Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
The Bone & Joint Journal Logo

Receive monthly Table of Contents alerts from The Bone & Joint Journal

Comprehensive article alerts can be set up and managed through your account settings

View my account settings

Volume 62-B, Issue 3 August 1980

LM Brown MJ Robson WJ Sharrard
View article
Download PDF

Eleven patients with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita neurologica have been reviewed. Distinct patterns of deformity and muscle activity were identified which have been correlated with specific levels of segmental neurological motor deficit without sensory loss. The clinical picture was consistent with localised lesions of the anterior horn cell cell columns. This finding agreed with the recorded pathological lesions. Orthopaedic treatment should take account of the paralytic nature of the deformities.


MJ Robson LM Brown WJ Sharrard
View article
Download PDF

A patient with Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome complicated by tetraplegia secondary to cervical spondylolisthesis is reported. The abnormalities presenting in this condition are reviewed.


AD Sutherland JP Savage DC Paterson BK Foster
View article
Download PDF

The nuclide bone-scan will reliably diagnose Perthes' disease with a sensitivity of 0.98 and a specificity of 0.95. The comparable figures for radiographic sensitivity and specificity are respectively 0.92 and 0.78. In addition, it is possible on the scan to recognise the onset of revascularisation of the femoral capital epiphysis some months before there are radiographic signs of new bone formation. Scintigraphy also suggests that in some cases of transient synovitis there may bae a period of reversible ischaemia of the capital epiphysis, which may have relevance to the pathogenesis of Perthes' disease.


C Hamanishi
View article
Download PDF

Seventy patients with 91 congenital short femora are classified. Deformities resulting maternal Thalidomide treatment are compared with those where Thalidomide was not involved and genetic and epidemiological factors investigated in 50 patients. No essential anatomical difference was found between the two groups of femora but the whole complex of abnormalities differed: the Thalidomide group showed femur-tibia-radius anomalies while the non-Thalidomide garoup had femur-fibula-ulna anomalies, indicating either different aetiological factors or different timing of the insult to the foetus. Some differences between congenital coxa vara and congenital short femur associated with coxa vara are mentioned. Simple hypoplasia of the femur may possibly have a multifactorial genetic background since it is associated with other minor abnormalities of the limbs in these families, whereas environmental factors only are associated with the more severe femoral defects.


Access Required
BR Love PM Stevens PF Williams
View article
Download PDF

Shelf arthroplasty is briefly reviewed in historical perspective and the results in 45 hips (39 patients) which had undergone this procedure at the Royal Children's Hospital are presented. The majority of these patients were adolescents who had previously been treated for congenital dislocation or subluxation of the hip. The indications for operation and the operative technique are discussed. Clinical examination was carried out upon 33 of the 39 patients at an average of 11 years after operation. The results suggested that where pain had been an indication for operation almost 80 percent of the hips remained relatively free of symptoms at the time of follow-up and in those patients where acetabular dysplasia had been an indication, the coverage remained good and pain had not appeared. It is concluded that the shelf operation is useful for dealing with both pain and dysplasia in the adolescent.


MF Macnicol R McHardy J Chalmers
View article
Download PDF

In 30 elderly women awaiting hip arthroplasty on account of unilateral osteoarthritis of the hip, walking speed and oxygen consumption were measured during a 12-minute test and the power output was calculated from the stair climbing rate. The results were compared with those for a group of 30 normal women of similar age. An age-related decline in maximal walking speed was observed in both groups. After arthroplasty there was a significant increase in maximal walking speed, particularly among the more disabled patients, with the major gain occurring by three months and a further slight increase by six months. Oxygen consumption returned towards normal values, and both stride length and cadence increased by a comparable degree. Mean power output during stair climbing doubled, and both before and after arthroplasty bore a linear relationship to the maximal walking speed.


AW Heywood
View article
Download PDF

A high percentage of hips in patients with rheumatoid arthritis presenting for total joint replacement have protrusio deformity with extremely thin medial acetabular walls. Biomechanical principles suggest that, to prevent inward migration of the acetabular component, the prosthesis should be positioned laterally near the acetabular rim. To reinforce the medial wall, the femoral head is fashioned into a solid graft which is anchored against the medial wall as a plug, minimising the amount of cement used and making the use of wire mesh and restraining rings about the acetabulum unnecessary. A series of nine operations on seven patients is presented. Serial radiographs, tomograms and scintigrams taken after operation suggest satisfactory incorporation of the grafts, and no complications have been encountered in a follow-up period ranging from three months to two years.


JA Chapman DP Deakin JH Green
View article
Download PDF

Eight slipped upper femoral epiphyses in patients who had had radiotherapy are described. These cases involved five patients in an "at risk" population of 48. This increased incidence is highly significant.


J Ireland EL Trickey
View article
Download PDF

Fifty patients who underwent a MacIntosh repair for anterolateral instability of the knee have been reviewed after a mean follow-up of two and a quarter years. The repair abolished a positive anterolateral jerk test in 42 out of 50 knees and at the time of review 37 patients (74 per cent) were involved in some form of active sport, having regained functional and clinical stability. The MacIntosh repair is described in detail and the importance of excluding meniscal lesions as the main cause of instability is emphasised.


F Johnson S Leitl W Waugh
View article
Download PDF

An anteroposterior radiograph of the leg to include the hip and ankle, taken with the patient standing, provides an estimate of the line of load-bearing at the knee. Gait analysis may be used to determine the way in which the load in the knee is shared between the medial and lateral compartments during normal walking. A comparison of the results from the two methods, carried out on a group of 47 patients, led to the conclusion that both calculations are required for the successful outcome of a tibial osteotomy or a total arthroplasty.


AR Butson
View article
Download PDF

A modification of the Lapidus procedure to correct hallux valgus is described in which the length of the first metatarsal is maintained. One hundred and nineteen operations in 78 patients have been followed up for between two and 16 years. There were excellent or good results in 110 feet (92 per cent).


H Kvist M Kvist
View article
Download PDF

The conservative management of chronic calcaneal paratenonitis is time-consuming and often unsatisfactory. A new, safe and simple technique is described. The crural fascia on both sides of the tendon is incised and left open, adhesions around the tendon are trimmed away, the strongly hypertrophied portions of the paratenon are removed and mobilisation is begun immediately after operation. Between 1961 and 1978 201 such operations were performed on 182 patients 62 of whom were top-ranking Finnish athletes. Only five patients were not athletes. The results, including early return to full activity, were excellent in 169, good in 25 and poor in seven cases. After operation one of the patients gained an Olympic gold medal; others have attained international prominence.


MA Adams WC Hutton
View article
Download PDF

Cadaveric lumbar intervertebral joints were loaded to simulate the erect standing posture (lordosis), and the erect sitting posture (slightly flexed). The results show that, after the intervertebral disc has been reduced in height by a period of sustained loading, the apophysial joints resist about 16 per cent of the intervertebral compressive forces in the erect standing posture, whereas in the erect sitting posture they resist none. The implications of this in relationship to degenerative changes and to low backache are discussed.


MD Northmore-Ball H Heger GA Hunter
View article
Download PDF

The place of the myo-electric prosthesis in below-elbow amputees has been reviewed. Forty-three patients were seen and all possessed both a myo-electric prosthesis and a standard artificial limb. Nearly half the patients used the newer device almost all the time at work and many of these wore it for the majority of their waking hours. Its use at work was mainly related to the patient's type of job and here in turn there was concern about damaging the device. It is suggested that acceptance would be further increased if greater attention were paid to the durability of the arm and its glove. Criteria for prescription and future developments are discussed.


Access Required
NJ Blockey AA Gibson KM Goel
View article
Download PDF

Seven out of 22 children with monarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (MJRA) developed involvement of other joints between six months and three and a half years from the onset. In the other 15 patients the disease has remained monarticular for between one and 16 years (mean six years). Chronic iridocyclitis was seen in three of the five boys, two with antinuclear antibodies. Children with MJRA and antinuclear antibodies should have periodic ophthalmic assessment. Synovial biopsy was of value primarily in excluding other cases of arthritis, but there was only limited correlation between the histological findings and the subsequent course of the disease.


LB Lane PG Bullough
View article
Download PDF

The thickness of the calcified zone of the articular cartilage and the number of tidemarks at the junction between articular cartilage and bone has been determined in specimens from 41 femoral heads and 42 humeral heads from cadavers aged between 25 and 93. The thickness of the calcified zone decreased with age but the number of tidemarks increased, particularly over the age of 60. These observations suggest that remodelling of the bone ends occurs and that this process is accelerated with increasing age.


B Bj0rksten L Boquist
View article
Download PDF

Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis (CRMO) is characterised by an insidious onset of fever, local swelling and pain in affected bones, and radiological abnormalities suggestive of osteomyelitis. The histopathological features in 14 patients are described. Morphologically CRMO begins as an acute inflammatory process with a predominance of polymorphonuclear leucocytes, which occasionally form an abscess and osteoclastic bone resorption. At a later stage the predominant features are lymphocytes in the inflammatory infiltrates and occasional granulomatous foci and sigans of bone formation. The clinical course may be prolonged for many years.


Access Required
R Merryweather JH Middlemiss NG Sanerkin
View article
Download PDF

A recurrent spinal tumor confidently diagnosed as osteoblastoma eventually terminated as a sclerosing osteoblastic which metastasised nine years after the onset of symptoms.


L Klenerman M Biswas GH Hulands AM Rhodes
View article
Download PDF

The effect of the application of a tourniquet to a limb and the release of the accumulated metabolites have been investigated with reference to the acid-base level in the blood from the limb and in the right atrium. Investigations have been carried out experimentally in rhesus monkeys and observations have been made on patients undergoing reconstructive operations on the knee. The acidotic blood from the ischaemic limb produces little systemic effect. The limb recovers in approximately 40 minutes after a tourniquet has been in place for four hours. Three hours is recommended as a reasonable upper limit for the safe application of a pneumatic tourniquet.


JM Thomas JA Lowes S Tabaqchali
View article
Download PDF

Two patients with acute osteomyelitis of the foot caused by mixed aerobic organisms are described; sources of infection and predisposing factors are discussed. Serratia marcescens was isolated in each instance. Antimicrobial therapy which did cover this organism failed; a change to treatment directed against it succeeded.


MD Northmore-Ball MR Wood BF Meggitt
View article
Download PDF

In 65 mature Wistar rats a Kirschner wire was introduced into the medullary cavity of each femur. A closed transverse mid-shaft fracture of one femur was produced by a three-point bending technique. Subsequently the mechanical characteristics of the healing fracture, including the torque and angle of twist required to take the callus to its yield point and to ultimate failure, were compared with those for the opposite femur of each rat. Controls were killed in groups at two, three, four, five and seven weeks. Test animals were given bovine growth hormone in a daily dose of five milligrams before being killed in groups at two, three and four weeks. A significant increase in torque index was found in the two-week group of test animals but not in subsequent groups. No evidence was found that growth hormone given alone could produce an overall shortening of the healing time in fresh fractures.


FW Heatley
View article
Download PDF

In rabbits, repair of incisions in the central part of the meniscus has been demonstrated after surgical excision of the peripheral rim. Healing took place via a highly cellular but relatively avascular fibrous tissue stroma which proliferated from the synovial margin and invaded along the cut edge of the meniscus. Suturing facilitated this healing process by providing stability and possibly by supplying bridges for synovial cells to migrate onto the meniscus. Transformation of fibrous tissue into fibrocartilage has also been observed.


T Albrektsson
View article
Download PDF

Tibial grafts in rabbits were studied using a microscopic technique in vivo that made it possible to photograph the "graft to be" at the donor site and then subsequently to observe the same graft repeatedly at the host site. With this method the effects on the graft tissues of varying degrees of surgical trauma have been tested. The period of follow-up ranged between 14 and 300 days. The grafts removed with minimal trauma showed a more rapid rapid of revascularisation. In this group the first vessels appeared on average seven days after grafting, whereas they took 15 days in the grafts which were more severely traumatised. Bone remodelling started when the vascular density resembled the more pattern and this occurred earlier and much more rapidly in the minimally injured grafts. It correlated with the presence of surviving cells, as shown by histochemical tests, and a causal relationship is suggested. It is concluded that control of trauma is important not only in the preparation of the host bed but also in procurement of the graft. Suggestions are given on techniques to minimise the surgical trauma.