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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1574 - 1579
1 Dec 2006
Pihlajamäki HK Ruohola J Weckström M Kiuru MJ Visuri TI

The incidence and long-term outcome of undisplaced fatigue fractures of the femoral neck treated conservatively were examined in Finnish military conscripts between 1970 and 1990. From 106 cases identified, 66 patients with 70 fractures were followed for a mean of 18.3 years (11 to 32). The original medical records and radiographs were studied and physical and radiological follow-up data analysed for evidence of risk factors for this injury. The development of avascular necrosis and osteoarthritis was determined from the follow-up radiographs and MR scans. The impact of new military instructions on the management of hip-related pain was assessed following their introduction in 1986. The preventive regimen (1986) improved awareness and increased the detected incidence from 13.2 per 100 000 service-years (1970 to 1986) to 53.2 per 100 000 (1987 to 1990). No patient developed displacement of the fracture or avascular necrosis of the femoral head, or suffered from adverse complications. No differences were found in MRI-measured hip joint spaces at final follow-up. The mean Harris Hip Score was 97 (70 to 100) and the Visual Analogue Scale 5.85 mm (0 to 44). Non-operative treatment, including avoidance of or reduced weight-bearing, gave favourable short- and long-term outcomes. Undisplaced fatigue fractures of the femoral neck neither predispose to avascular necrosis nor the subsequent development of osteoarthritis of the hip


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 53-B, Issue 1 | Pages 136 - 143
1 Feb 1971
Griffiths WEG Swanson SAV Freeman MAR

1. Thirty-seven specimens of the proximal third of the human femur were subjected to cyclically varying loads applied in a physiological direction to the femoral head, having maximum values of from four to thirteen times body weight. 2. Ten of these specimens sustained subcapital fractures of the femoral neck after numbers of cycles of loading varying from 123 to 8,193. 3. The maximum value of cyclic load needed to give fatigue fracture after 10,000 or fewer cycles was found to vary from about twelve times the body weight at ages twenty to fifty to about five times the body weight at age seventy or more. 4. In youth and in middle age the load levels mentioned above are greater than those encountered in normal living, but are comparable to those which may be applied to the femoral head during activities known to produce "fatigue" fractures clinically in young adults. 5. In the elderly the load levels mentioned above are within the range that can be applied in normal living. It is inferred that some femoral neck fractures in the elderly may be fatigue fractures caused by the cyclic loading of normal walking


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 4 | Pages 622 - 623
1 Nov 1948
Kitchin ID


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 2 | Pages 151 - 157
1 Feb 2024
Dreyer L Bader C Flörkemeier T Wagner M

Aims

The risk of mechanical failure of modular revision hip stems is frequently mentioned in the literature, but little is currently known about the actual clinical failure rates of this type of prosthesis. The current retrospective long-term analysis examines the distal and modular failure patterns of the Prevision hip stem from 18 years of clinical use. A design improvement of the modular taper was introduced in 2008, and the data could also be used to compare the original and the current design of the modular connection.

Methods

We performed an analysis of the Prevision modular hip stem using the manufacturer’s vigilance database and investigated different mechanical failure patterns of the hip stem from January 2004 to December 2022.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 30-B, Issue 2 | Pages 266 - 279
1 May 1948
Burrows HJ

1. A hope expressed in 1940, that further cases of spontaneous fracture of the lowest third of the apparently normal fibula would be described, has been fulfilled. The literature is here reviewed. Five further personal cases are added. 2. The clinical and radiographic features, diagnosis, treatment and results are considered in the light of the information so far available. Special note is made of misleading freedom of ankle and tarsal movements and the occasional absence of tenderness. 3. It is established that fractures of the lowest third occur particularly in two groups of subjects: 1) young male runners and skaters; 2) active and hard-pressed women of middle age and over. 4. In male runners and skaters the fracture usually occurs through slender, mainly cortical bone, two inches or more above the tip of the lateral malleolus; in middle-aged women the fracture is usually distal to the interosseous ligament through thicker, mainly cancellous bone, one and a half inches from the tip of the lateral malleolus. 5. The most convenient name for both groups of fractures in the lowest third is low fatigue fracture of the fibula. 6. A review of the literature of fatigue fracture of the uppermost third of the fibula shows that it is very often precipitated by jumping. The most convenient name for it is high fatigue fracture of the fibula. 7. Like all clinical classifications this distinction between low and high fractures has exceptions (a low fracture of one fibula in a runner was followed later by a high fracture of the other; most military fractures were high, but a few may have occurred at other levels). 8. Fatigue fracture of the fibula, high or low, may be bilateral. 9. A fracture similarly situated to the high fatigue fracture of the fibula has been frequent in parachute schools. It is a speculative possibility that military and parachutist fractures of the upper third of the fibula indicate the link between true fatigue fractures (as exemplified by march fractures with minimal trauma often repeated) and purely traumatic fractures (with adequate trauma applied once only)


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 4 | Pages 723 - 728
1 Nov 1972
Todd RC Freeman MAR Pirie CJ

1. The femoral head has been examined in specimens taken from cadavers, patients suffering subcapital fracture of the femoral neck and patients undergoing total replacement arthroplasty for osteoarthrosis and rheumatoid arthritis. 2. Lesions have been seen, some of which appear to be uniting fatigue fractures of individual trabeculae. 3. It is suggested that excessive cyclical loading, sometimes leading to fatigue fractures, may represent a fundamental pathological process of general importance in the evolution of certain skeletal and articular diseases


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 2 | Pages 215 - 221
1 Feb 2007
Krieg AH Hefti F

We evaluated 31 patients who were treated with a non-vascularised fibular graft after resection of primary musculoskeletal tumours, with a median follow-up of 5.6 years (3 to 26.7 years). Primary union was achieved in 89% (41 of 46) of the grafts in a median period of 24 weeks. All 25 grafts in 18 patients without additional chemotheraphy and/or radiotherapy achieved primary union, compared with 16 of the 21 grafts (76%; 13 patients) with additional therapy (p = 0.017). Radiographs showed an increase in diameter in 70% (59) of the grafts. There were seven fatigue fractures in six patients, but only two needed treatment. Non-vascularised fibular transfer is a simpler, less expensive and a shorter procedure than the use of vascularised grafts and allows remodelling of the fibula at the donor site. It is a biological reconstruction with good long-term results, and a relatively low donor site complication rate of 16%


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 11 | Pages 867 - 876
10 Nov 2022
Winther SS Petersen M Yilmaz M Kaltoft NS Stürup J Winther NS

Aims

Pelvic discontinuity is a rare but increasingly common complication of total hip arthroplasty (THA). This single-centre study evaluated the performance of custom-made triflange acetabular components in acetabular reconstruction with pelvic discontinuity by determining: 1) revision and overall implant survival rates; 2) discontinuity healing rate; and 3) Harris Hip Score (HHS).

Methods

Retrospectively collected data of 38 patients (39 hips) with pelvic discontinuity treated with revision THA using a custom-made triflange acetabular component were analyzed. Minimum follow-up was two years (mean 5.1 years (2 to 11)).


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 11_Supple_A | Pages 56 - 59
1 Nov 2014
Konan S Garbuz DS Masri BA Duncan CP

Non-modular tapered fluted, titanium stems are available for use in femoral revision. The combination of taper and flutes on the stem provides axial and rotational stability, respectively. The material and surface properties of the stem promotes bone on-growth. If the surgeon is confident and reasonably experienced in the surgical use of this sort of design and the case is relatively straightforward, a non-modular design is effective. It also potentially reduces implant inventory, and circumvents the potential problems of taper junction corrosion and fatigue fracture. There are reports of excellent survival, good clinical and functional results and evidence of subsequent increase in proximal bone stock. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B(11 Suppl A):56–9


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 7 | Pages 833 - 843
1 Jul 2022
Kayani B Baawa-Ameyaw J Fontalis A Tahmassebi J Wardle N Middleton R Stephen A Hutchinson J Haddad FS

Aims

This study reports the ten-year wear rates, incidence of osteolysis, clinical outcomes, and complications of a multicentre randomized controlled trial comparing oxidized zirconium (OxZr) versus cobalt-chrome (CoCr) femoral heads with ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) and highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) liners in total hip arthroplasty (THA).

Methods

Patients undergoing primary THA were recruited from four institutions and prospectively allocated to the following treatment groups: Group A, CoCr femoral head with XLPE liner; Group B, OxZr femoral head with XLPE liner; and Group C, OxZr femoral head with UHMWPE liner. All study patients and assessors recording outcomes were blinded to the treatment groups. The outcomes of 262 study patients were analyzed at ten years’ follow-up.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 3 | Pages 155 - 164
1 Mar 2023
McCarty CP Nazif MA Sangiorgio SN Ebramzadeh E Park S

Aims

Taper corrosion has been widely reported to be problematic for modular total hip arthroplasty implants. A simple and systematic method to evaluate taper damage with sufficient resolution is needed. We introduce a semiquantitative grading system for modular femoral tapers to characterize taper corrosion damage.

Methods

After examining a unique collection of retrieved cobalt-chromium (CoCr) taper sleeves (n = 465) using the widely-used Goldberg system, we developed an expanded six-point visual grading system intended to characterize the severity, visible material loss, and absence of direct component contact due to corrosion. Female taper sleeve damage was evaluated by three blinded observers using the Goldberg scoring system and the expanded system. A subset (n = 85) was then re-evaluated following destructive cleaning, using both scoring systems. Material loss for this subset was quantified using metrology and correlated with both scoring systems.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 37-B, Issue 4 | Pages 618 - 621
1 Nov 1955
Evans DL

1. Two cases of fatigue fracture of the ulna are reported. 2. Three cases previously reported are reviewed and a striking similarity with one of the present cases is noted. 3. In all cases the mechanism of injury appears to have been the same


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 56-B, Issue 4 | Pages 698 - 702
1 Nov 1974
Freeman MAR Todd RC Pirie CJ

1. Senile subcapital fractures in osteoporotic patients are due to fatigue, not to the impact of a fall, since they are preceded by the local accumulation of isolated trabecular fatigue fractures. 2. One pathological significance of the isolated trabecular fractures described by Todd, Freeman and Pirie (1972) has been demonstrated


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 36-B, Issue 4 | Pages 647 - 651
1 Nov 1954
Singer M Maudsley RH

1. Five patients with seven fatigue fractures of the lower third of the tibia are described; two had bilateral fractures. There is a striking similarity in the site and appearance of these fractures. 2. All occurred in middle-aged or elderly people without a history of unusual activity or illness. 3. The fractures are so nearly identical as to constitute an entity which, as far as we are aware, has not been described before


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 39-B, Issue 2 | Pages 302 - 305
1 May 1957
Murray DS

1. A case is described of fatigue fractures occurring in the lowest thirds of the right tibia and fibula simultaneously. 2. The fibular fracture was a runner's fracture. 3. The tibial fracture was ascribed to the application of a below-knee walking plaster to treat the fibular lesion. 4. Both fractures were slow in uniting. 5. The fractures occurred in a rapidly growing youth but no clinical evidence of an endocrine dysfunction was found


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 33-B, Issue 1 | Pages 36 - 46
1 Feb 1951
McFarland B

1. The results of the by-pass grafting operation in eleven cases of pseudarthrosis of the tibia in childhood are presented. 2. The operation was successful in securing sound bone union in nine cases, and unsuccessful in two. 3. The causes of failure in the two unsuccessful cases are analysed. 4. The possible causes of occurrence and persistence of tibial pseudarthrosis in childhood are discussed. 5. It is suggested that the pseudarthrosis results from a fatigue fracture of a congenitally abnormal tibia, but that its persistence depends entirely on mechanical factors. 6. There is evidence to suggest that the underlying congenital abnormality may arise from dysplasia of the mesenchyme


Aims

There are concerns regarding nail/medullary canal mismatch and initial stability after cephalomedullary nailing in unstable pertrochanteric fractures. This study aimed to investigate the effect of an additional anteroposterior blocking screw on fixation stability in unstable pertrochanteric fracture models with a nail/medullary canal mismatch after short cephalomedullary nail (CMN) fixation.

Methods

Eight finite element models (FEMs), comprising four different femoral diameters, with and without blocking screws, were constructed, and unstable intertrochanteric fractures fixed with short CMNs were reproduced in all FEMs. Micromotions of distal shaft fragment related to proximal fragment, and stress concentrations at the nail construct were measured.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 3 | Pages 374 - 378
1 May 1989
de Boer H Wood M

We report a retrospective review of 62 consecutive patients who had a vascularised fibular transfer to reconstruct a large skeletal defect. We were particularly interested in the bone dynamics of the vascularised graft, since fractures occurred in 25% of the cases at an average time of eight months after surgery. Hypertrophy was more common when the limb was mechanically loaded; it was enhanced where the graft was not bypassed by internal fixation. The length of the graft and the use of additional bone graft material had no influence on the incidence of stress fracture or on hypertrophy. We conclude that a vascularised graft should be protected against fatigue fracture during the first year, and that a gradual increase in mechanical loading will enhance remodelling and hypertrophy


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1214 - 1219
1 Nov 2004
Jafri AA Green SM Partington PF McCaskie AW Muller SD

Fatigue fractures which originate at stress-concentrating voids located at the implant-cement interface are a potential cause of septic loosening of cemented femoral components. Heating of the component to 44°C is known to reduce the porosity of the cement-prosthesis interface. The temperature of the cement-bone interface was recorded intra-operatively as 32.3°C. A simulated femoral model was devised to study the effect of heating of the component on the implant-cement interface. Heating of the implant and vacuum mixing have a synergistic effect on the porosity of the implant-cement interface, and heating also reverses the gradients of microhardness in the mantle. Heating of the implant also reduces porosity at the interface depending on the temperature. A minimum difference in temperature between the implant and the bone of 3°C was required to produce this effect. The optimal difference was 7°C, representing a balance between maximal reduction of porosity and an increased risk of thermal injury. Using contemporary cementing techniques, heating the implant to 40°C is recommended to produce an optimum effect


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 5 | Pages 720 - 724
1 Nov 1984
Brunet J Wiley J

Spondylolysis occurring after a spinal fusion is considered to result from operative damage to the pars interarticularis on both sides. Fourteen cases are reported, and compared with the 23 cases which have previously been published. The defects are usually recognised within five years of fusion, and usually occur immediately above the fusion mass. Other contributory causes may be: fatigue fracture from concentration of stress; damage and altered function of the posterior ligament complex; and degenerative disc disease immediately above or below the fusion. Fusion technique is critical, since virtually all cases occurred after posterior interlaminar fusions. This complication is easily overlooked in patients with recurrent back pain after an originally successful posterior spinal fusion