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Volume 40-B, Issue 3 August 1958

Philip Wiles
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THE JOURNAL Pages 377 - 377
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Philip Wiles
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VERTEBRA PLANA Pages 378 - 384
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A. T. Fripp
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R. Merle D'aubigné J. P. Dejouany
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1. An operation to re-establish the continuity of the bone after resection of tumours of the lower end of the femur or upper end of the tibia is described.

2. Sound bony union may be obtained, allowing walking with weight bearing after three to four months.

3. The combination of a massive tibial or femoral graft (Juvara procedure) with an intramedullary nail, a massive homogenous graft, and fixation of the patella to the autograft to accelerate its revascularisation. has given constant and rapid bony union in five cases.

4. This possibility gives real value to wide resection in the treatment of severe cases of giant-cell tumours. especially those that are recurrent. osteolytic or suspect of malignancy.

5. Its value in the treatment of sarcoma cannot be assessed in so short a series.


C. C. Jeffery
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1. Thirteen cases of non-union of the epiphysis of the lateral condyle of the humerus were studied. Ten followed minor lateral luxations of the epiphysis; three were sequelae of open reduction and soft-tissue suture of major displacements.

2. In three cases in which non-union developed while the patient was under observation, union was secured after bone grafting by a technique described.


R. T. Ahern
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The results obtained from combined chemotherapy and radical surgery in eighteen patients with trochanteric tuberculosis have been satisfactory so far, although the period of observation is still short. The results compare very favourably with those of all other methods of treatment.


W. P. U. Jackson
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1. The syndrome of osteoporosis is reviewed and its various causes are mentioned. Osteoporosis in youngish patients without any demonstrable cause is referred to as "idiopathic." The scant literature on this condition is reviewed. Its clinical, radiological, biochemical and histological features are considered.

2. A series of thirty-eight cases is analysed, and illustrative case histories are described. The peculiarities of the disease as it is seen in women are discussed, particularly the relationship to pregnancy and lactation, which appear to act as precipitating factors, rather than being primarily causative.

3. The differential diagnosis is discussed. Osteogenesis imperfecta may not always be easy to distinguish; since it is really a "congenital osteoporosis" this is hardly surprising.

4. The following possible etiological factors are propounded (apart from pregnancy): nutritional, occupational, lack of sex hormone, liver dysfunction, loss of protein, diabetes, premature ageing, hypophosphatasia, "alarm reaction," and inheritance. None of them can be incriminated except in the odd case. The relationship between osteoporosis and idiopathic hypercalcuria is mentioned. The only conclusion regarding etiology is that some people are simply more prone to bone loss than are others, and in these a variety of accentuating factors may render the disorder clinically apparent.

5. The treatment of the condition is unsatisfactory, although occasionally a positive calcium balance may be obtained with sex hormones or intravenous infusion of plasma albumin or whole plasma. The general tendency seems to be towards clinical improvement (biologically "stabilisation" rather than improvement), but some patients become permanently crippled.


Alexander L. Zaoussis J. I. P. James
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1. The belief that the cessation of spinal growth and curve progression coincides with the completion of growth in the iliac apophyses has been confirmed in a review of material from 224 cases. This applies also to paralytic curves.

2. In a high number of cases this ossification centre showed an asymmetrical development on the two sides of the pelvis. The appearance of a separate posterior centre of ossification is also common, and probably represents an advanced stage in the growth of the iliac apophysis.

3. Menarche and the growth of the apophyses of the vertebral bodies almost always occurred in advance of the iliac apophyses. They should be regarded as early signs of maturation, not reliable in the prognosis of curve progression.

4. The growth of the iliac apophysis appeared to be unaffected by poliomyelitis.


Erik Moberg
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1. It was observed clinically that tactile gnosis varies directly with the sudomotor function in the hand.

2. Two methods of fingerprinting were elaborated to register the sudomotor function, and consequently the tactile gnosis objectively. They are sensitive, simple to perform and suitable for clinical work. Their anatomical background, sources of error and relative value are discussed.

3. The correspondence between the sudomotor function, determined with these methods, and the tactile gnosis was established. This was done by, firstly, comparing the regions which did not perspire with the ones which became insensible on total denervation of a region of the hand; secondly, by examining the loss of function after nerve block; and thirdly, by comparing the tactile gnosis and sudomotor function in cases of residual median nerve defect.

4. These two qualities do not accompany each other in skin grafts. Grafts regain sudomotor function but never tactile gnosis.

5. A practical procedure for determining the functional value of the cutaneous sensibility in the hand is described.

6. Cases are related illustrating the usefulness of objective study of the sensibility in the hand.


J. P. Michail S. Theodorou K. Houliaras N. Siatis
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1. Two new cases of obstetrical separation of the upper femoral epiphysis are described.

2. Diagnosis in the first instance must be largely clinical, because radiological confirmation of the injury may be delayed.

3. The simple method of longitudinal traction is the treatment recommended.

4. It is notable that in our first case the ossification centre of the femoral head appeared at the exceptionally early age of fifteen days.


W. Peter Cockshott Adewale Omololu
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R. W. Butler R. A. McCance A. M. Barrett
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G. Blundell Jones R. L. Midgley G. Stewart Smith
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1. The clinical and pathological features are given of an example of the rare syndrome of progressive and massive osteolysis associated with haemangiomatous changes in the bones affected.

2. Twenty-six cases have been previously reported, but this is only the second from Britain. Only one other patient is considered to have died as a direct result of the disease.


DISAPPEARING BONES Pages 502 - 513
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S. M. Milner S. L. Baker
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A case is reported of a woman in whom the bones of one upper limb have been progressively disappearing during at least eleven years. Investigations have thrown no light on etiology or treatment.


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J. N. Aston
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Francisco Branco J. da Silva Horta
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1. A case of essential osteolysis, progressing for thirteen years and involving the right femur and pelvis of a boy who was thirteen years old at the time of onset, is presented.

2. The histological appearance of fragments of bone and soft tissue removed from the affected thigh is described.

3. No evidence that might throw light on the etiology of the disease was obtained from biochemical investigations or from the histological studies.

4. None of the many lines of treatment that were tried had any effect upon the progress of the disease.


J. B. Pyper
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1. Patients subjected to the flexor-extensor transplant have been reviewed. The results in forty feet were assessed by direct questioning and examination, and the results of a further five operations were assessed from the records.

2. Worthwhile improvement was gained in a little over half the cases. The chances of success are greatest when the symptoms are mildest.

3. The operation appears to be inadequate in certain respects and it seems doubtful whether it has any advantage over the multiple arthrodesis (Lambrinudi) operation.


G. A. Pollock
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A. C. Allison B. S. Blumberg
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1. Two unrelated families with a genetically determined arthritis-like syndrome of the joints of the hand and wrist are described.

2. The condition begins before puberty, is relatively painless and is not functionally disabling. The condition resembles that described by Thiemann and appears to fall into the group of avascular necrosis.

3. The appearance of the abnormality is controlled by a single autosomal gene which manifests itself in nearly all persons who are heterozygous for it. Two of the offspring of a marriage between affected persons showed much greater involvement than their siblings.

This suggests that they may represent the effect of the abnormal gene in double dose. If this is so, the type of inheritance cannot strictly be regarded as "dominant," since the abnormal homozygote is different from the heterozygote.


P. B. Cook
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A case of hyperparathyroidism from carcinoma of the parathyroid gland which recurred locally and metastasised to the lung is described. There was a history of renal lithiasis and peptic ulceration. Improvement followed initial surgical removal but the tumour recurred and death resulted from hyperparathyroidism.


W. G. Horton
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By polarising microscope and x-ray crystallographic techniques the annulus fibrosus has been shown to consist of regularly oriented sheets of collagen fibres. These results have been interpreted in terms of an elastic mechanism whereby thrust from the nucleus causes increased girth in the annulus. It is suggested that this is accomplished by a change in the angle between the axis of the fibres in adjacent uniaxial layers of the annulus. Furthermore, the loss of elasticity of the intervertebral disc associated with age would seem to be mainly due to changes occurring in the nucleus pulposus.


E. Storey
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1. When cortisone is administered to rabbits there is early rapid resorption of bone and a partial inhibition of new bone formation. After a few days the effect becomes less obvious, so that, if observations are made at later stages, the results may be ascribed then to simple inhibition of bone growth.

2. The effect of mechanical stress has been studied in the jaw. When tooth movement is induced mechanically there is, in ordinary circumstances, a resorption of bone on the side to which the tooth is moving (the "pressure" side) and bone formation on the opposite side (the "tension" side). After administration of cortisone there is increased resorption on the "pressure" side and there is greater resorption of connective tissues here. On the "tension" side there is resorption and inhibition of bone formation.

3. In the areas of stress, when cortisone is administered, collagen fibres are no longer in apposition, being separated by spaces presumably filled with altered ground substance; this kind of change may be responsible for many of the observed phenomena.

4. A.C.T.H. does not produce a demonstrable resorptive effect on bone or connective tissue until it has been administered for periods longer than is required for cortisone (three weeks); even then the change is not pronounced.

5. In the guinea pig there is slight delay in bone formation with large doses of both cortisone and A.C.T.H., but no significant bone resorption occurs.


C. H. G. Price
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1. Analyses are presented of comparable groups of the two commonest bone-forming tumours—osteochondroma and osteogenic sarcoma—derived from the following sources: Bristol Bone Tumour Register; British Empire Cancer Campaign Annual Report (1949); Stocks and Barrington (1925); Meyerding (1927); and Geschickter and Copeland (1949).

2. From this study, the following features emerge as characteristic and common to both tumours. 1) Both tumours are commoner in the male during the age periods 0-34 years, and over fifty years, with the possible exceptions of tumours of the humerus during early life and tumours of the pelvis. 2) The male preponderance is most marked for the appendicular long bones. 3) The male preponderance is greatest during the age period 15-34 years. 4) In the separate bones, these tumours tend to arise at a somewhat earlier age in the female. 5) In both sexes both tumours tend to arise at an earlier age in the bones of the upper arm and shoulder girdle than in those of the lower limb and pelvis. 6) Both tumours are related to an aberration of endochondral growth in length of bone.

3. The greater growth of the male, and differences in skeletal development in the two sexes, offer a simple and reasonably consistent explanation of these peculiarities and make it possible to discern the interplay of the three factors of age, sex and site of origin of the tumour.

4. From this concept it is possible to make a crude estimate of the factors of time and bulk of tissue which when combined may well account for the observed male preponderance of these tumours, and their anatomical distribution.


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Robert B. Duthie
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Donal Brooks
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G. C. Lloyd-Roberts
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Joseph Trueta
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J. G. Bonnin
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A. Rocyn Jones
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Philip Newman
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Ronald O. Murray
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A. J. Watson
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H. Jackson Burrows
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William Gissane
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D. Ll. Griffiths
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