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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. 72-B, Issue 3 | Pages 453 - 456
1 May 1990
Ferris B Jackson A

We describe a rare form of congenital snapping knee. In six knees in four children, the tibia subluxed anteriorly on the femur when the knee was extended and reduced spontaneously on flexion. The abnormal movements were seen and felt as sudden snaps or clunks at about 30 degrees of flexion. All six knees showed similar dysplastic features, although the patients had different clinical syndromes. The mechanism of the subluxation and its management are discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 7 | Pages 984 - 988
1 Jul 2010
Guo JJ Tang N Yang HL Tang TS

We compared the outcome of closed intramedullary nailing with minimally invasive plate osteosynthesis using a percutaneous locked compression plate in patients with a distal metaphyseal fracture in a prospective study. A total of 85 patients were randomised to operative stabilisation either by a closed intramedullary nail (44) or by minimally invasive osteosynthesis with a compression plate (41). Pre-operative variables included the patients’ age and the side and pattern of the fracture. Peri-operative variables were the operating time and the radiation time. Postoperative variables were wound problems, the time to union of the fracture, the functional American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle surgery score and removal of hardware. We found no significant difference in the pre-operative variables or in the time to union in the two groups. However, the mean radiation time and operating time were significantly longer in the locked compression plate group (3.0 vs 2.12 minutes, p < 0.001, and 97.9 vs 81.2 minutes, p < 0.001, respectively). After one year, all the fractures had united. Patients who had intramedullary nailing had a higher mean pain score, but better function, alignment and total American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle surgery scores, although the differences were not statistically significant (p = 0.234, p = 0.157, p = 0.897, p = 0.177 respectively). Three (6.8%) patients in the intramedullary nailing group and six (14.6%) in the locked compression plate group showed delayed wound healing, and 37 (84.1%) in the former group and 38 (92.7%) in the latter group expressed a wish to have the implant removed. We conclude that both closed intramedullary nailing and a percutaneous locked compression plate can be used safely to treat Orthopaedic Trauma Association type-43A distal metaphyseal fractures of the tibia. However, closed intramedullary nailing has the advantage of a shorter operating and radiation time and easier removal of the implant. We therefore prefer closed intramedullary nailing for patients with these fractures


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 1 | Pages 101 - 103
1 Jan 1995
Bostman O

A series of 3061 patients with fracture of the distal tibia or ankle was studied for a possible link between overweight and failed reduction. The relative body-weight was recorded as the preoperative self-reported body mass index (BMI) of each patient. There were 109 patients (3.6%) with failure of internal fixation or of closed reduction severe enough to necessitate refixation or corrective osteotomy. The mean BMI in all age- and gender-specific groups studied was found to be significantly higher in patients with failed reduction than in those with an uneventful course (p < 0.01). The relative risk of loss of reduction for patients with a BMI greater than 1SD above the BMI of the corresponding age and gender group of the general population was 3.72 for distal tibial fractures and 3.04 for ankle fractures. Overweight should be recognised as a significant factor in predicting a complicated course after a fracture of the lower leg. Awareness of the increased risk of loss of reduction in overweight patients is important in all phases of management


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 9, Issue 6 | Pages 282 - 284
1 Jun 2020
Clement ND Calliess T Christen B Deehan DJ


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

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


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 3 | Pages 412 - 415
1 May 1987
Clement D Worlock P

We have reviewed 15 cases of triplane fracture of the distal tibia. The mechanism of injury is lateral rotation and the anatomical pattern of the fracture depends on the state of the growth plate at the time of injury. In seven of our cases the anteromedial part of the growth plate was fused, but in eight children the plate was completely open. In six of these eight children there was a hump or projection of the medial growth plate. It is suggested that this hump stabilises the anteromedial part of the epiphysis in a manner similar to the partial anteromedial fusion seen in older children, and that this accounts for the occurrence of triplane fracture in the presence of an open growth plate


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 55-B, Issue 2 | Pages 312 - 318
1 May 1973
Christensen NO

1. The Küntscher method of intramedullary reaming and nail fixation was applied to thirty-five cases of non-union of the lower extremity, twenty femurs and fifteen tibias. A bone graft was generally not used. 2. Most of the patients were allowed to bear weight and to exercise the joints within a few days of the operation. Additional measures such as pre-operative surgery for infection or distraction of shortening were used in some cases. 3. The pseudarthrosis healed in all cases, even when infection was present. The nails were generally not removed until after healing had occurred. 4. It is concluded that the Küntscher method gives remarkably rapid consolidation and restoration of function even in difficult cases of non-union of shaft fracture, particularly of the femur


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 3 | Pages 267 - 271
1 Aug 1977
Hootnick D Boyd N Fixsen J Lloyd-Roberts G

Forty-three patients with unilateral congenital short tibia with partial or complete absence of the fibula are reviewed. The factors influencing the degree of leg shortening at maturity are considered. Serial radiographic measurements of leg length in fourteen patients covering an average observation period of 9-3 years support the hypothesis that the relative difference in growth between the two limbs remains remarkably constant. By estimating the percentage difference between the normal and abnormal leg lengths on the first measurable radiograph it is therefore possible to predict the likely shortening at maturity. This method of prediction allows the surgeon to make the decision to proceed to Syme's amputation or to the use of an extension prosthesis at about one year of age when the child starts to walk


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 2 | Pages 359 - 365
1 May 1969
Hall-Craggs ECB Lawrence CA

1. Arrest of growth at one proximal tibial epiphysis of young rabbits was obtained by stapling. 2. Radiopaque markers allowed the subsequent growth of both proximal and distal epiphyses of the experimental and contralateral tibiae and of both lower femoral epiphyses to be followed radiographically. 3. The reduction in the normal deceleration of growth rate at the distal epiphysis found after epiphysiodesis of the proximal epiphysis was again observed. 4. This change in growth rate was not encountered in the distal femoral epiphysis lying adjacent to the stapled tibial epiphysis. 5. Removal of the staples after the change in growth rate had become established at the distal tibial epiphysis was followed by a return to an approximately normal growth rate by both proximal and distal epiphyses. 6. It is concluded that a direct relationship exists between the additional growth at the uninjured epiphysis and the deficiency in growth obtained at the stapled epiphysis, and that this change in growth rate is limited to the experimental tibia


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 98-B, Issue 4 | Pages 534 - 541
1 Apr 2016
Tsang STJ Mills LA Frantzias J Baren JP Keating JF Simpson AHRW

Aims

The aim of this study was to identify risk factors for the failure of exchange nailing in nonunion of tibial diaphyseal fractures.

Patients and Methods

A cohort of 102 tibial diaphyseal nonunions in 101 patients with a mean age of 36.9 years (15 to 74) were treated between January 1992 and December 2012 by exchange nailing. Of which 33 (32%) were initially open injuries. The median time from primary fixation to exchange nailing was 6.5 months (interquartile range (IQR) 4.3 to 9.8 months).

The main outcome measures were union, number of secondary fixation procedures required to achieve union and time to union.

Univariate analysis and multiple regression were used to identify risk factors for failure to achieve union.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 3 | Pages 391 - 394
1 May 1990
Strachan R McCarthy I Fleming R Hughes S

There has been a long-standing debate as to whether medullary or periosteal flow is the dominant vascular supply during the healing of diaphyseal fractures. We used radioactive microspheres to quantify blood flow to the canine tibia two weeks after an osteotomy. There was a significant contribution from the periosteum to the blood supply of healing cortical bone after nutrient artery ligation, with a reversal of flow from a centrifugal to a centripetal direction. Our study has confirmed the qualitative observations of Trueta (1974) regarding the significant recruitment of vessels from surrounding soft tissue during fracture healing. We have not studied the later stages of healing


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 4 | Pages 455 - 463
1 Nov 1979
Campanacci M Costa P

Resection of the distal femur or proximal tibia en bloc has been performed on twenty-six patients with primary bone tumours. The gap was filled with autogenous bone grafts stabilised with a long intramedullary nail, thus arthrodesing the knee. In two cases temporary stabilisation with a Kuntscher rod and acrylic cement was adopted because of adjuvant chemotherapy. Union was achieved in twenty-four cases (92 per cent). Infection was the main and practically the only major complication, occurring in five (19 per cent) of the cases: it healed with union in three, healed with non-union in one, and led to an above-knee amputation in the fifth case. Follow-up has been from one to eight years with an average of four years


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 1 | Pages 141 - 141
1 Jan 2007
GRIMER RJ CARTER SR TILLMAN RM ABUDU A


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 2 | Pages 276 - 277
1 Feb 2006
BISMIL Q WOOD CPJ RICKETTS DM


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 3 | Pages 490 - 493
1 May 1995
Reichert I McCarthy I Hughes S

The tibial nutrient artery supplies 62% of cortical blood flow in the diaphysis and normal blood flow is centrifugal (Willans 1987). Intramedullary reaming destroys the nutrient artery and injures the endosteal surface of the cortex. Trueta (1974) suggested that the direction of blood flow can reverse from centrifugal to centripetal after loss of the endosteal supply. We examined this hypothesis by measuring cortical and periosteal blood flow after intramedullary reaming of the tibia in eight sheep, using 57Co radiolabelled microspheres. The unreamed contralateral tibiae served as a control group. Thirty minutes after reaming there was no significant change in cortical blood flow, but a sixfold increase in the periosteal flow. Our study confirms Trueta's hypothesis; after trauma or in other pathological states, flow can become centripetal


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 4 | Pages 467 - 472
1 Apr 2014
Nakamura E Okamoto N Nishioka H Karasugi T Hirose J Mizuta H

We report the long-term outcome of 33 patients (37 knees) who underwent proximal tibial open-wedge osteotomy with hemicallotasis (HCO) for medial osteoarthritis of the knee between 1995 and 2000. Among these, 29 patients with unilateral HCO were enrolled and 19 were available for review at a mean of 14.2 years (10 to 15.7) post-operatively. For these 19 patients, the mean Hospital for Special Surgery knee score was 60 (57 to 62) pre-operatively and 85 (82 to 87) at final follow-up (p < 0.001; paired t-test). The femorotibial angle and tibial inclination angle (IA) were measured at short-term follow-up, one to four years post-operatively, and showed no significant subsequent changes. The clinical scores and radiological measurements showed little change over time. One patient required conversion to total knee replacement during this time. These results suggest that the coronal angle achieved at operation is maintained at long-term follow up after HCO without alteration of the IA, providing a good long-term clinical outcome.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B:467–72.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 2 | Pages 310 - 313
1 May 1967
Devas MB

1. Shin splints in five horses is described as a stress fracture of the second metacarpal bone. 2. The value of this finding in relation to stress fracture of the tibia in man is discussed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 7 | Pages 959 - 966
1 Sep 2000
Gopal S Majumder S Batchelor AGB Knight SL De Boer P Smith RM

We performed a retrospective review of the case notes of 84 consecutive patients who had suffered a severe (Gustilo IIIb or IIIc) open fracture of the tibia after blunt trauma between 1990 and 1998. All had been treated by a radical protocol which included early soft-tissue cover with a muscle flap by a combined orthopaedic and plastic surgery service. Our ideal management is a radical debridement of the wound outside the zone of injury, skeletal stabilisation and early soft-tissue cover with a vascularised muscle flap. All patients were followed clinically and radiologically to union or for one year. After exclusion of four patients (one unrelated death and three patients lost to follow-up), we reviewed 80 patients with 84 fractures. There were 67 men and 13 women with a mean age of 37 years (3 to 89). Five injuries were grade IIIc and 79 grade IIIb; 12 were site 41, 43 were site 42 and 29 were site 43. Debridement and stabilisation of the fracture were invariably performed immediately. In 33 cases the soft-tissue reconstruction was also completed in a single stage, while in a further 30 it was achieved within 72 hours. In the remaining 21 there was a delay beyond 72 hours, often for critical reasons unrelated to the limb injury. All grade-IIIc injuries underwent immediate vascular reconstruction, with an immediate cover by a flap in two. All were salvaged. There were four amputations, one early, one mid-term and two late, giving a final rate of limb salvage of 95%. Overall, nine pedicled and 75 free muscle flaps were used; the rate of flap failure was 3.5%. Stabilisation of the fracture was achieved with 19 external and 65 internal fixation devices (nails or plates). Three patients had significant segmental defects and required bone-transport procedures to achieve bony union. Of the rest, 51 fractures (66%) progressed to primary bony union while 26 (34%) required a bone-stimulating procedure to achieve this outcome. Overall, there was a rate of superficial infection of the skin graft of 6%, of deep infection at the site of the fracture of 9.5%, and of serious pin-track infection of 37% in the external fixator group. At final review all patients were walking freely on united fractures with no evidence of infection. The treatment of these very severe injuries by an aggressive combined orthopaedic and plastic surgical approach provides good results; immediate internal fixation and healthy soft-tissue cover with a muscle flap is safe. Indeed, delay in cover (> 72 hours) was associated with most of the problems. External fixation was associated with practical difficulties for the plastic surgeons, a number of chronic pin-track infections and our only cases of malunion. We prefer to use internal fixation. We recommend primary referral to a specialist centre whenever possible. If local factors prevent this we suggest that after discussion with the relevant centre, initial debridement and bridging external fixation, followed by transfer, is the safest procedure


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 5 | Pages 638 - 642
1 May 2008
Aderinto J Keating JF

We reviewed 27 diabetic patients who sustained a tibial fracture treated with a reamed intramedullary nail and compared them with a control group who did not have diabetes. There were 23 closed fractures and four were open. Union was delayed until after six months in 12 of the 23 (52%) diabetic patients with closed fractures and ten of the 23 (43%) control patients (p = 0.768). In two patients with diabetes (9%), closed tibial fractures failed to unite and required exchange nailing, whereas all closed fractures in the control group healed without further surgery (p = 0.489). In both the diabetic and control groups with closed fractures two patients (9%) developed superficial infections. There were two (9%) deep infections in diabetic patients with closed fractures, but none in the control group (p = 0.489).

Overall, there was no significant difference in the rate of complications between the diabetic patients and the control group, but there was a tendency for more severe infections in patients with diabetes.