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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 4 | Pages 673 - 675
1 Jul 1994
Coventry M


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 3 | Pages 485 - 487
1 May 1994
Lennox I Cobb A Knowles J Bentley G

We describe 83 knees (69 patients) which had had patellectomy for anterior knee pain (52), patellofemoral osteoarthritis (25) or comminuted fractures (6) between 1942 and 1978. The patients were questioned about their symptoms and the function of the operated knee 14 to 50 years after operation. In the group with anterior knee pain, 76% achieved good results and were satisfied with the operation. Only 54% of the osteoarthritis group had satisfactory relief of pain and most had progressive deterioration of function. Sixteen patients who had had unilateral patellectomy were assessed by dynamometry, ultrasound and radiography. The average quadriceps muscle power was 60% of that on the normal side although two patients had stronger muscles in their operated than in their unoperated legs.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 2 | Pages 240 - 244
1 Mar 1994
Alsema R Deutman R Mulder T

In 1988 we reported a ten-year review of 83 surviving patients from a group of 135 (146 prostheses) who had undergone primary hip replacement using the Stanmore prosthesis. We have now reviewed 44 of these patients at 15 to 16 years. Four patients had undergone revision, but the other 40 were all satisfied with the result of their hip replacement, 36 having little or no pain. Functional activities had decreased, but were still adequate for their average age of 81 years. There had been definite migration of the cup and/or femoral component in three hips, wear of the cup in ten and resorption of the calcar in six. Of the 24 hips inserted with radiopaque cement, eight showed an increase in radiolucent lines at the acetabular interface. The cumulative survival rate of the prosthesis was 91% at 15 to 16 years.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 1 | Pages 133 - 136
1 Jan 1994
Clain M Baxter D

We examined 16 feet, 33 to 133 months (mean 83) after simultaneous calcaneocuboid and talonavicular fusions performed for a variety of painful disorders of the hindfoot. Objectively, four feet were rated excellent, eight good, four fair and none poor. There was one asymptomatic nonunion of the talonavicular joint. Progressive degenerative arthritis of the ankle was seen in six patients and of the naviculocuneiform joint in seven. Biomechanically, simultaneous calcaneocuboid and talonavicular arthrodesis is better than an isolated talonavicular fusion and is a simple and effective alternative to triple arthrodesis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 5 | Pages 696 - 698
1 Nov 1987
Thomas A Afshar F

The technique and results of microsurgical techniques for lumbar disc protrusions in 60 patients are presented. All patients were followed up for a minimum of 2.5 years, and 91% had good or excellent results. The only patient with a recurrent disc sequestration had a good result after a second operation.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 1 | Pages 80 - 83
1 Jan 1987
Jorgensen U Sonne-Holm S Lauridsen F Rosenklint A

We report the results of a prospective longitudinal study of 147 athletes who had had a meniscectomy for an isolated meniscus injury. The patients were reviewed in detail after median periods of 4.5 years and 14.5 years and the results analysed. The frequency of complaints related to the operation increased from 53% at 4.5 years to 67% at 14.5 years, while demonstrable knee instability increased from 10% to 36%. The incidence of radiographic changes of degeneration rose from 40% to 89% and at late review 8% of patients had definite osteoarthritis by the criteria of Ahlback (1968). In consequence 46% had given up or reduced their sporting activity, and 6.5% had changed their occupation. Radiographic deterioration started after the 4.5-year review in 49% of the patients and was more frequent after lateral than medial meniscectomy.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 5 | Pages 787 - 790
1 Nov 1986
Olsen N Ejsted R Krogh P

The St Georg modular knee replacement has been studied in 59 cases with an observation period ranging from 28 to 73 months. In 47% of the knees both compartments were replaced; five of the six poor results were in this group. These were revised to a hinge arthroplasty or, in one case, to an arthrodesis. Other complications were few and insignificant. There were no infections. We concluded that unicompartmental knee arthroplasty can be recommended when joint involvement is localised to one compartment only. With more generalised joint disease we prefer a semiconstrained total condylar prosthesis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 5 | Pages 656 - 659
1 Nov 1984
Stillwell A Menelaus M

Of 47 patients with spina bifida who had had transplantation of the iliopsoas more than 10 years previously, 32 (68%) were community walkers, 3 were household walkers and 12 were non-walkers. Comparison with other published reports showed that, at the very least, the patients reviewed had not had their walking ability jeopardized by the inevitable loss of hip flexor power. Furthermore, all but three of the community walkers were able to climb and descend stairs. There was a high proportion of non-walkers in those patients whose operation had been performed in the first year of life and such early surgery is no longer recommended. We also found that the pre-operative assessment of muscle power had, in some patients, been inaccurate. Finally, we found that, at review, the power of the transferred muscles was poor, suggesting that transplantation is beneficial because it achieves permanent and major reduction in hip flexor power; this usually prevents recurrent hip flexion deformity and dislocation.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 3 | Pages 352 - 354
1 Aug 1977
Wilkinson J

Thirty-one patients have been reviewed four and a half to thirteen years after total excision of the patella for fracture. This operation did not give the uniformly excellent results previously reported by some authors. The type of incision used was unimportant in the long term. Immobilisation in plaster-of-Paris for any period between one and eight weeks after operation had no adverse effect on the long-term results. There was no correlation between the amount of calcification or ectopic bone formation found in the patellar tendon and the degree of function or discomfort in the joint. There was no evidence that osteoarthritis is an inevitable sequel to patellectomy in man. Maximal recovery of knee function may take up to three years after patellectomy. In this series 22% of patients had excellent results, 39% good results and 39% poor results, according to defined criteria. The implications of these findings are discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 6 | Pages 814 - 821
1 Nov 1992
Pellegrini V Hughes S Evarts C

We implanted 57 uncemented cobalt-chrome porous-coated collarless femoral components into 51 patients (mean age 49 years). At review, five to eight years postoperatively, good or excellent results were recorded in 70% by the Mayo Clinic hip evaluation and in 84% by the Harris hip score. Revision for aseptic loosening of the femoral stem was necessary in only one hip. Thigh pain diminished with time and was present in only two hips at the time of review. Endosteal bone formation was seen at the junction of the smooth and the porous segments of the stem in 94% of hips and in 60% it continued after three years. In 90% of hips, proximal femoral atrophy did not progress after three years. Discontinuous radiolucent lines were seen around 30% of stems, most commonly in zones I, IV and VII. They were not progressive in 94% and their presence did not correlate with the clinical outcome.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 2 | Pages 325 - 326
1 Mar 1989
Burkhart S Peterson H


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 5 | Pages 772 - 776
1 Nov 1988
Kannus P Jarvinen M

We have reviewed 32 patients who sustained a substantial knee ligament injury during adolescence when their knee epiphyses were open. They were all treated non-operatively and re-examined and evaluated in detail after an average of eight years. There were 25 Grade II partial tears and seven Grade III complete tears. After Grade II injuries the functional results were excellent or good, though static instability had not improved from the initial post-traumatic examination. The long-term results of Grade III injuries were poor, because of chronic functional instability, with continuous symptoms and some post-traumatic osteoarthritis. The results of non-operative treatment for Grade III ligament injuries were not acceptable.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 3 | Pages 439 - 441
1 May 1986
Giladi M Milgrom C Kashtan H Stein M Chisin R Dizian R

Of 66 recruits who sustained stress fractures during basic training and returned to training after a period of rest, seven (10.6%) suffered recurrent fractures within one year. None of the recurrences was at the original anatomical site. All of the recruits with recurrent stress fractures had had at least one of their initial stress fractures in the femur. This suggests that a femoral stress fracture carries a high risk of recurrence at other sites.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 3 | Pages 340 - 343
1 May 1984
Bourne R Hunter G Rorabeck C Macnab J

Thirty-three Girdlestone's arthroplasties used to salvage infected total hip replacements were followed for a mean of 6.2 years to assess the efficacy of this procedure. Subjective and objective assessment was obtained at the time of review. Gram-negative organisms, retained cement, bony sequestra and secondary healing were common features of the five patients (15%) whose wounds discharged for more than four weeks after operation. Girdlestone's arthroplasty provided satisfactory pain relief in 91% of patients, and control of infection in 97%. Although leg-length discrepancy (mean 4 cm) and a Trendelenburg gait made walking difficult and tiring , 42% were satisfied with their functional ability; 85% needed walking aids, and 3 patients could not walk at all and were confined to bed or a chair. Overall, 79% were satisfied. Objectively, the mean Harris hip rating was 60; however, if patients with multiple joint problems were excluded, this score increased to 77. Girdlestone's arthroplasty seems a reasonable salvage procedure in the management of an infected total hip replacement and the results seem to improve with time.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 4 | Pages 417 - 420
1 Nov 1977
Ransford A Hughes S

Twenty patients with complete brachial plexus lesions were reviewed approximately nine and a half years after injury. Thirteen were amputees and seven had received no surgical treatment. Amputation did not alleviate pain and a prosthesis was frequently of no greater use of the patient than the useless limb it replaced: only two of the thirteen amputees were true prosthetic users and they both had dominant limb involvement, the rest adapting easily to being one-handed. Initial treatment should therefore be conservative, with intensive rehabilitation and retraining. It is recommended that amputation should not be considered until a year after injury and only if the flail limb causes repulsion, prevents sporting activities or if the patient has difficulty in converting to the non-dominant limb. In no instance should smputation be done for relief of pain.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 58-B, Issue 1 | Pages 102 - 106
1 Feb 1976
Kikuchi S Hasue M Watanabe M Hasebe K

A case of the Jansen type of metaphysial dysostosis, followed for fifteen years from childhood to the age of nineteen, is reported. Radiographs taken at five years revealed the characteristic metaphysial changes in all the tubular bones, especially those of the hands and feet. The acetabular and glenoid areas, the costochondral junctions and the sternal ends of the clavicles were also involved. Radiographs taken at nineteen years, however, showed only marked deformities, which shows that the involvement of the metaphyses can regress by the end of growth. Biopsy of the lower end of radius at the age of twelve revealed changes in the growth plate or physis, especially in the zone of resting cartilage. This finding suggests that cellular function in this zone is disturbed by some unknown mechanism. Hence, the term physial dysostosis may be more accurate than metaphysial dysostosis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 4 | Pages 638 - 647
1 Nov 1969
Apley AG Millner WF Porter DS

1. A total of 120 Moore's arthroplasties in 111 patients were reviewed one to nine years after operation.

2. There was striking reduction in the severity of pain in 105 out of the 120 hips reviewed. Range of movement was improved in most patients but the degree of independence was improved less often. The reasons for this are discussed.

3. We draw the following conclusions regarding the place of Moore's arthroplasty. Firstly, it was a natural step in the evolution towards total hip replacement, an operation which promises to give more complete relief of symptoms and which seems likely to replace Moore's arthroplasty as the treatment of choice in osteoarthritis of the hip in the elderly. Secondly, Moore's arthroplasty is still a rational procedure for the treatment of degeneration if the acetabulum is not involved—for instance, in idiopathic avascular necrosis of the femoral head. Thirdly, it is certainly a valuable operation for some cases of recent fracture of the femoral neck. Avascular necrosis of the femoral head after trifin nailing can be satisfactorily treated by Moore's arthroplasty, particularly in the early stages before the acetabulum becomes involved. Finally, Moore's arthroplasty gave many fairly elderly patients considerable relief of pain at a time when nothing better was available. Much of the relief afforded has proved to be lasting, but deterioration sometimes occurred with time. In the few patients whose deterioration amounted to failure a definite cause for the failure was found. In the majority the deterioration was slight, and it seems likely that the operation will last most of these elderly patients for the rest of their lives.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 94-B, Issue 2 | Pages 158 - 162
1 Feb 2012
Sternheim A Backstein D Kuzyk PRT Goshua G Berkovich Y Safir O Gross AE

We report the use of porous metal acetabular revision shells in the treatment of contained bone loss. The outcomes of 53 patients with 50% acetabular bleeding host bone contact were compared with a control group of 49 patients with > 50% to 85% bleeding host bone contact. All patients were treated with the same type of trabecular metal acetabular revision shell. The mean age at revision was 62.4 years (42 to 80) and the mean follow-up of both groups was 72.4 months (60 to 102). Clinical, radiological and functional outcomes were assessed. There were four (7.5%) mechanical failures in the 50% host bone contact group and no failures in the > 50% host bone contact group (p = 0.068). Out of both groups combined there were four infections (3.9%) and five recurrent dislocations (4.9%) with a stable acetabular component construct that were revised to a constrained liner. Given the complexity of the reconstructive challenge, porous metal revision acetabular shells show acceptable failure rates at five to ten years’ follow-up in the setting of significant contained bone defects. This favourable outcome might be due to the improved initial stability achieved by a high coefficient of friction between the acetabular implant and the host bone, and the high porosity, which affords good bone ingrowth.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 1 | Pages 118 - 122
1 Jan 1994
Huber H Gerber C

We reviewed 25 children who presented consecutively with voluntary (habitual) subluxation of the shoulder. Thirty-six shoulders were involved and symptoms had been present for an average period of 12 years. Eighteen children were managed by 'skillful neglect': all these had become fully active in the profession of their choice and were satisfied with the outcome. Two of them had required shoulder surgery in adult life but only after trauma. Seven children (ten shoulders) had undergone stabilising operations during childhood with the aim of preventing later degenerative arthritis. These patients were also active in their selected professions, but only three (five of the ten shoulders) had good results: two shoulders had recurrent instability, two were painful and one was stiff. None of the shoulders in either group had developed osteoarthritic changes. There was no association with emotional or psychiatric problems. We conclude that voluntary subluxation of the shoulder in children has a favourable prognosis and that there is no indication for surgical intervention during childhood.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 1 | Pages 118 - 121
1 Jan 1992
Hede A Larsen E Sandberg H

Two hundred patients with a meniscal lesion were peroperatively allocated to partial or total meniscectomy in a random manner. The results were compared at one year and at 6.3 to 9.8 years (median 7.8). After one year more patients with partial meniscectomy (90%) than with total meniscectomy (80%) had no complaints. At the later review these figures were 62% and 52%, respectively (p = 0.18). However, patients with partial meniscectomy had higher functional scores. The deterioration in function between the first review and the second showed no significant difference in the two treatment groups. The incidence of mediolateral instability rose from 8% to 47% and was more frequent after total than after partial meniscectomy. Between the two reviews the radiological signs of knee degeneration increased with no difference between the two treatment groups.