Two children with radial club hand and absence of the biceps muscle were treated by centralisation of the ulna into the carpus and triceps transfer. The two operations were performed only a short time apart so that the period between the procedures could be used to stretch the triceps and to enable the children to adapt to an altered position of the wrist and to mobility of the elbow at one step and following a single period of plaster
1. One hundred and forty-two cases of extra-articular arthrodesis of quiescent tuberculous hips with fibrous ankylosis have been reviewed. 2. The methods used were the ilio-femoral graft with and without osteotomy, and the ischio-femoral graft by the Brittain or Foley technique. 3. Success occurs more frequently when the grafting operation is combined with or followed by a femoral osteotomy. 4. It is suggested that this success is due largely to the increased
We compared the long-term outcome in 61 patients (62 fractures) treated operatively or conservatively for an acute fracture of the carpal scaphoid. A total of 30 fractures was randomised to conservative treatment using a cast and 32 to operative treatment using a Herbert bone screw. The duration of sick leave was shorter for patients treated by operation, but this was only significant in patients with blue-collar occupations. There were no differences between the groups in respect of function, radiological healing of the fracture, or carpal arthritis after follow-up at 12 years. Those managed by operation showed radiological signs of arthritis of the scaphotrapezial joint more often, but this finding did not correlate with subjective symptoms. Operative treatment of an acute fracture of the scaphoid allows early return of function and should be regarded as an alternative to conservative treatment in patients in whom
In type-II fractures of the odontoid process, the treatment is either conservative in a halo vest or primary surgical stabilisation. Since nonunion, requiring prolonged
We describe a new method for the reconstruction of ruptures of the patellar ligament or the quadriceps tendon, using the flexible open-weave polyester Leeds-Keio prosthetic ligament. Of 25 operations performed since 1985, we were able to review 18 patients (19 knees) with a mean follow-up of 3.5 years (3 to 6.5). No patient had required
Radiographs of the scaphoid after injury are difficult to interpret, and bone scintigraphy is widely used to increase the accuracy of diagnosis, though many fractures suspected on scintigraphy cannot be confirmed radiologically. We have reviewed the clinical consequences, after one year, of managing suspected scaphoid fractures according to the bone-scan results. We studied 160 patients, 35 of whom had initially positive radiographs and were treated in a cast for 12 weeks. The other 125 had bone scintigraphy and were managed according to the result. After a minimum of one year 119 patients were reviewed. Scintigraphically suspected scaphoid fracture could not be confirmed radiologically in 25%. There were no cases of nonunion. The long period of
We compared fibrin sealant, polydioxanone (PDS) pins and Kirschner wires in the fixation of osteochondral fractures in rabbit knees. Standardised osteochondral fractures of the right medial femoral condyle were made in 56 adult New Zealand white rabbits. There were equal groups of control knees, and those which had Kirschner-wire, fibrin-sealant or PDS-pin fixation. No external
We present a study of 30 fusion operations in 26 rheumatoid arthritics with cervical spine instability. Atlanto-axial instability was present in 15, of whom 12 were fused; three had cord involvement and all made a partial or complete recovery following fusion. Cranial settling necessitated cranio-cervical fusion in four patients; all fused, and one with myelopathy was relieved. Subaxial instability required fusion in seven cases; two postoperative deaths followed the only two anterior interbody fusions. Posterior fusion was successful in the other five, with remission of neurological compromise in the three with myelopathy and one with radiculopathy. We conclude that neurological compromise in an unstable but mobile rheumatoid cervical spine can usually be brought to remission by
Five cases are presented of bilateral simultaneous rupture of the quadriceps tendon and the English literature of six isolated case reports is reviewed. All the patients were men, and most were over 50 years old. The injury often happens in elderly people and there is diagnostic confusion with other causes of inability to use the legs, notably with mild strokes. In three of our five cases there was a delay in diagnosis. The cardinal features are diffuse swelling around the knee, a visible or palpable suprapatellar defect and the inability to lift the straight leg despite a functioning quadriceps and normal activity in all other muscle groups in the leg. In all our patients operative repair was undertaken, followed by six weeks
Eighty-one patients treated by patellectomy for osteoarthritis have been reviewed. Eighty-seven knees were examined with a mean follow-up period of six and a half years. Clinical and radiological assessment was carried out and the results have been analysed. A good result was achieved in 53 per cent, a fair result in 26 per cent and a poor result in 21 per cent. The overall result did not deteriorate significantly with time and the radiological appearance of the tibiofemoral joint deteriorated minimally. Pain before operation, radiological changes at the patellofemoral and tibiofemoral joints and the duration of
1. Orthopaedic treatment of joint deformities in thirteen patients with haemophilia is reviewed over a period of seven years. 2. Forms of treatment discussed include open operation, manipulation under general anaesthesia, continuous traction, splintage and physiotherapy. The amount of intravenous therapy required for each form of treatment is indicated. 3. In discussing prevention of joint deformity the histories of a further eighteen patients have been taken into account. It is concluded that initially painless haemarthroses provide the main threat to joint deformity in haemophilia. 4. The best preventive treatment is early
1 . A series of 343 tibial shaft fractures proceeding to sound union in adults, and 192 fractures in children, was studied. Groups of fractures differing from each other only in the one particular variable under consideration were compared. 2. The severity of the injury (as assessed by the degree of displacement, of comminution and of compound wounding) was found to be an important determinant of speed of fracture union and of incidence of delayed and non-union. A simple classification of severity of injury is described. 3. Distraction delayed healing. Traction which avoided distraction had no effect on the rate of union of fractures of moderate severity compared with cases of similar severity of injury treated by
This is a retrospective study of primary repairs of flexor pollicis longus in 16 children under 15 years of age. Patients with injuries to the median or ulnar nerve at the wrist, crush injuries, skin loss or fracture were excluded. Repairs were carried out within 24 hours using a modified Kessler technique. The mean follow-up was for two years. The final results were evaluated using the criteria of Buck-Gramko and Tubiana. They were good or excellent in all except one patient who had a secondary tendon rupture. When compared with the non-injured thumb, however, there was a significant decrease in active interphalangeal flexion (>
30°) in one-third of cases. A new method of assessment is proposed for the recovery of function of the flexor pollicis tendon which is more suitable for children. Postoperative
We report the results in 24 consecutive patients treated from 1976 to 1991 for nonunion of olecranon fractures. Their mean age was 42 years, and the mean interval from fracture to treatment for nonunion was 19 months. Management was by rehabilitation and activity as tolerated for three, continued
We performed a prospective, randomised study on 110 patients more than 50 years old with fractures of the distal radius to compare the outcome of conservative treatment with that using remodellable bone cement (Norian skeletal repair system, SRS) and
Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in 152 patients was treated by Luque L-rod instrumentation and early mobilisation without external support. This series was compared with a matched group of 156 patients treated by Harrington instrumentation and
Forty-one arthrodeses of the shoulder in thirty-nine patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis (thirty women, nine men) have been reviewed. Using internal fixation and external splints the position of the shoulder was maintained in 55 degrees of abduction, 25 degrees of horizontal flexion and enough internal rotation to allow the patient to reach the mouth. The mean period of
1. Thirty-five children suffering from a mild illness with narrowing of an intervertebral disc have been studied. 2. Backache was the presenting symptom in only a small proportion of children, vague aching in the legs being almost as common at the onset. 3. Stiffness of the affected part of the spine is often present, but there may be no abnormal signs in the back. 4. Radiographs reveal a narrowed disc space with adjacent bony changes. There is usually progressive narrowing of the disc space which may go on to fusion of the affected vertebrae. Less commonly there is reconstitution of the affected disc. 5. The symptoms and signs quickly subside with
1. Forty-eight cases of causalgia are reviewed and the clinical features are briefly described. 2. Multiple nerve injuries are common and the pain is often associated with all the injured nerves. In the upper limb there was always an incomplete lesion of the lower trunk or medial cord of the brachial plexus, or of the median nerve. In the lower limb there was always an incomplete lesion of the medial popliteal division of the sciatic, the medial popliteal, or the posterior tibial nerve. These nerves carry most of the sympathetic fibres to the hand and foot. With two exceptions all the nerve lesions were at or above the level of the knee or elbow. 3. Sympathectomy gives marked relief of pain in most cases of causalgia. Prompt treatment is essential to prevent the crippling deformities which follow prolonged voluntary
We have investigated whether assessment of blood flow to the proximal scaphoid can be used to predict nonunion in acute fractures of the scaphoid. We studied 32 fractures of the scaphoid one to two weeks after injury, by dynamic fat-suppressed T1-weighted gradient-echo MRI after the intravenous administration of gadopentetate dimeglumine (0.1 mmol/kg body-weight). Steepest slope values (SSV) and percentage enhancement values (%E) were calculated for the distal and proximal fragments and poles. All the fractures were treated by