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Volume 61-B, Issue 4 November 1979

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G Meachim
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NG Sanerkin P Gallagher
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Sixty-two cases of chondrosarcoma of bone were reviewed and histologically graded as low, medium or high-grade tumours. After excluding patients dead from unrelated causes or lost to follow-up, forty cases were available for ten-year follow-up and fifty-eight for five-year follow-up. The rates of survival, recurrence and metastasis were analysed according to the histological grading. Recurrence was further analysed according to the adequacy of treatment. The results were compared with those previously reported in the literature. There was a ten-year survival rate of 58 per cent. Recurrence developed in 58 per cent and was uncontrollable in 29 per cent. The recurrence rate was 87 per cent with inadequate treatment and 15 per cent with adequate treatment. Recurrences outside the limb bones usually proved uncontrollable; recurrences in the limb bones were amenable to further, and if necessary repeated, operations. High-grade chondrosarcoma had a metastatic risk of 75 per cent and eventual mortality of 88 per cent. Medium-grade chondrosarcoma had a metastatic risk of 14 per cent and a mortality of 60 per cent. Low-grade chondrosarcoma had a metastatic risk of 5 per cent and a mortality of 29 per cent.


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JK Stanley R Owen S Koff
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A review of seventy-one children with sacral anomalies is presented. The aetiology is discussed and a classification of sacral anomalies is suggested, with three groups of patients: agenetic, dysgenetic and dysraphic. The clinical presentation of each group is discussed and the high incidence of congenital visceral and skeletal abnormalities is indicated in the dysgenetic group. The need for constant urological assessment is emphasised, particularly in the agenetic and dysraphic children.


DN Smith MH Harrison
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The correction of angular deformities of long bones by incomplete osteotomy, followed three weeks later by manual osteoclasis, overcomes the problem of secondary displacement sometimes seen after correction by complete osteotomy and makes internal fixation unnecessary. This paper presents an experience of twenty-six operations in eighteen patients. In all cases the deformity was corrected with excellent cosmetic and functional results. Complete bony union was achieved and there were no problems with displacement at the osteotomy site. Four cases are described in detail to illustrate use of the technique in different clinical situations.


D Younge D Drummond J Herring RL Cruess
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Experience in the management of fourteen children with melorheostosis has been reviewed. The principal and presenting clinical features were unilateral soft-tissue contractures associated with inequality of limb length. In contrast to the disease in adults, pain occurred infrequently and was never intense. The average interval between the discovery of the clinical features and the correct diagnosis was six years. The distinctive radiographic feature in the child was an endosteal pattern of hyperostosis marked by streakiness of the long bones and spotting of the small. This differs from the usual subperiosteal or extracortical pattern of hyperostosis seen in adults. The surgical treatment of the contractures proved difficult and recurrence of the deformity was the rule. Distal ischaemia occurred when the chronically contracted and flexed joint was rapidly extended.


GA Hunter RP Welsh HU Cameron WH Bailey
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The results of 140 total hip revision procedures for "non-septic" loosening, dislocation, and fracture of the femoral stem or shaft have been personally reviewed and rated by the Harris method. The minimum follow-up period was six months: thirty-three (24 per cent) showed excellent or good results, seventy-two (51 per cent) showed fair or poor results. Subsequent excision arthroplasty was performed in thirty-one patients. The infection rate for these revision procedures was very high, suggesting that many were already infected at the time of revision, and that every "loose" hip must be assumed to be infected until proved otherwise. The mortality rate of 3 per cent was surprisingly low after more than one major surgical procedure in these elderly patients.


GA Hunter
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Sixty-five total hip arthroplastics were reinserted after sepsis around the hip, positive cultures being obtained from fifty-six. Although 65 per cent of patients still have their implant in position, only sixteen of sixty-five (25 per cent) show an excellent or good result on a Harris rating. Twenty-three of sixty-five (35 per cent) subsequently required an excision arthroplasty. The indications and contraindications for this procedure are given.


F Langlais JL Roure P Maquet
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RA Mollan
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Estimations of serum alkaline phosphatase were carried out prospectively on a series of patients having a total hip replacement. The levels of serum alkaline phosphatase before operation indicated a group of patients who subsequently developed heterotopic ossification. Levels of this enzyme after operation did not indicate those patients who were developing heterotopic ossification.


JM Sikorski J Peters I Watt
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A new radiological technique is presented in which serial axial radiographs of the patellofemoral joints are taken under conditions in which the muscles about the knee and hip are contracted in a manner similar to that during weight-bearing. A form of analysis has been developed whereby patellar rotation can be measured in two planes and femoral rotation about its long axis inferred. A population of asymptomatic adults and children was investigated in this way and their results (regarded as normal) compared with those in fifteen children with idiopathic chondromalacia patellae. In the normal child the femur rotates medially with the onset of muscle activity; by contrast the children with chondromalacia show a reversal of this mechanism.


H Delgado-Martins
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This investigation has been performed to study the relationship between the articular surfaces of the patella and the femoral condyles with the knee extended. A computerised tomographic scanning technique was used on twelve normal subjects in whom it was shown that when the knee is in full extension the patella usually lies laterally and incongruently in contact with the lateral femoral condyle.


JA Vanhegan W Dabrowski GP Arden
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We have reviewed 100 Attenborough total knee replacements in eighty-two patients with a follow-up of one to four years and conclude that this prosthesis has a valuable place in the surgical management of patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis with severe involvement of the knee. In 85 per cent of these knees a good result was obtained with relief from pain, and in 77 per cent a useful range of movement with a stable knee. Only two patients with loosening and three with deep infection were seen in this series.


EA Williams EJ Hargadon DR Davies
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The results of thirty-one Manchester knee arthroplasties performed on twenty-eight patients are reviewed. There were sixteen patients with rheumatoid arthritis all of whom were satisfactory at the time of follow-up. Of the fifteen patients with osteoarthritis over half the arthroplasties failed after between twelve and thirty-six months. We suggest that resurfacing arthroplasty of the knee using the Manchester prosthesis should be used only for rheumatoid patients.


M Campanacci P Costa
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Resection of the distal femur or proximal tibia en bloc has been performed on twenty-six patients with primary bone tumours. The gap was filled with autogenous bone grafts stabilised with a long intramedullary nail, thus arthrodesing the knee. In two cases temporary stabilisation with a Kuntscher rod and acrylic cement was adopted because of adjuvant chemotherapy. Union was achieved in twenty-four cases (92 per cent). Infection was the main and practically the only major complication, occurring in five (19 per cent) of the cases: it healed with union in three, healed with non-union in one, and led to an above-knee amputation in the fifth case. Follow-up has been from one to eight years with an average of four years.


J Christie DW Lamb JM McDonald S Britten
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The growth of the stump has been studied in eighteen children with below-knee amputations. Measurements were available shortly after operation and later at skeletal maturity. It was found that all patients achieved less than expected growth and that the reduction was greater in those patients who had had amputation for congenital deformity.


D Truscelli A Lespargot G Tardieu
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Clinical assessment of equinus in children before and after operation was made over a twenty-year period (1958-1978), and three groups were defined. Forty-three muscles (Group I) had abnormal shortening without spasticity and the deformity progressed steadily despite immediate improvement after operation; this was considered to be the result of a lack of muscle growth during bone growth. Forty-one muscles (Group II) had both shortening and spasticity with an imbalance which might be unchanged after operation, or reversed or improved. Fourteen muscles (Group III) had spasticity only and progression was unpredictable and could not be defined. Improvement in gait was regularly observed in Group I in the early years after operation. In Groups II and III the results were variable. These results did not depend on surgical technique but on differences in pathophysiology.


A Jackson M Glasgow
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Thirty-seven patients have been reviewed after arthrodesis of the ankle in order to determine the reduction of dorsiflexion and plantarflexion of the foot, the incidence of tarsal hypermobility and its relevance to the clinical results of this procedure. Radiological methods of measuring movements in the foot and tarsus are described and applied to patients who had a normal foot on the opposite side which could be used as a control. Our findings suggest that tarsal hypermobility is not as common as has hitherto been supposed and that a stiff foot with minor radiological degenerative changes in the tarsal joints is quite compatible with an excellent result.


K Tayton P Thompson
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The operation of soft-tissue release and calcaneocuboid fusion, published by Dillwyn Evans in 1961, is described in detail and a long-term review of 118 club feet is presented. The average age of the patients at review was nearly seventeen years. All were resistant cases and in all the Dillwyn Evans "collateral operation", deliberately delayed by a policy of prolonged conservative treatment, had been the main surgical procedure.


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JM Fitton AB Nevelos
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Operative correction of congenital vertical talus in nine feet in six patients is described. The operation consists of the comprehensive lengthening of the tendons in the foot and full peritalar release without excision of the navicular; it is performed through a dorsal transverse incision.


JH Newman
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The clinical details of six patients who developed spontaneous dislocations in the foot or ankle are presented. All were shown to have diabetic neuropathy. This previously unreported condition can occur with a short history of diabetes. Some cases can be managed without operation, though arthrodesis probably offers the best chance of obtaining a stable foot of satisfactory shape.


SE Larsson
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Total removal of the third thoracic vertebra and partial removal of the second and fourth vertebrae together with partial lung resection were successfully performed in a twenty-two-year-old woman with a large, radioresistant, giant-cell tumour which completely surrounded the spinal cord and extended over the left lung. On admission, the patient was in her third episode of paraplegia, the two previous episodes having been temporarily relieved after decompression of the spinal cord by laminectomy and partial removal of the tumour. Three and a half months after operation she was discharged walking without support and with normal sphincter control. Two years later she is free of symptoms and the neurological status is practically normal. Clinical and radiological examinations show no signs of recurrence of the tumour.


I Mackay B Fitzgerald JH Miller
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Eighteen patients with marginal depressed or comminuted fractures of the head of the radius, nine of whom had an associated posterior dislocation of the elbow, had a Silastic replacement carried out shortly after injury. After an average follow-up of twenty-six months satisfactory clinical results were observed in seventeen cases; three prostheses broke. The prosthesis has been particularly effective in the group with an associated posterior dislocation of the elbow.


BM Wroblewski
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Wear of high-density polyethylene on bone and cartilage has resulted in a large volume of plastic particles being shed into the two knees and two hips studied. The giant-cell foreign-body reaction of the synovium may not be sufficient to cope with the amount of debris presented and the destruction of the endosteal bone in one hip, caused by the wear particles and movement of the prosthesis, has made revision impossible. Articulation of high-density polyethylene against bone or cartilage either by design or by the failure of alignment of the component must be avoided.


GR Bushell P Ghosh TK Taylor JM Sutherland
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