HIV predisposes patients to opportunistic infections. However, with the establishment of Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy (HAART), patients’ CD4 counts are maintained, as is a near normal life expectancy. This study aimed to establish the impact of HIV on the bacteriology of spondylodiscitis in a region in which tuberculosis (TB) is endemic, and to identify factors that might distinguish between them. Between January 2014 and December 2015, 63 consecutive cases of spontaneous spondylodiscitis were identified from a single-centre, prospectively maintained database. Demographics, presenting symptoms, blood results, HIV status, bacteriology, imaging, and procedure undertaken were reviewed and comparisons made of TB, non-TB, and HIV groups. There were 63 patients (22 male, 41 female) with a mean age of 42.0 years (11 to 78; Aims
Patients and Methods
We obtained samples of spinal accessory nerve from patients undergoing radical surgery for tumours or nerve grafting in the neck. These were analysed by light and electron
We present the case of a 63-year-old woman who sustained an acrylic cement burn of the sciatic nerve at hip replacement. She was treated by resection of the damaged segment and grafting. Electron
1. The orientation of collagen fibres of the menisci of the knee has been demonstrated by polarised light
The purpose of this study was to determine whether intracellular After stabilizing with Kirschner wire, we created a midshaft femur fracture in Sprague-Dawley rats and infected the wound with green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged Aims
Methods
We studied factors contributing to the initiation of fracture and failure of a zirconia ceramic femoral head. The materials retrieved during a revision total hip replacement were submitted to either visual, stereomicroscopic and scanning electron
Teratomas in the spinal cord are rare. We report a case in a 54-year-old man. CT scans revealed tumours of different densities within the spinal canal; this heterogeneity may help to differentiate teratoma from other spinal cord tumours. After resection of the tumours under
An extremely strong mechanical bond between cement and bone was observed in three patients with cemented hip protheses who underwent revision operations. The nature of the bone--cement attachment was studied by electron
Results are given of a study of four cases of osteogenesis imperfecta using biophysical methods comprising microradiography,
1. A method is described for the in vivo and in vitro study of osteogenesis by implanting a modified transparent chamber in half lop-eared rabbits (as originated by Sandison 1928). This method allows the daily observation and photography of the developing bone and the study of its intimate connection with the vascularity of the area. 2. The osteogenetic potential of a variety of substances can also be investigated by this method. The tissue in the chamber can easily be prepared for its final examination by optical and electron
Preclinical data showed poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) loaded with microsilver to be effective against a variety of bacteria. The purpose of this study was to assess patient safety of PMMA spacers with microsilver in prosthetic hip infections in a prospective cohort study. A total of 12 patients with prosthetic hip infections were included for a three-stage revision procedure. All patients received either a gentamicin-PMMA spacer (80 g to 160 g PMMA depending on hip joint dimension) with additional loading of 1% (w/w) of microsilver (0.8 g to 1.6 g per spacer) at surgery 1 followed by a gentamicin-PMMA spacer without microsilver at surgery 2 or vice versa. Implantation of the revision prosthesis was carried out at surgery 3.Objectives
Methods
Specimens of tissue from haemophilic synovium and articular cartilage were collected from 39 patients during reconstructive surgery. They were studied by histochemistry, electron
We obtained specimens of growth-plate cartilage from four patients with osteogenesis imperfecta. Light
Three madreporic prostheses in two patients were examined to evaluate resorption and formation of the surrounding bone tissue. All three prostheses were firmly fixed and had no clinical or radiographic signs of loosening. Transverse sections were examined by scanning electron
We studied the most superficial layer of macroscopically normal articular cartilage obtained from human femoral heads, using polarising
We cultured human osteoblasts from trabecular bone explants and confirmed their phenotype by alkaline phosphatase assay, increased cyclic adenosine monophosphate production in response to prostaglandin E2 and radiographic micro-analysis of nodules of calcification. The osteoblasts were seeded on to demineralised human bone fragments and examined at ten-day intervals over a 50-day period by scanning electron
Ischaemic preconditioning is a process by which exposure of a tissue to a short period of non-damaging ischaemic stress leads to resistance to the deleterious effects of a subsequent prolonged ischaemic stress. It has been extensively described in the heart, but few studies have examined the possibility that it can occur in skeletal muscle. We have used a rat model of ischaemia of one limb to examine this possibility. Exposure of the hind limb to a period of ischaemia of five minutes and reperfusion for five minutes significantly protected the tibialis anterior muscle against the structural damage induced by a subsequent period of limb ischaemia for four hours and reperfusion for one hour. This protection was evident on examination of the muscle by both light and electron
Full thickness samples of articular cartilage were removed from areas of chondromalacia on the medial and "odd" facets of the patellae of 21 adults and examined by histology, autoradiography and electron
1. Human articular cartilage from normal femoral heads and from cases of osteoarthrosis in subjects of various ages has been examined histologically and by electron