Intramedullary locking nails have proved to be of considerable advantage when treating complex, comminuted or segmental femoral shaft fractures. We have reviewed 117 patients with 120 femoral shaft fractures treated with the Strasbourg device. These included 20 compound fractures, 13 pathological fractures and two non-unions. Rehabilitation and union rates have been very satisfactory and there have been no serious infections in the series. Comminution of the proximal
We performed intraoperative arthrography of the knee in 12 children with congenital short
The use of a total femoral prosthesis can offer a realistic alternative to amputation or disarticulation. The limited indications for such a prosthesis in the surgical management of primary bone tumours and pathological fractures still exist. In this specialised clinic there is an increased need to replace the entire
A method is described of measuring radiological subsidence of a femoral prosthesis in relation to the
1. A specially designed loading apparatus and dyeing technique have been used to demonstrate the weight-bearing areas in fifty-one normal adult hip joints. 2. Under loads and positions typical of the stance phase of walking the entire articular surface of the acetabulum is involved in weight-bearing. This contact area is reproduced on the femoral head, and its position determined by the attitude of the
1. A case of hypophosphatasia in a boy who sustained a fractured left
The intermittent administration of cortisone in both the young and the mature rabbit is associated with appositional bone growth on the periosteal surfaces of the cranium, premaxilla and middle of the shaft of the
We treated 37 patients with chronic osteomyelitis of the tibia (25),
We report the short-term results of 100 cementless total hip replacements in 52 severely dysplastic and 48 totally dislocated hips, with some new technical solutions to the problems involved. In cases with a very narrow iliac bone, the acetabular screw ring is seated below the true cotyloid area. In hips with tight flexor and abductor muscles or with deformities of the proximal
We analysed the gait characteristics of 15 patients with prosthetic reconstruction of the proximal
Patients with neuromuscular imbalance who require
total hip arthroplasty (THA) present particular technical problems
due to altered anatomy, abnormal bone stock, muscular imbalance
and problems of rehabilitation. In this systematic review, we studied articles dealing with THA
in patients with neuromuscular imbalance, published before April
2017. We recorded the demographics of the patients and the type
of neuromuscular pathology, the indication for surgery, surgical
approach, concomitant soft-tissue releases, the type of implant
and bearing, pain and functional outcome as well as complications
and survival. Recent advances in THA technology allow for successful outcomes
in these patients. Our review suggests excellent benefits for pain
relief and good functional outcome might be expected with a modest
risk of complication. Cite this article:
Dislocation rates are reportedly lower in patients requiring
proximal femoral hemiarthroplasty than for patients undergoing hip
arthroplasty for neoplasia. Without acetabular replacement, pain
due to acetabular wear necessitating revision surgery has been described.
We aimed to determine whether wear of the native acetabulum following
hemiarthroplasty necessitates revision surgery with secondary replacement
of the acetabulum after proximal femoral replacement (PFR) for tumour
reconstruction. We reviewed 100 consecutive PFRs performed between January 2003
and January 2013 without acetabular resurfacing. The procedure was
undertaken in 74 patients with metastases, for a primary bone tumour
in 20 and for myeloma in six. There were 48 male and 52 female patients,
with a mean age of 61.4 years (19 to 85) and median follow-up of
two years (interquartile range (IQR) 0.5 to 3.7 years). In total,
52 patients presented with a pathological fracture and six presented
with failed fixation of a previously instrumented pathological fracture.Aims
Patients and Methods
The term "floating knee" describes the flail joint resulting from fractures of the shaft or adjacent metaphyseal region of the ipsilateral
A new radiological technique is presented in which serial axial radiographs of the patellofemoral joints are taken under conditions in which the muscles about the knee and hip are contracted in a manner similar to that during weight-bearing. A form of analysis has been developed whereby patellar rotation can be measured in two planes and femoral rotation about its long axis inferred. A population of asymptomatic adults and children was investigated in this way and their results (regarded as normal) compared with those in fifteen children with idiopathic chondromalacia patellae. In the normal child the
Gentamicin incorporated in beads of polymethylmethacrylate has been shown capable of being released over a period of several months in concentrations sufficiently high to control most pathogens. The therapeutic efficacy of such beads has been demonstrated in a model of osteomyelitis of the
1. The various surgical procedures in common use for the treatment of the osteoarthritic hip are briefly reviewed and compared with the operation of replacement of both the acetabulum and head of the
We reviewed 80 patients (87 hips) who were older than 80 years of age at the time of cementless total hip arthroplasty. An Alloclassic SL stem had been implanted in all patients. A variety of cementless acetabular components was used. After a mean follow-up of 69.3 months (39.2 to 94.1) 48 hips in 43 patients were analysed clinically and radiologically. One patient had sustained a traumatic periprosthetic fracture of the
The aims of this study were to examine the rate at which the
positioning of the acetabular component, leg length discrepancy
and femoral offset are outside an acceptable range in total hip
arthroplasties (THAs) which either do or do not involve the use
of intra-operative digital imaging. A retrospective case-control study was undertaken with 50 patients
before and 50 patients after the integration of an intra-operative
digital imaging system in THA. The demographics of the two groups
were comparable for body mass index, age, laterality and the indication
for surgery. The digital imaging group had more men than the group without.
Surgical data and radiographic parameters, including the inclination
and anteversion of the acetabular component, leg length discrepancy,
and the difference in femoral offset compared with the contralateral
hip were collected and compared, as well as the incidence of altering
the position of a component based on the intra-operative image.Aims
Patients and Methods
Patient-specific (PS) implantation surgical technology has been introduced in recent years and a gradual increase in the associated number of surgical cases has been observed. PS technology uses a patient’s own geometry in designing a medical device to provide minimal bone resection with improvement in the prosthetic bone coverage. However, whether PS unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) provides a better biomechanical effect than standard off-the-shelf prostheses for UKA has not yet been determined, and still remains controversial in both biomechanical and clinical fields. Therefore, the aim of this study was to compare the biomechanical effect between PS and standard off-the-shelf prostheses for UKA. The contact stresses on the polyethylene (PE) insert, articular cartilage and lateral meniscus were evaluated in PS and standard off-the-shelf prostheses for UKA using a validated finite element model. Gait cycle loading was applied to evaluate the biomechanical effect in the PS and standard UKAs.Objectives
Methods
Torsional instability of femoral components has not received much attention, and is difficult to detect in conventional radiographs. To test this we designed a system to apply a load in an anteroposterior direction to the head of a femoral component, implanted into a cadaveric