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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 1 | Pages 114 - 116
1 Jan 1995
Muir L Laliotis N Kutty S Klenerman L

There is some evidence that the anterior tibial vascular tree is poorly developed in children with club foot. We have found a significantly greater prevalence of absence of the dorsalis pedis pulse in the parents of such children. We also found significantly more tobacco smokers among the club-foot parents than in the control group.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 4 | Pages 607 - 609
1 Jul 1994
Mody B Patil S Carty H Klenerman L

We describe three cases of traumatic myositis ossificans in which fractures occurred through a mature, quiescent ossification mass. None of the fractures reactivated the original pathological process, no callus was formed and union did not occur. The nonunion became painless over a period of months. This unusual late complication of myositis ossificans seems to require only symptomatic treatment by temporary splintage and subsequent mobilisation. We could find no previous report of a similar case.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 967 - 971
1 Nov 1993
Kumar P Laing P Klenerman L

In the 1950s Frederick Dwyer evolved the concept of treating resistant and relapsed clubfoot by osteotomy of the calcaneum. He published the results of his medial opening wedge procedure in 1963 with a mean follow-up of five years. We present the structured, radiographic and functional results at a mean elapsed time of 27 years of 36 feet (26 patients) all operated on by Dwyer. Their mean Laaveg and Ponseti (1980) grading was 83.7%. In 94% the heel was in neutral or valgus and 86% of the feet were plantigrade. A good range of movement was present in the ankle and subtalar joints in 83%.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 973 - 974
1 Nov 1993
Tolat V Carty H Klenerman L Hart C


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 1 | Pages 163 - 163
1 Jan 1993
Phillipson A Klenerman L


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 1 | Pages 133 - 136
1 Jan 1992
Laing P Cogley D Klenerman L

Ulceration of the insensitive foot continues to cause great morbidity in diabetic patients. We treated 46 patients with neuropathic ulceration by applying total contact casts. Most neuropathic ulcers healed within six weeks but ischaemic ulcers did not heal. One patient developed gangrene and required partial amputation of the foot.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 4 | Pages 644 - 646
1 Jul 1991
Bryan A Klenerman L Bowsher D

Thirty-three patients with reflex sympathetic dystrophy were studied prospectively to ascertain the pressure-pain threshold of affected and unaffected limbs. The affected side had a lower threshold which was found to be statistically significant. In all 18 patients with upper limb involvement, the pain threshold was reduced on the affected side, but this applied to only 11 of the 15 with leg involvement. This difference may be because patients with lower limb symptoms had been referred later in the course of the syndrome. We showed by repeated tests that after an average of 49 days there was a slow return to normality. The estimation of pressure-pain thresholds may help in the earlier diagnosis of reflex sympathetic dystrophy.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 1 | Pages 1 - 2
1 Jan 1991
Klenerman L


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 2 | Pages 245 - 251
1 Mar 1990
Hughes J Clark P Klenerman L

The importance of well-functioning toes has long been recognised but has not previously been assessed in biomechanical studies. We have examined the weight-bearing function of the foot in 160 normal subjects by use of the pedobarograph. The function of the toes was assessed by reference to the time they were in contact with the ground and the peak pressures they exerted individually in comparison with other parts of the foot. The toes were in contact for about three-quarters of the stance phase of gait and exerted peak pressures similar to those of the metatarsal region. When the foot was bearing the second peak of total force, the area in contact with the ground (the metatarsal heads and toes) was decreasing.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 2 | Pages 286 - 286
1 Mar 1988
Klenerman L Ferris B Hart J


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 2 | Pages 236 - 241
1 Mar 1988
Grace D Hughes J Klenerman L

In a retrospective study we compared the results of 31 Wilson and 31 Hohmann osteotomies of the first metatarsal in the treatment of hallux valgus. There were no differences between the two operations in terms of patient satisfaction, pain relief, appearance, footwear and walking ability. First metatarsal shortening was the same after both operations, and the degree of shortening was unrelated to either the clinical or the pedobarographic findings. Although the long-term radiographic changes after the Hohmann osteotomy were more worrying, the pedobarographic patterns tended to be worse after the Wilson osteotomy. There were no poor results and the numbers of feet with the same final grade were identical in each group. However, there was abnormal loading of the lateral metatarsal heads after both osteotomies when compared with the normal foot, and hallux-contact time during the stance phase was also significantly reduced after osteotomy.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 2 | Pages 234 - 237
1 Mar 1987
Ferris B Dodds R Klenerman L Bitensky L Chayen J

Quantitative polarised light microscopy was applied to sections of unfixed, undecalcified bone taken at operation from patients with two types of proximal femoral fracture, subcapital and trochanteric. Specimens were also taken from the equivalent sites in otherwise normal subjects at autopsy, and from various other sites of traumatic fractures; these two latter groups acted as controls. Analysis of the 57 specimens disclosed changes in the nature of the bone at the site of subcapital fractures, namely the presence of relatively large crystals of hydroxyapatite and a change in the molecular orientation, but not total content, of the acidic proteoglycans of the bone matrix. Our results have confirmed and extended the findings of others on subcapital fractures, and have also shown very similar changes in the trochanteric fractures. It thus appears that the bony changes in the two types of proximal femoral fracture are not as different as has been suggested.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 5 | Pages 645 - 651
1 Nov 1984
Klenerman L


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 4 | Pages 586 - 591
1 Aug 1984
Guiloff R Scadding J Klenerman L

In an attempt to improve the accuracy of diagnosis, 16 patients suffering from Morton's metatarsalgia were investigated clinically and electrophysiologically. The histological findings were related to these observations. The precise aetiology of Morton's metatarsalgia remains obscure, but the findings are compatible with an entrapment syndrome. Nerve conduction studies have a place in the investigation of patients with atypical presentation of pain in the foot. Further refinement of the electrophysiological technique should be possible.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 4 | Pages 374 - 375
1 Aug 1983
Klenerman L


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 2 | Pages 189 - 194
1 Mar 1983
Kent G Dodds R Klenerman L Watts R Bitensky L Chayen J

The aim of this study was to try to elucidate the increased susceptibility of the neck of femur to fracture. Quantitative polarised light microscopy has been applied to fresh, undecalcified sections of samples of bone taken from the site of fracture, in specimens taken at operation from patients with fractures of the femoral neck or osteoarthritic femoral heads or from the equivalent site from otherwise normal subjects at necropsy. In all 21 specimens of fractured necks of femur, but in none of the other specimens, relatively large crystals (up to 2.5 X 0.5 micrometres) were found close to the site of fracture; the properties of these crystals were compatible with their being apatite. Measurement of the natural birefringence of the collagen showed no difference in the orientation of the collagen in all three types of specimen. However, the orientation of acidic glycosaminoglycans, measured by the birefringence of alcian blue bound to these moieties, was 45 per cent lower in the specimens from fractured necks of femur than in the other specimens, even though the total content of acidic glycosaminoglycans was unchanged. Although the decreased orientation was most marked close to the site of fracture, it was still apparent 15 millimetres from that site. These changes were unlikely to be simply the sequelae of fracture since they were not found in traumatic fractures of other bones. Thus it is conceivable that changes in the orientation of the ground substance allow formation of relatively large crystals of apatite and that such crystals, in the microcrystalline mass of apatite, are the cause of the increased fragility of such bones.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 3 | Pages 385 - 388
1 Aug 1980
Klenerman L Biswas M Hulands G Rhodes A

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.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 2 | Pages 178 - 183
1 May 1979
Patterson S Klenerman L

Experiments have been carried out on rhesus monkeys to determine the effect of the application of a pneumatic tourniquet on the ultrastructure of the muscles of the lower limb. Tourniquets were applied for periods lasting between one and five hours. The changes in the muscle lying immediately under the cuff of the tourniquet were more marked than those observed in muscle distal to the cuff. Three hours appears to be close to the limit of the time that a muscle can resist the sustained compression of a tourniquet.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 2 | Pages 197 - 199
1 May 1977
Hill J Klenerman L Trustey S Blowers R

The diffusion of Fucidin, gentamicin, and clindamycin from acrylic cement was tested in an in vitro system. The activity of Fucidin was very short-lived and only against gram-positive organisms; gentamicin inhibited gram-positive and gram-negative organisms for twenty-two and eleven days respectively; clindamycin had significant action only against gram-positive organisms and retained some activity for fifty-six days. We suggest that the destruction of organisms in the tissues is more likely to be achieved by topical and intravenous administration of antibiotics during the operation than by incorporation of antibiotic in the cement.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 55-B, Issue 2 | Pages 331 - 334
1 May 1973
Klenerman L Merrick MV

1. A case of anterior sacral meningocele is described in members of a family consisting of a woman, her father and his brother.

2. This is the first recorded case of this anomaly in members of the same family of different sex, and only the second recorded case of occurrence in the same family.