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Volume 76-B, Issue 4 July 1994


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IJ Harrington WR Harris

S MacMahon A Rodgers R Collins B Farrell

NR Boeree NM Clarke

We report the preliminary results of a continuing prospective evaluation of a screening programme for congenital dislocation of the hip (CDH) which uses ultrasound imaging to provide delayed selective screening to complement neonatal clinical screening. Of 26,952 births in the Southampton district, 1894 infants were referred for secondary screening because of a clinical abnormality or the presence of a predetermined risk category for CDH. Pavlik harness treatment was required for only 118 infants, giving a treatment rate of 4.4 per 1000 births. Of those referred with clinical instability, 35% did not require treatment. Dislocation or subluxation was detected in 17 of 643 infants referred only because they fell within one of three risk categories: breech presentation, foot deformity and family history. All 17 had normal clinical examinations and cases were discovered in each category. Six children presented with CDH after 12 weeks of age, giving a late presentation rate of 0.22 per 1000 births. All had normal clinical examinations within 24 hours of birth and none was in a risk category. Surgery has been required in ten children, giving a surgical treatment rate of 0.37 per 1000 births. We conclude that, in Southampton, delayed selective secondary screening with ultrasound is more effective than clinical screening alone. It targets treatment to those infants who need it, and reveals a number of dislocated and subluxed hips that would otherwise be missed.


DS Marks J Clegg AN al-Chalabi

We have undertaken routine ultrasound screening for neonatal hip instability in Coventry since June 1989. Of the 14,050 babies scanned during the first three years, 847 (6%) had ultrasound abnormalities. A grading system, based on the percentage of femoral head coverage, is presented. The proportion of abnormal hips decreased gradually so that by nine weeks, 90% had normal ultrasound appearances. Abnormality was more common in babies with a family history of CDH and in breech presentations. All babies with clinically abnormal hips had an abnormal first ultrasound examination. Five babies not diagnosed by clinical examination and with no risk factors had abnormal ultrasound appearances and were subsequently found to have clinically abnormal hips. Routine ultrasound screening has detected cases which would otherwise have presented late.


RJ Hernandez RG Cornell RN Hensinger

Routine ultrasound evaluation of neonates and young infants for congenital dislocation of the hip has been recommended. We have used the methods of decision analysis to determine whether every neonate should be examined by ultrasound or just those at increased risk. We have also studied the reliability and accuracy of ultrasound in following infants during observation and treatment, using published data. We find that ultrasound is not the preferred strategy for the screening of neonates, and that its role in evaluating high-risk patients depends on the point of view. For an individual, when third parties are bearing the cost, ultrasound is useful. For society as a whole, the routine ultrasound evaluation of the high-risk patient is not advantageous. For follow-up, ultrasound using the methods of Graf has a low reliability and there are no adequate data for methods using dynamic assessment.


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B Benjamin MR Khan

We reviewed 190 children with brucellosis admitted over a 7.8-year period. Seventy of these had articular involvement (36%) and the most common site was the hip (18%). All but one patient had unilateral infection. The hip was the only joint infected in 20 patients (57%). The next most common articular site was the knee. All patients had painful limitation of movement and this was the only articular sign in 28 (80%). Extra-articular signs included fever and hepatosplenomegaly. Brucella infection should be considered in every child from an endemic area who presents with fever and joint symptoms. The insidious onset and a normal or low leucocyte count help the differentiation from acute septic arthritis. Children with hip involvement had a slower response to treatment, longer hospital stays and a higher incidence of complications and relapse than those without. Complications included dislocation (n = 4) and avascular necrosis of the femoral head (n = 1). Treatment by combination chemotherapy for 6 to 12 weeks usually achieves cure and prevents relapse. A multidisciplinary team approach to management is recommended.


NS Broughton G Graham MB Menelaus

In a consecutive series of 124 children with spina bifida we found that 220 (89%) of the 248 feet were deformed: 70 had a calcaneus deformity; 126 were in equinus; 16 were in valgus; 3 were in varus; and 5 had convex pes valgus. Operations were performed on 171 (78%) of the deformed feet. Spasticity of the muscles controlling the foot was detected in 36 (51%) of the 70 calcaneus feet and in 22 (17%) of the 126 equinus feet. The deformities were symmetrical in 94 children. There is a high incidence of foot deformity in patients with spina bifida who have no voluntary activity in the motors of the feet.


A Tsujino Y Itoh K Hayashi

We report the reconstruction of two cases of floating thumb by transplanting the distal two-thirds of the fourth metatarsal. Opponensplasty was performed after six months and resulted in satisfactory morphological and functional results. The metatarsal defect was filled by a full-thickness iliac bone graft including the apophysis. This prevented shortening of the fourth toe and formed a new metatarsophalangeal joint.


H Yamamoto T Muneta T Ishibashi K Furuya

We reviewed 19 children with 24 congenital club feet at a mean of 11 years after one-stage posteromedial release at the age of five years or older (mean 6.8 years). Thirteen feet had undergone previous surgery. Nineteen feet were functionally excellent or good, three were fair and two had required subtalar arthrodesis. Radiographs showed good alignment of the tarsal bones, although mild adduction or varus deformity remained in several feet. Deformities of the bones were more common in feet which had had previous surgery.


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FH Norman-Taylor DI Sweetnam JA Fixsen

We treated five children with non-metastatic Ewing's sarcoma of the distal fibula by distal fibulectomy. At a mean of eight years after surgery they all had nearly normal levels of painfree function. Distal fibulectomy is a good alternative to the more radical amputations recommended in the past.


R Jerre L Billing G Hansson J Wallin

We reviewed, at an average age of 46 years, a series of 61 patients treated for unilateral slipped upper femoral epiphysis. At maturity there had been slipping of the contralateral hip in 11 patients (18%) and another 14 (23%) had originally had evidence of bilateral slipping when the primary radiographs were reviewed. In only two of these 25 patients (8%) was the slipping of the contralateral hip symptomatic. The incidence of early osteoarthritis of the contralateral hip was 7 of 36 with no slip, 5 of 16 with an untreated slip and 1 of 9 with a slip pinned in situ. If all 61 contralateral hips had been prophylactically pinned at the primary admission, 36 of the operations (59%) would have been unnecessary. We recommend that prophylactic pinning of the contralateral hip should not be standard, but that lateral radiography by the Billing technique be repeated every third to fourth month until closure of the growth plate begins. Hips in which a slip occurs should be pinned in situ.


OL Huk M Bansal F Betts CM Rimnac Lieberman MH Huo EA Salvati

We report a prospective study of the liner-metal interfaces of modular uncemented acetabular components as sources of debris. We collected the pseudomembrane from the screw-cup junction and the empty screw holes of the metal backing of 19 acetabula after an average implantation of 22 months. Associated osteolytic lesions were separately collected in two cases. The back surfaces of the liners and the screws were examined for damage, and some liners were scanned by electron microscopy. The tissues were studied histologically and by atomic absorption spectrophotometry to measure titanium content. The pseudomembrane from the screw-cup junction contained polyethylene debris in seven specimens and metal debris in ten. The material from empty screw holes was necrotic tissue or dense fibroconnective tissue with a proliferative histiocytic infiltrate and foreign-body giant-cell reaction. It contained polyethylene debris in 14 cases and metal in five. The two acetabular osteolytic lesions also showed a foreign-body giant-cell reaction to particulate debris. The average titanium levels in pseudomembranes from the screw-cup junction and the empty screw holes were 959 micrograms/g (48 to 11,900) and 74 micrograms/g (0.72 to 331) respectively. The tissue from the two lytic lesions showed average titanium levels of 139 and 147 micrograms/g respectively. The back surfaces of the PE liners showed surface deformation, burnishing, and embedded metal debris. All 30 retrieved screws demonstrated fretting at the base of the head and on the proximal shaft. Non-articular modular junctions create new interfaces for the generation of particulate debris, which may cause granulomatous reaction.


DJ Berry CL Barnes RD Scott ME Cabanela R Poss

Ten cases are described of catastrophic failure of the polyethylene liner of three different designs of uncemented acetabular component. Failure occurred as a result of either 'wearthrough' to the metal backing, liner fracture or a combination of both, at a mean of 4.6 years after implantation (2 to 7.6). At revision there was metallosis in all hips and osteolysis of the femur or the pelvis in six. Catastrophic failure was seen only in cups with a minimum polyethylene thickness of less than 5 mm.


FS Santori A Vitullo M Stopponi N Santori S Ghera

We performed a randomised controlled study to compare heparin with the A-V Impulse System in the prevention of deep-vein thrombosis (DVT) in 132 consecutive patients undergoing total hip replacement. After the operation, all patients had compression stockings, 65 were treated with calcium heparin and 67 with the intermittent plantar pump. DVT was diagnosed by Doppler ultrasound and thermography, followed by phlebography. There were 23 cases of DVT (35.4%) in the heparin group, with 16 major and seven minor thromboses. In the impulse pump group there were nine cases (13.4%) with three major and six minor thromboses. The differences for all thromboses and for major thromboses were both significant at p < 0.005. In the heparin group there was one fatal pulmonary embolism and nine patients (13.8%) had excessive bleeding or wound haematomas, as against none in the impulse pump group.


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K Takagishi A Saitoh M Tonegawa T Ikeda M Itoman

We report six patients with isolated paralysis of the infraspinatus and discuss the diagnosis, pathology, treatment, and outcome over a mean follow-up period of 33 months. Four patients were shown to have space-occupying lesions at the spinoglenoid notch by MRI or ultrasonography or both, and ganglia were confirmed and removed surgically in three, with good results. Ganglia at this site are not uncommon and should be included in the differential diagnosis of patients presenting with shoulder pain and weakness.


AP Skirving TK Kozak SJ Davis

We describe five patients, seen since 1984, with posterior shoulder pain and isolated wasting and weakness of the infraspinatus. In four of these a ganglion in the spinoglenoid notch was demonstrated by MRI and in one recent case ultrasound scans were positive. Three patients have been treated by operation, but there was recurrence in one after five years. In each confirmed case, the ganglion straddled the base of the spine of the scapula, extending into both supraspinatus and infraspinatus fossae. The nerve was either compressed against the spine or stretched over the posterior aspect of the ganglion. Adequate surgical exposure is essential to preserve the nerve to the infraspinatus and to allow complete removal of the ganglion. This is difficult because of the location and thin-walled nature of the cysts.


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We reviewed 44 patients with 44 full-thickness rotator-cuff tears at an average of 4.2 years after arthroscopically-assisted repair. There were 25 women and 19 men aged between 35 and 76 years (average 58); 35% of the shoulders had other intra-articular lesions. Most of the patients (85%) had been discharged from hospital immediately after the operation. The result was rated good or excellent in 84%, 88% of the patients were satisfied, and 64% of the athletes returned to their previous sports. The size of the tear was a determining factor in the outcome.


DS Marks ES Isbister KM Porter

We report 33 cases of femoral supracondylar fracture in elderly or debilitated patients treated by Zickel supracondylar nails. Most of the patients were female and their mean age was 79 years. All had concurrent medical problems and only nine could walk unaided. The operating time averaged one hour and mean blood loss was 100 ml. Postoperative management was by mobilisation in a cast brace or plaster. Six patients died before fracture union; all the others achieved union at an average of 12 weeks. The results were excellent in terms of pain relief, movement and function; there were no infections or nonunions. The locking screws backed out or broke in 26% but this did not prejudice the outcome. Use of the Zickel system is recommended for this group of frail patients.


A Lizaur L Marco R Cebrian

We report a prospective study of 46 patients with acute complete dislocation of the acromioclavicular joint. They were all treated by suture of the deltoid and trapezius over the clavicle with no repair of the coracoclavicular ligaments, using only temporary fixation with two wires. At operation 43 patients (93.5%) had damage to the trapezius or deltoid or both. The coracoclavicular ligaments were intact in six (13%). Follow-up was from 2 to 7.9 years (mean 5.8), and at the latest review only five patients (10.9%) had redisplacement, due to premature removal of wires for infection in one, to migration of the wires in another and to partial failure of the muscle repair in three. We consider that the deltoid and trapezius attachments are important clinical stabilizers of the clavicle and that their repair, with reinforcement, is a useful addition to any method of surgical treatment.


BS Mody SS Patil H Carty L Klenerman

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.


GA Hoy IJ Henderson

We reviewed 32 ankles in 30 patients at an average of five years after a Watson-Jones tenodesis. All but one patient had had ankle pain before operation and 19 had had clicking, catching, or locking of the ankle. Eleven of these had an ankle arthrotomy at the time of ligament reconstruction for intraarticular pathology. At review seven of 23 ankles had a significant decrease in ankle motion, and five in subtalar motion, but only two were unstable on examination. Twenty-one ankles, however, caused some pain on activity and nine were tender on palpation. These findings indicate intra-articular degeneration or injury rather than simple instability. Radiographs of 16 ankles showed good varus and anterior-drawer stability. Seven had talocrural osteoarthritis, but only four showed grade-1 subtalar osteoarthritis. We found no correlation between follow-up time and long-term results. The Watson-Jones tenodesis provides good rotational and lateral ankle instability and does not appear to lead to subtalar degeneration.


M McKee J Jupiter CL Toh L Wilson C Colton KK Karras

We reviewed the results of 13 adults of secondary reconstruction of malunited and ununited intraarticular distal humeral fractures. Their average age was 39.7 years, and preoperatively all had pain, loss of motion and functional disability; the average arc of motion was only 43 degrees and the average flexion contracture was 45 degrees. Nine patients had ulnar neuropathy. Elbow reconstruction, at an average of 13.4 months after the original injury, included osteotomy for malunion or debridement for nonunion, realignment with stable fixation and autogenous bone grafts, anterior and posterior capsulectomy and ulnar neurolysis. The elbows were mobilised 24 hours postoperatively. There were no early complications and all nonunions and intra-articular osteotomies healed. After a mean follow-up of 25 months, the average arc of motion was 97 degrees with no progressive radiographic degeneration. Ulnar nerve function improved in all cases and clinical assessment using the Morrey score showed two excellent, eight good and three fair results. Reconstruction of intra-articular malunion and nonunion of the distal humerus in young active adults is technically challenging, but can improve function by restoring the intrinsic anatomy of the elbow.


TK Cobb RL Linscheid

We treated three patients with malunion after comminuted intercondylar fractures of the humerus by intra-articular derotational opening-wedge osteotomy and the insertion of a tricortical iliac bone graft. Two patients required additional operations, including interposition arthroplasty and hardware removal. A mean arc of increased motion of 65 degrees was achieved in flexion and extension in two patients and a more functional arc in the third. Although this is viewed as a salvage procedure in patients who are thought to be too young for elbow arthroplasty, none of the three patients has significant pain and none has required total elbow arthroplasty after an average follow-up of 7.6 years.


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PJ Papagelopoulos BF Morrey

We report the results in 24 consecutive patients treated from 1976 to 1991 for nonunion of olecranon fractures. Their mean age was 42 years, and the mean interval from fracture to treatment for nonunion was 19 months. Management was by rehabilitation and activity as tolerated for three, continued immobilisation for one, and operative treatment for 20. Operations included excision of the olecranon fragment (1), osteosynthesis (16), and joint replacement (3). Four patients also had distraction arthroplasty. At a mean follow-up of 18 months no patient had severe residual elbow pain but three had moderate and six had mild symptoms. The mean arc of motion was 98 degrees representing an average improvement of 11 degrees. Twelve patients had an excellent result, four good, six fair, and two a poor result. Union had been achieved in 15 of the 16 patients treated by osteosynthesis.


MJ Kraay MP Figgie AE Inglis SW Wolfe CS Ranawat

We used survival analysis to evaluate 113 consecutive semiconstrained total elbow arthroplasties (TEAs) in 95 patients at a maximum follow-up of 99 months. Our criteria for failure were mechanical malfunction, revision for any reason, and deep infection. The primary diagnosis was inflammatory arthritis in 86 elbows, post-traumatic arthritis in 6, supracondylar nonunion or fracture in 12, osteoarthritis in 2 and other causes in 3. Seven failures were due to deep infection, and five of these had a primary diagnosis of inflammatory arthritis. Eight failures were revised or had revision recommended for aseptic loosening, and six of these were in patients with post-traumatic arthritis or supracondylar nonunion. The cumulative survival for TEAs performed for post-traumatic arthritis, fractures or supracondylar nonunion was 73% at three years and 53% at five years, significantly worse than the cumulative three- and five-year survivals of 92% and 90%, respectively, for patients with inflammatory arthritis. TEA with a semiconstrained prosthesis appears to have a satisfactory survival in selected patients with arthritic disorders. The incidence of deep infection was reduced by improvements in surgical technique and postoperative management, and the routine use of antibiotic-impregnated cement. The incidence of aseptic loosening was low, except in patients with supracondylar nonunion or post-traumatic arthritis.


K Tsuge T Mizuseki

We report the technique and results of a new method of debridement arthroplasty for advanced primary osteoarthritis of the elbow. Triceps and the periosteum of the olecranon are reflected towards the ulnar side and the joint is opened by dividing the radial collateral ligament. Osteophytes are removed, the olecranon and coronoid fossae are deepened and the fibrosed anterior joint capsule is excised. The degenerative changes are always more advanced on the radial side, with erosion of the capitellum, and it is usually necessary to remodel the head of the radius. In 29 elbows reviewed at a mean of 64 months, the average gain of range of motion was 34 degrees, with good pain relief and improved grip in most patients. Two elbows required reoperation but there were no other serious complications.


F Eckstein F Lohe M Muller-Gerbl M Steinlechner R Putz

In 16 cadaver humeroulnar joints, the distribution of subchondral mineralisation was assessed by CT osteoabsorptiometry and the position and size of the contact areas by polyether casting under loads of 10 N to 1280 N. Ulnas with separate olecranon and coronoid cartilaginous surfaces showed matching bicentric patterns of mineralisation. Under small loads there were separate contact areas on the olecranon and coronoid surfaces; these areas merged centrally as the load increased. They occupied as little as 9% of the total articular surface at 10 N and up to 73% at 1280 N. Ulnas with continuous cartilaginous surfaces also had density patterns with two maxima but those were less prominent, and in these specimens the separate contact areas merged at lower loads. The findings indicate a physiological incongruity of the articular surfaces which may serve to optimise the distribution of stress.


DJ Beard CA Dodd HR Trundle AH Simpson

We performed a prospective, double-blind, randomised, clinical trial to investigate the efficacy of two regimes of rehabilitation for knees with anterior cruciate ligament deficiency (ACLD). Fifty ACLD patients were randomly allocated to one of two treatment groups: a programme of muscle strengthening (T) or a programme designed to enhance proprioception and improve hamstring contraction reflexes (P). An indirect measure of proprioception, the reflex hamstring contraction latency (RHCL), and a functional scoring system were used to record the status of the knee before and after the 12-week course of physiotherapy. Sagittal knee laxity was also measured. There was improvement in mean RHCL and in the mean functional score in both groups after treatment. The improvement in group P was significantly greater than that in group T. There was no significant change in joint laxity after treatment in either group. In both groups there was a positive correlation between improvement in RHCL and functional gain.


AB Mullaji SS Upadhyay EK Ho

We have used dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry to measure bone mineral density (BMD) in patients with ankylosing spondylitis comparing 41 healthy control subjects and 33 patients with either mild or advanced ankylosing spondylitis. A Norland XR-28 bone densitometer was used to measure the BMD of the lumbar spine and that of the head, trunk, arms, femoral neck, Ward's triangle, legs, pelvis, and total body. Mild ankylosing spondylitis was defined as that showing no or incipient syndesmophytes between L1 and L5 vertebrae: we studied 16 men of mean age 37 years and six women of mean age 37 years. Advanced ankylosing spondylitis, in 11 men of mean age 42 years, showed a bamboo spine with bridging syndesmophytes across all disc spaces between L1 and L5. The mean BMD of the lumbar spine was significantly different in the patients and control subjects of the same sex (0.01 < p < 0.05, analysis of variance), being significantly reduced compared with control subjects in mild disease (0.001 < p < 0.01, t-test) and significantly increased in advanced disease over control subjects (0.01 < p < 0.05; t-test) and over patients with mild disease (0.001 < p < 0.01; t-test). The relevance of these findings to the aetiology and pathogenesis of spinal deformities and other complications in ankylosing spondylitis is discussed.


H Kawai T Murase R Shibuya H Kawabata K Yonenobu T Masatomi K Ono

We studied the motor evoked potentials (MEP) in the biceps of 25 patients with traumatic brachial plexus palsy from root avulsion after cross-innervation by intercostal nerves. We used transcranial, transcervical and transthoracic magnetic stimulation at 8 to 235 months (mean 51) after transfer of intercostal nerves to the musculocutaneous nerve. Biceps strength recovered to MRC grade 2 in eight patients, grade 3 in three and grade 4 in 14. The mean latency of the MEP in the normal biceps on transcranial stimulation was 12.5 +/- 1.3 ms and on transcervical stimulation 6.3 +/- 1.1 ms. After intercostal reinnervation the mean latency on transcranial stimulation was 21.7 +/- 4.5 ms and on transthoracic stimulation 11.6 +/- 3.8 ms. The latency of the biceps MEP after reinnervation by intercostal nerves on transcranial and transthoracic magnetic stimulation correlated well with the duration of follow-up and the latency of the MEP on transthoracic magnetic stimulation correlated significantly with muscle power.



J Hettfleisch R Wissenbach

T Sadique JG Bradley AM Jackson


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