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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 41-B, Issue 4 | Pages 738 - 748
1 Nov 1959
MacKenzie IG

One hundred cases of Lambrinudi's arthrodesis are reviewed. The shortest follow-up was one year. and the longest twenty-seven years. Thirty-seven per cent were successful. Nineteen per cent were failures; many of these were associated with faulty technique, and one method of operation which gives good results is described.

Success is likely if there is a balance of power between the dorsiflexors and plantarflexors of the ankle, especially if there is some fixed equinus before operation.

Success is less likely when the operation is done for a flail foot. In such circumstances arthrodesis of the ankle may have to be considered subsequently for instability of the lateral ligament, recurrence of dropfoot, or arthritis which may develop in the more active patients.

Age in itself is no bar to success, but pseudarthrosis is more likely to occur in patients over the age of twenty.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 38-B, Issue 4 | Pages 892 - 898
1 Nov 1956
Morgan AD MacKenzie DH

1. The so-called adamantinoma of long bones is a clinico-pathological entity, the pathogenesis of which is still in doubt. The case for its being a synovial sarcoma showing epithelial differentiation is in our view unconvincing.

2. The tumour is slowly growing, and of low grade malignancy. Apparent cure has been effected in a third of the total cases recorded by amputation or resection of the diseased bone.

3. These means, however, have not prevented metastases to the lungs and skeleton in a similar number.

4. A case is presented in which a metastasis appeared in the chest twenty-two years after amputation of the leg. This was sensitive to telecobalt irradiation, and is the first case in which a distant metastasis has been proved microscopically.