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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 2 | Pages 178 - 181
1 Mar 1986
Gopalakrishnan K el Masri W

Twelve cases of sternal injury associated with spinal fractures have been reviewed. The sternum is regularly buckled or fractured in patients with high thoracic spinal fractures. Our review suggests that sternal injuries may also be associated with spinal fractures outside this region, and with types of fracture other than crushing of vertebral bodies. Injury to the sternum, when due to indirect violence, is almost always associated with a severe spinal column injury. A displaced fracture of the thoracic spine, with or without an associated sternal fracture, can produce significant widening of the mediastinal shadow on a chest radiograph. This is caused by a paravertebral haematoma, and can be difficult to differentiate from widening due to an aortic rupture.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 1 | Pages 126 - 126
1 Feb 1975
Wilson RI


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 2 | Pages 256 - 262
1 May 1974
Brodie IO Denham RA

1. A series of 298 unstable ankle fractures treated during the last ten years is reviewed.

2. Open reduction and rigid fixation with two screws, with early mobilisation after operation and avoidance of plaster, achieved a high percentage of satisfactory results. Accurate reduction diminishes the incidence of traumatic arthritis and pain.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 4 | Pages 717 - 719
1 Nov 1972
Jeffery CC

The case illustrated substantiates the explanation of the rare epiphysial separation of the head of the radius with 90 degrees backward tilting referred to above as Group 2. It suggests also that the initial fall on the hand may loosen the capital epiphysis.

The undesirability of reducing dislocations of the elbow merely by pulling on the hand of the injured limb is emphasised. The dislocation should be reduced by gentle traction accompanied by pressure with the thumbs on the front of the displaced olecranon.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 53-B, Issue 3 | Pages 425 - 428
1 Aug 1971
Brown RF Morgan RG

1. A review of ten cases of T-shaped intercondylar fractures of the humerus treated with a sling and early movement is presented.

2. The method and the results are discussed and some comparison is made with other series.

3. This method of treatment has certain advantages and the results are reasonable in comparison with those of other methods.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 53-B, Issue 3 | Pages 392 - 405
1 Aug 1971
Schatzker J Rorabeck CH Waddell JP

1. Thirty-seven cases of fracture of the dens have been studied.

2. The incidence of non-union was high: 64 per cent after apparently adequate closed treatment.

3. Possible causes of the high incidence of non-union have been studied : attention is drawn to the effect of displacement and to that of posterior displacement in particular.

4. Non-union of the dens with potential instability at the atlanto-axial joint is not acceptable in a patient who expects to lead a normal active life.

5. Atlanto-axial fusion is the method of choice in the treatment of instability ; once that has been secured, pseudarthrosis of the dens is no longer significant.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 2 | Pages 324 - 329
1 May 1969
Woodyard JE

1. Forty-four cases of Smith's type fractures are reviewed and emphasis laid upon the significance of the different fracture types.

2. Treatment is reviewed and recommendations made for future management.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 3 | Pages 436 - 440
1 Aug 1966
Kennedy JC Grainger RW McGraw RW

1. The importance of recognising osteochondral fractures of the femoral condyle in the adolescent knee joint is emphasised.

2. The mechanism of the formation of the fractures is discussed. Essentially, a powerful rotary and compressive force shears off cartilage and subchondral bone. The absence of lateral condylar lesions in the experimental group lends support to the theory that the patella may cause the fracture by impingement.

3. On the basis of the mechanism a clinical classification of osteochondral fractures of the femoral condyles is presented.

4. Early surgery is recommended. The arguments for removal or replacement of the fragment are discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 2 | Pages 236 - 239
1 May 1965
Patrick J

1. A direct approach to trimalleolar fractures is described.

2. It is considered that a direct view of the fractured joint surface is essential in operations on all trimalleolar fractures and that access must be planned accordingly.

3. Failure to get a perfectly congruous surface is likely to be followed by osteoarthritis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 4 | Pages 674 - 684
1 Nov 1964
Jarry L

1. A technique of transarticular nailing for subcapital and transcervical fractures of the neck of the femur is described.

2. Forty-four operations have been done, and twenty-one patients have been under observation for periods of from one to six years. In one of these pseudarthrosis has developed; in two others there has been delayed union.

3. The method gives sound fixation by a "squeezing effect" on the proximal fragment, which is enhanced by the locking of the adjacent articulation.

4. It is presented as an alternative to prosthetic replacement for treatment of femoral neck fracture in the aged. The nail damages the articular surface of the acetabulum but not the femoral head.

5. The importance of care after operation is stressed.

6. The advantages of the method, the role of circulatory changes in the femoral head and the mechanics of transarticular fixation are discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 3 | Pages 371 - 372
1 Aug 1964
Ellis J


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 1 | Pages 24 - 27
1 Feb 1964
Stevens J Abrami G

1. It is now more than three years since a group of ninety-one patients with transcervical fracture of the neck of the femur were examined for osteoporosis at the time of injury using a histological or a radiographic technique, or a combination of both methods.

2. After patients with basal fractures were excluded, ninety fractures in eighty-eight patients were available for review and sixty-six (74 per cent) were adequately followed up.

3. In this series the fate of the fracture did not appear to be influenced by the presence or absence of osteoporosis, or by the degree of osteoporosis.

4. The incidence of osteoporosis increased with advancing age, but this increased incidence did not appear to be responsible for the greater proportion of failures after the age of sixty-five.

5. In this series of patients examination for osteoporosis was made by methods which were believed to be the best available at the time. The possibility that these are not absolutely reliable cannot be ruled out.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 1 | Pages 103 - 109
1 Feb 1963
Lee MLH

1. A review of intra-articular and peri-articular fractures of the phalanges has been carried out, and the late results of such injuries have been examined.

2. These fractures usually unite by bone.

3. The results of conservative treatment by immobilisation are satisfactory in the case of mallet fractures, hyperextension sprain fractures and collateral avulsion fractures of the proximal phalanges.

4. The less satisfactory results after collateral avulsion fractures of the interphalangeal joints and avulsion fractures complicating dislocations are discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 1 | Pages 6 - 20
1 Feb 1963
Holdsworth FW


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 4 | Pages 647 - 663
1 Nov 1961
Garden RS

The successful management of femoral neck fractures is obviously based upon many factors. The forces acting upon the proximal end of the femur are believed to be mainly compressive in nature, and the low-angle nail by stabilising the fully reduced fracture in the line of these forces is held to allow weight bearing to take place. Low-angle nailing is believed to offer many advantages over conventional methods of treatment but only in the presence of stability. Stable reduction is the essential preliminary to any form of treatment, and low-angle fixation with early weight bearing in the absence of stability is regarded as futile.

It is suggested that those subcapital separations which follow trivial injury may originate as stress fractures accompanying the process of bone remodelling in the aged, and that many of these fractures may remain unrecognised and heal spontaneously. With rare exceptions, subcapital fractures are regarded as being of the same essential pattern, and their varying radiological appearance is considered to be due to the different degrees of displacement to which they have been subjected. A new classification based on this premise has been suggested.

In a series of eighty subcapital fractures the incidence of avascular necrosis was not adversely affected by early weight bearing, but reduction in the extreme valgus position was invariably followed by this disaster. This is probably also true of any malposition in extreme rotation which must stretch and obliterate the vessels in the ligamentum teres.

A rough alignment index of reduction was found to provide an almost infallible guide to the prognosis both in regard to union and to avascular change. It may therefore be possible to base prognosis on the quality of reduction before the fixation appliance has been inserted. The unsatisfactory results in those cases apparently destined to non-union or avascular necrosis may then be avoided by alternative means of treatment at an early stage. Whether this will prove to be true must depend upon a much longer experience of low-angle fixation, and, in common with almost every communication on this subject, premature publication must largely offset the value of the present findings.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 1 | Pages 21 - 27
1 Feb 1960
Arden GP

1. A method is described for measuring blood flow to the head of the femur after fracture of the femoral neck, by estimation of the rate of uptake of radioactive phosphorus.

2. Of one hundred cases investigated the readings in fifteen were incomplete, and in seventeen were unreliable. Reasons are given for discarding the latter seventeen cases. After two years seven patients had died, leaving sixty-one available for analysis.

3. The results in sixty-one surviving patients with a follow-up of not less than two years are analysed. In twenty of these radioactivity was measured by bone sampling and in forty-one by direct readings with a needle counter.

4. The twenty-one intertrochanteric fractures studied were used as controls. In these the P32 ratio varied from 0·4 to 3·0. Union occurred in all patients and none developed avascular necrosis.

5. Of the forty patients with displaced fractures of the femoral neck twenty-eight showed a low P32 ratio. In twenty-three of these (82 per cent) the fracture united.

6. Twelve patients with fractures of the femoral neck showed a borderline or abnormal P32 ratio. In ten of these there was subsequent avascular necrosis or non-union.

7. The possible reasons for the discrepancy between expected and actual results are discussed.

8. Almost 40 per cent of the cases investigated had to be abandoned because of technical faults and in one-fifth of the remaining cases the expected results failed to agree with the clinical results. The method of investigation is therefore not of much practical value at the present time. Improvements in apparatus and technique might make the method more reliable and more useful.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 42-B, Issue 2 | Pages 236 - 252
1 May 1960
Powell HDW

Cases are reported of two men who sustained bilateral hip injuries while undergoing convulsive therapy and of one woman who sustained bilateral hip injuries during a uraemic convulsion. A further twenty-three previously unreported cases are analysed, sixteen of which were of simultaneous bilateral femoral neck fractures and five of which were simultaneous bilateral central dislocations of the hip. One other patient sustained his injuries in an epileptic fit. A review of the literature has revealed another thirty-five cases of bilateral hip injuries, most of them caused by convulsive therapy, but a few by accident, disease of the femoral neck, or epilepsy.

One case is included of a rare double injury, a femoral neck fracture on one side and a central dislocation on the other. I have found no previous reference to this combined injury.

Double hip injuries are very rare in relation to the large numbers of patients receiving convulsion therapy, but the change from pharmacological to electrical methods has not prevented their occurrence and at least fifteen are known to have occurred during the last six years.

A wide age range is represented, and many fractures of convulsive origin have occurred in fit, well nourished, adult men. Only a few have been found in more elderly and possibly osteoporotic patients.

All the "convulsive " injuries were sustained during unmodified treatment, and mention is made of the differences of opinion among psychiatrists about the use of anaesthesia and of relaxant drugs in convulsion therapy.

These are the most severe injuries complicating convulsion therapy, and the most difficult for the orthopaedic surgeon to treat.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 3 | Pages 641 - 642
1 Aug 1959
McKee GK


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 40-B, Issue 4 | Pages 804 - 812
1 Nov 1958
Bloch B

1. The properties and behaviour of ethoxyline resins, which are already well known in industry, are discussed.

2. Experiments in the use of these compounds for the bonding of fractures of the long bones of sheep are described.

3. There has been no evidence of toxic reaction to the presence of the resin in the tissues.

4. Application of the method to fractures in man has been studied, and two such fractures have been bonded with promising early results.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 38-B, Issue 4 | Pages 794 - 817
1 Nov 1956
Blockey NJ Purser DW

1. Fifty-one cases of fracture of the odontoid have been analysed. Forty were reported by other surgeons; eleven were new cases first reported by us.

2. Fracture of the odontoid in young children is an epiphysial separation. It occurs up to the age of seven years. As in epiphysial separations elsewhere, it unites readily, and remodelling occurs when reduction has been incomplete, so that normal anatomy is restored.

3. In adults forward displacement is twice as common as backward displacement.

4. Immediate paralysis is commoner if backward displacement occurs, but late neurological disorders are seen only after fractures with forward displacement.

5. Failure of bony healing is not dangerous if treatment has resulted in firm fibrous union, for there is neither excessive abnormal mobility nor progressive subluxation, either of which could injure the spinal cord or medulla. Neurological disorders developing after the fracture are the result of mobility from inadequate early treatment. It is the results of inadequate early treatment which have given this fracture a sinister reputation.

6. The fracture should be reduced by skeletal traction through a skull caliper. The reduction should be maintained for six weeks by continuous traction, and this should be followed by a period of six weeks in a plaster.

7. The increasing definition of the fracture-line seen in the radiographs of some patients indicates non-union.