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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 6 | Pages 878 - 883
1 Nov 1996
Bizot P Witvoet J Sedel L

After an allogenic bone-marrow transplant, a vascular necrosis of the femoral head may affect young adults, producing destructive lesions which require hip replacement. We have reviewed 27 consecutive such total hip arthroplasties (THA) at a minimal follow-up of two years. Of these, 20 were primary operations for Ficat (1985) stage-III and stage-IV lesions, and seven were revisions after the failure of previous surgery. The median age at operation was 30 years (17.5 to 44). The prostheses had a cemented, collared titanium-alloy stem, an alumina-alumina joint, and a press-fit socket. Seven had a titanium-alloy metal back and 20 had all-alumina cups of which six had to be cemented. At an average follow-up of five years, no patient had been lost to follow-up. One had died from septicaemia after two years and another with chronic graft-versus-host disease developed a deep infection 2.5 years postoperatively and had a successful revision. There were no revisions for aseptic loosening. The clinical results on the Merle d’Aubigné and Postel (1954) scale were very good or excellent in 23 hips (88%), good in one and fair in two. Ten hips showed incomplete acetabular radiolucencies less than 1 mm thick, but there were no radiolucent lines around the stems. We conclude that for these difficult patients THA with ceramic joints and careful technique provides the best short- and medium-term option after the failure of medical treatment


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 4 | Pages 581 - 594
1 Nov 1948
Hughes JR

1. Three cases are reported of ischaemic necrosis of the anterior tibial muscles which were not due to injury. In two, ischaemia was the result of strenuous or unaccustomed exercise in young adults; in the third it was an incident in a systemic disturbance. All three cases were probably the result of spasm of a large segment of the anterior tibial artery. 2. The clinical features during the first few hours resemble those of tenosynovitis of the tibialis anterior; and after twelve to twenty-four hours those of cellulitis of the leg. Later there is "drop foot" due to muscle weakness, contracture limiting plantar-flexion movement, and woody hardness of the muscles in the middle third. 3. The morbid histology is similar to that of Volkmann's ischaemic contracture. 4. The possible explanations—primary arterial disease, arterial occlusion by pressure of the interosseous membrane, occlusion by tension within the fascial space, intraluminary occlusion by embolism or thrombosis, and fatigue arterial spasm, are discussed. 5. The vascular pattern of the anterior tibial muscles has been studied by experimental injections in cadavers. 6. It is concluded that the most likely cause is spasm of the anterior tibial artery due to muscle fatigue, aggravated by increased tension within the anterior fascial compartment due to reaction after strenuous exercise. 7. Treatment is outlined. Exploration of the anterior tibial artery within the first twelve hours is warranted, but late exploration may be dangerous. 8. Although not previously recognised, evidence is shown that regeneration of necrotic muscle is possible in the human being


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 60-B, Issue 3 | Pages 420 - 429
1 Aug 1978
Uhthoff H Jaworski Z

The histodynamic response to long-term "non-traumatic" immobilisation was studied in young adult Beagle dogs by means of radiomorphometry and histomorphometry, the right forelimb being encased in plaster and the left forelimb serving as a control. The dogs were killed at two, four, six, eight, twelve, sixteen, twenty, twenty-four, thirty-two and forty weeks and the third metacarpal, radius, ulna and humerus removed for analysis of the contributions of the periosteal, haversian and endosteal envelopes to the bone loss at the mid-diaphysis. The bone mass responded to long-term immobilisation in three stages. First there was a rapid initial loss of bone, reaching its maximum (some 16 per cent of original mass) at six weeks, to which all three bone envelopes, to some extent, contributed. A rapid reversal followed, the bone mass approaching the control values between eight and twelve weeks after immobilisation. A second stage of slower but longer lasting bone loss ended twenty-four to thirty-two weeks after immobilisation; the periosteal envelope was the main contributor (80 to 90 per cent of the total loss). The third stage was characterised by maintenance of the bone mass which had been reduced by some 30 to 50 per cent of original values. This pattern was qualitatively similar in all four bones but the distal bones lost more bone than the proximal bones. The extent of resorption surface and the total histologically "active" periosteal envelope increased parallel to the phases of bone loss. The linear mineralisation rate did not differ significantly between the experimental and control sides


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 3 | Pages 321 - 330
1 Mar 2022
Brzeszczynski F Brzeszczynska J Duckworth AD Murray IR Simpson AHRW Hamilton DF

Aims

Sarcopenia is characterized by a generalized progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass, strength, and physical performance. This systematic review primarily evaluated the effects of sarcopenia on postoperative functional recovery and mortality in patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery, and secondarily assessed the methods used to diagnose and define sarcopenia in the orthopaedic literature.

Methods

A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Google Scholar databases according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Studies involving sarcopenic patients who underwent defined orthopaedic surgery and recorded postoperative outcomes were included. The quality of the criteria by which a diagnosis of sarcopenia was made was evaluated. The quality of the publication was assessed using Newcastle-Ottawa Scale.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 12 | Pages 840 - 843
15 Dec 2021
Al-Hourani K Tsang SJ Simpson AHRW


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 1 | Pages 178 - 183
1 Feb 1968
Shim SS Copp DH Patterson FP

1. Hitherto, no study has been reported on the relative quantitative contributions of blood supply by the different arterial systems of long bone. This paper is a report on such a study in the young adult rabbit. 2. The rates and regional distributions of the blood supply of the nutrient as well as other arteries of the femur were studied after ligation of the nutrient artery. The average rates of reduction in blood flow per minute for the first five minutes through the entire femur as well as the shaft, and the epiphysis and metaphysis on each end, were measured and analysed. The bone blood flow was measured by the method of bone clearance of blood strontium 85. 3. The normal average rate of blood flow through the femurs of average weight of 9·38 grammes was 0·90±0·05 millilitres per minute, or 9·60±0·47 millilitres per minute per 100 grammes of bone. 4. The nutrient artery contributed at least 46 per cent of the normal total blood supply of the entire femur and at least 71 per cent of the normal total blood flow of the shaft including its marrow, and 37 per cent and 33 per cent of the normal total blood flow of the upper and the lower epiphysial and metaphysial areas respectively. 5. About 63 per cent, 30 per cent and 67 per cent of the total normal blood flow through the upper epiphysis and metaphysis, the shaft and the lower epiphysis and metaphysis respectively are still intact in the first five minutes after ligation of the nutrient artery, which represent the approximate proportions of the blood supply by the other regional arteries. 6. These quantitative data obtained in this study offer good support to the qualitative observations made by many previous workers


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 2 | Pages 265 - 273
1 Feb 2022
Mens RH Bisseling P de Kleuver M van Hooff ML

Aims

To determine the value of scoliosis surgery, it is necessary to evaluate outcomes in domains that matter to patients. Since randomized trials on adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) are scarce, prospective cohort studies with comparable outcome measures are important. To enhance comparison, a core set of patient-related outcome measures is available. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcomes of AIS fusion surgery at two-year follow-up using the core outcomes set.

Methods

AIS patients were systematically enrolled in an institutional registry. In all, 144 AIS patients aged ≤ 25 years undergoing primary surgery (median age 15 years (interquartile range 14 to 17) were included. Patient-reported (condition-specific and health-related quality of life (QoL); functional status; back and leg pain intensity) and clinician-reported outcomes (complications, revision surgery) were recorded. Changes in patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) were analyzed using Friedman’s analysis of variance. Clinical relevancy was determined using minimally important changes (Scoliosis Research Society (SRS)-22r), cut-off values for relevant effect on functioning (pain scores) and a patient-acceptable symptom state (PASS; Oswestry Disability Index).


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 1 | Pages 12 - 19
3 Jan 2022
Salih S Grammatopoulos G Burns S Hall-Craggs M Witt J

Aims

The lateral centre-edge angle (LCEA) is a plain radiological measure of superolateral cover of the femoral head. This study aims to establish the correlation between 2D radiological and 3D CT measurements of acetabular morphology, and to describe the relationship between LCEA and femoral head cover (FHC).

Methods

This retrospective study included 353 periacetabular osteotomies (PAOs) performed between January 2014 and December 2017. Overall, 97 hips in 75 patients had 3D analysis by Clinical Graphics, giving measurements for LCEA, acetabular index (AI), and FHC. Roentgenographical LCEA, AI, posterior wall index (PWI), and anterior wall index (AWI) were measured from supine AP pelvis radiographs. The correlation between CT and roentgenographical measurements was calculated. Sequential multiple linear regression was performed to determine the relationship between roentgenographical measurements and CT FHC.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 12 | Pages 1089 - 1095
21 Dec 2021
Luo W Ali MS Limb R Cornforth C Perry DC

Aims

The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) has demonstrated faster administration, lower burden of data capture and reduced floor and ceiling effects compared to traditional Patient Reported Outcomes Measurements (PROMs). We investigated the suitability of PROMIS Mobility score in assessing physical function in the sequelae of childhood hip disease.

Methods

In all, 266 adolscents (aged ≥ 12 years) and adults were identified with a prior diagnosis of childhood hip disease (either Perthes’ disease (n = 232 (87.2%)) or Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis (n = 34 (12.8%)) with a mean age of 27.73 years (SD 12.24). Participants completed the PROMIS Mobility Computer Adaptive Test, the Non-Arthritic Hip Score (NAHS), EuroQol five-dimension five-level questionnaire, and the Numeric Pain Rating Scale. We investigated the correlation between the PROMIS Mobility and other tools to assess use in this population and any clustering of outcome scores.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 8 | Pages 611 - 617
10 Aug 2021
Kubik JF Bornes TD Klinger CE Dyke JP Helfet DL

Aims

Surgical treatment of young femoral neck fractures often requires an open approach to achieve an anatomical reduction. The application of a calcar plate has recently been described to aid in femoral neck fracture reduction and to augment fixation. However, application of a plate may potentially compromise the regional vascularity of the femoral head and neck. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of calcar femoral neck plating on the vascularity of the femoral head and neck.

Methods

A Hueter approach and capsulotomy were performed bilaterally in six cadaveric hips. In the experimental group, a one-third tubular plate was secured to the inferomedial femoral neck at 6:00 on the clockface. The contralateral hip served as a control with surgical approach and capsulotomy without fixation. Pre- and post-contrast MRI was then performed to quantify signal intensity in the femoral head and neck. Qualitative assessment of the terminal arterial branches to the femoral head, specifically the inferior retinacular artery (IRA), was also performed.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 10, Issue 3 | Pages 32 - 35
1 Jun 2021


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 9 | Pages 574 - 590
7 Sep 2021
Addai D Zarkos J Pettit M Sunil Kumar KH Khanduja V

Outcomes following different types of surgical intervention for femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) are well reported individually but comparative data are deficient. The purpose of this study was to conduct a systematic review (SR) and meta-analysis to analyze the outcomes following surgical management of FAI by hip arthroscopy (HA), anterior mini open approach (AMO), and surgical hip dislocation (SHD). This SR was registered with PROSPERO. An electronic database search of PubMed, Medline, and EMBASE for English and German language articles over the last 20 years was carried out according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. We specifically analyzed and compared changes in patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), α-angle, rate of complications, rate of revision, and conversion to total hip arthroplasty (THA). A total of 48 articles were included for final analysis with a total of 4,384 hips in 4,094 patients. All subgroups showed a significant correction in mean α angle postoperatively with a mean change of 28.8° (95% confidence interval (CI) 21 to 36.5; p < 0.01) after AMO, 21.1° (95% CI 15.1 to 27; p < 0.01) after SHD, and 20.5° (95% CI 16.1 to 24.8; p < 0.01) after HA. The AMO group showed a significantly higher increase in PROMs (3.7; 95% CI 3.2 to 4.2; p < 0.01) versus arthroscopy (2.5; 95% CI 2.3 to 2.8; p < 0.01) and SHD (2.4; 95% CI 1.5 to 3.3; p < 0.01). However, the rate of complications following AMO was significantly higher than HA and SHD. All three surgical approaches offered significant improvements in PROMs and radiological correction of cam deformities. All three groups showed similar rates of revision procedures but SHD had the highest rate of conversion to a THA. Revision rates were similar for all three revision procedures.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 3 | Pages 569 - 577
1 Mar 2021
Fujiwara T Grimer RJ Evans S Medellin Rincon MR Tsuda Y Le Nail L Abudu S

Aims

Urgent referral to a specialist centre for patients with a soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) has been recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in the UK since 2006. However, the impact of this recommendation on the prognosis for these patients remains unclear. We aimed to determine the impact of the NICE guidelines on the disease-specific survival (DSS) of patients with an STS.

Methods

A total of 2,427 patients with an STS referred to a supraregional centre in the ten-year periods before (n = 1,386) and after (n = 1,041) the issue of the NICE guidelines were evaluated.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 4 | Pages 729 - 764
1 Nov 1966
Barnes R Catto M

1. Chondrosarcoma is a malignant tumour of bone with clinical and morphological features which distinguish it from osteosarcoma. 2. Cartilage tumours present an unbroken spectrum in their clinical behaviour and histological appearances from the entirely benign to the frankly malignant. 3. A few chondrosarcomata, particularly those in children and young adults, run a rapidly fatal course but in general they metastasise late and some kill by local extension of the tumour. 4. "Secondary" chondrosarcomata arising from a pre-existing osteocartilaginous exostosis or enchondroma are mostly low grade tumours. 5. The first appearance of an osteocartilaginous exostosis after skeletal maturity, renewed growth, or pain unassociated with a fracture, should arouse suspicion of malignancy in any cartilage tumour. 6. Cartilage tumours of the trunk and upper end of femur and humerus are especially liable to sarcomatous change. 7. Although most benign cartilage tumours occur in the hand and foot they rarely become malignant with the exception of those in the calcaneus. 8. If biopsy is necessary it should be of the incisional type, a generous amount of material being removed from the edge of the tumour. Calcified, degenerate areas must be avoided. 9. In low grade tumours microscopic fields judged to be malignant by Lichtenstein and Jaffe's well established criteria may be scanty and many paraffin sections should be examined. Absence of mitotic figures, heavy calcification and poor vascularity are no guarantee of benignity. 10. Information as to the site of the tumour and age of the patient must be available to the pathologist if a useful report is to be given. 11 . In "borderline" tumours or where any difficulty in diagnosis arises the clinical, radiographic and histological features must all be taken into account and treatment based on the most unfavourable features. 12. Chondrosarcoma is a radio-resistant tumour and treatment is by radical excision or amputation. 13. Malignant cartilage cells implanted in the tissues at operation will often continue to grow and in all instances the biopsy wound and surrounding tissues must be removed en bloc with the tumour. 14. Small, low grade, readily accessible, peripheral tumours may be successfully treated by excision with a wide margin of healthy tissue. 15. In the limbs or pelvis large tumours and those of high grade malignancy should be treated by amputation. Since marrow permeation is often greater than the radiograph suggests amputation should, as a rule, not be performed through the bone in which the chondrosarcoma is situated. 16. Recurrence carries the danger that an initially accessible tumour becomes inaccessible and inoperable and, less frequently, a low grade tumour recurs in a metastasising form. 17. Recurrence is frequent after inadequate surgery; it indicates that the tumour is at least locally malignant and a cure can usually only then be achieved by more radical surgery


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


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 10, Issue 2 | Pages 47 - 50
1 Apr 2021


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 10 | Pages 813 - 824
7 Oct 2021
Lerch TD Boschung A Schmaranzer F Todorski IAS Vanlommel J Siebenrock KA Steppacher SD Tannast M

Aims

The effect of pelvic tilt (PT) and sagittal balance in hips with pincer-type femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) with acetabular retroversion (AR) is controversial. It is unclear if patients with AR have a rotational abnormality of the iliac wing. Therefore, we asked: are parameters for sagittal balance, and is rotation of the iliac wing, different in patients with AR compared to a control group?; and is there a correlation between iliac rotation and acetabular version?

Methods

A retrospective, review board-approved, controlled study was performed including 120 hips in 86 consecutive patients with symptomatic FAI or hip dysplasia. Pelvic CT scans were reviewed to calculate parameters for sagittal balance (pelvic incidence (PI), PT, and sacral slope), anterior pelvic plane angle, pelvic inclination, and external rotation of the iliac wing and were compared to a control group (48 hips). The 120 hips were allocated to the following groups: AR (41 hips), hip dysplasia (47 hips) and cam FAI with normal acetabular morphology (32 hips). Subgroups of total AR (15 hips) and high acetabular anteversion (20 hips) were analyzed. Statistical analysis was performed using analysis of variance with Bonferroni correction.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1400 - 1404
1 Aug 2021
Sim FCJ Birley E Khan AL Loughenbury PR Millner P

Aims

The aim of this study was to determine whether there is an increased prevalence of scoliosis in patients who have suffered from a haematopoietic malignancy in childhood.

Methods

Patients with a history of lymphoma or leukaemia with a current age between 12 and 25 years were identified from the regional paediatric oncology database. The medical records and radiological findings were reviewed, and any spinal deformity identified. The treatment of the malignancy and the spinal deformity, if any, was noted.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1351 - 1357
1 Aug 2021
Sun J Chhabra A Thakur U Vazquez L Xi Y Wells J

Aims

Some patients presenting with hip pain and instability and underlying acetabular dysplasia (AD) do not experience resolution of symptoms after surgical management. Hip-spine syndrome is a possible underlying cause. We hypothesized that there is a higher frequency of radiological spine anomalies in patients with AD. We also assessed the relationship between radiological severity of AD and frequency of spine anomalies.

Methods

In a retrospective analysis of registry data, 122 hips in 122 patients who presented with hip pain and and a final diagnosis of AD were studied. Two observers analyzed hip and spine variables using standard radiographs to assess AD. The frequency of lumbosacral transitional vertebra (LSTV), along with associated Castellvi grade, pars interarticularis defect, and spinal morphological measurements were recorded and correlated with radiological severity of AD.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 7 Supple B | Pages 78 - 83
1 Jul 2021
Roedel GG Kildow BJ Sveom DS Garvin KL

Aims

Highly cross-linked polyethylene (HXLPE) has greatly improved the durability of total hip arthroplasty (THA) in young patients because of its improved wear characteristics. Few studies have followed this population into the second decade, and therefore the purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the clinical outcome for THA patients 50 years of age and younger at a minimum of 15 years postoperatively. The second purpose was to evaluate the radiological findings secondary to wear or mechanical failure of the implant.

Methods

Between October 1999 and December 2005, 105 THAs were performed in 95 patients (53 female, 42 male) aged 50 years and younger (mean 42 years (20 to 50)). There were 87 patients (96 hips) that were followed for a minimum of 15 years (mean 17.3 years (15 to 21)) for analysis. Posterior approach was used with cementless fixation with a median head size of 28 mm. HXLPE was the acetabular bearing for all hips. Radiographs were evaluated for polyethylene wear, radiolucent lines, and osteolysis.