for the acetabular cups of Charnley hip prostheses has a very low wear rate against steel. In the body radiographic measurements indicate that the polyethylene wears more rapidly. In order to investigate this higher wear rate, the sockets of acetabular cups removed at post-mortem have been examined using optical and electron microscopy. It has been shown that a socket wears predominantly on its superior part and that this is a direct consequence of the orientation of the cup in the body and the direction of loading of the hip. In the worn region the femoral head in effect bores out a new socket for itself, a process which is visible with the naked eye after approximately eight years. Electron microscopy shows that the predominant wear mechanism is adhesion, but after about eight years the appearance of surface cracks suggests that surface fatigue is taking place in addition to this. Laboratory wear tests have shown that pure surface fatigue is not sufficient to account for the high clinical wear rate. Other deformation processes are suggested and discussed with regard to the higher clinical wear rate


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 55-B, Issue 2 | Pages 246 - 261
1 May 1973
Solomon L

1. It is well known that the administration of corticosteroids may result in necrosis and progressive destruction of the femoral head. Identical changes have been found in chronic alcoholics, in South African negroes suffering from iron-overload osteoporosis and in patients with arthritis of the hip treated with non-steroid anti-inflammatory and analgesic preparations. The term "drug-induced arthropathy" is used to describe the common pathological lesion. 2. Seventy-two patients with this complication have been investigated and forty-two femoral heads were available for detailed study. The characteristic change is subchondral fragmentation and osteonecrosis, followed later by reactive bone formation and the typical increased radiographic density. 3. The frequent occurrence of fat occupying the Haversian canals in the affected femoral heads has not been adequately explained and its relationship to the destructive arthropathy remains obscure. The findings presented here do not support the theory that fat emboli are responsible for the subchondral bone changes. 4. More credence is given to the theory of subchondral microfracture in osteoporotic bone. The destructive arthropathy invariably follows the administration of some anti-inflammatory or analgesic preparation. It is postulated that a state of diminished sensibility predisposes to microtrauma in osteoporotic bone resulting in subarticular collapse of the femoral head


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 1 | Pages 20 - 37
1 Feb 1969
Eyre-Brook AL Price CHG

1. Fifty cases of fibrosarcoma from the records of the Bristol Bone Tumour Registry are reviewed. They present further clinical and radiological evidence supporting the concept of fibrosarcoma as a distinctive type of bone tumour. 2. The radiographic appearances have often been those ofan osteolytic lesion totally enclosed by reactive subperiosteal new bone. 3. Included in the group are eleven cases with Paget's osteitis deformans, three cases in which the sarcoma was associated with calcified cartilage and one case that is regarded as a post-irradiation sarcoma. 4. Several clinically differing modes of presentation are described. 5. Fibrosarcoma in bone has often been said to be "central" or "medullary" but because the present series includes tumours with eccentric origin and unilateral cortical destruction this description is inappropriate. 6. The histological differentiation from other fibroblastic lesions is briefly discussed. 7. The five-year and ten-year survival rates were respectively 28 per cent and 1 2 per cent, with an average survival oftwenty-four months in the thirty-six patients who died. Among the long survivors were two patients with Paget's disease


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 4 | Pages 661 - 668
1 Nov 1965
Freeman MAR

1. The results of three forms of treatment (mobilisation, immobilisation for six weeks, and suture with immobilisation for six weeks) for ruptures of the lateral ligament of the ankle have been compared in previously uninjured asymptomatic patients. 2. Only suture and immobilisation ensured final mechanical stability of the ankle as assessed by stress radiography. Unstable ankles were found after both mobilisation and immobilisation, but in these groups no ankle finally displayed more than 8 degrees of relative talar tilt. 3. The mean duration of disability in patients who finally became symptom-free was: after mobilisation, twelve weeks; after immobilisation, twenty-two weeks; and after suture and immobilisation, twenty-six weeks. 4. One year after injury 58 per cent of patients treated by mobilisation, 53 per cent of patients treated by immobilisation, but only 25 per cent of patients treated by suture and immobilisation, had become perfectly symptom-free. 5. For these reasons, and because simple sprains are satisfactorily treated by mobilisation, it is suggested that mobilisation may be the treatment of choice for most, perhaps all, ruptures of the lateral ligament of the ankle


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 3 | Pages 462 - 470
1 Aug 1963
Fernandez de Valderrama JA

1. The term "observation hip" refers to a form of hip disease affecting children and adolescents, the most significant features being the transient nature of the symptoms and the absence of a bony or cartilaginous lesion on radiographic examination. 2. With a view to determining the possible sequelae of the disorder, twenty-three patients aged between two and fifteen years at the onset of the condition were studied fifteen to thirty years later. 3. Varying degrees of coxa magna, osteoarthritis or simple broadening of the femoral neck in the "observed" hip joint were found in the radiographs of twelve of the twenty-three patients studied. 4. This analysis suggests that the " observation hip" syndrome is the result ofan inflammatory process ofthejoint due to varied etiology, whether from injury or infection. The developmental and degenerative changes which may occur are a consequence of hypervascularisation of the bone. Thus changes may develop without necessarily producing the epiphysial necrosis characteristic of the first stage of ischaemia in Legg-Calvé-Perthes' disease. 5. The persistence of this stage of hypervascularity, and therefore the possible outcome of the transient synovitis, may be conditioned by the age at onset of the pathological process, the severity of the condition, and the duration of the symptoms and signs