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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 2 | Pages 351 - 358
1 May 1968
Kemp HS Matthews JM

1. The management of fractures in seven haemophiliacs and one patient with Christmas disease is described.

2. The problems of management are essentially those associated with haemorrhage into the soft tissues.

3. There is no delay in the healing of fractures, which usually occurs with a relative lack of periosteal callus.

4. The principles of transfusion therapy are discussed.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 49-B, Issue 4 | Pages 748 - 756
1 Nov 1967
Goodfellow J Fearn CBD Matthews JM

1. Haemorrhage into the fascial compartment which contains the iliacus muscle and the femoral nerve is a common complication of haemophilia.

2. The iliacus haematoma syndrome is described and illustrated from the authors' study of thirty episodes occurring in twenty-four patients.

3. The anatomy of the iliopsoas fascia is described and the mechanism of femoral nerve compression explained.

4. Differential diagnosis, prognosis and treatment are discussed and the necropsy findings in one patient are presented.

5. An instance of iliacus haematoma occurring as a complication of anticoagulant therapy is recorded.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 2 | Pages 256 - 265
1 May 1965
de Valderrama JAF Matthews JM

1. The case history of a haemophiliac in whom a large haematoma of the thigh was treated by amputation of the limb is described.

2. Examination of the available radiographs and of the histology led to the conclusion that the cyst was subperiosteal in origin.

3. Evidence is presented to support the hypothesis that haemophilic pseudotumours are always associated with subperiosteal haemorrhage, and that those haemophilic cysts which are confined to muscle have little or no effect on the adjacent bone.