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Volume 76-B, Issue 5 September 1994

Metallosis Pages 687 - 688
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AJ Johnstone I Beggs

Carpal instability Pages 691 - 700
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JK Stanley IA Trail

CP Case VG Langkamer C James MR Palmer AJ Kemp PF Heap L Solomon

In a post-mortem study, we compared subjects with metal implants with and without visible wear with an age-matched control group to determine the extent and effects of dissemination of wear debris. In subjects with stainless-steel and cobalt-chrome prostheses metal was found in local and distant lymph nodes, bone marrow, liver and spleen. The levels were highest in subjects with loose, worn joint prostheses and the main source of the debris was the matt coating. Metal levels were also raised in subjects with implants without visible wear and, to a less extent, in those with dynamic hip screws. Necrosis of lymph nodes was seen in those cases with the most wear, and potential damage to more distant organs such as the bone marrow, liver and spleen in the long term cannot be discounted. The consequences for the immune system and the role of metal dissemination in the possible induction of neoplasia are discussed.


UW Bischoff MA Freeman D Smith MA Tuke PJ Gregson

We studied the wear generated by motion between polished and shot-blasted titanium-alloy (Ti-6Al-4V) or cobalt-chrome alloy (Co-Cr) surfaces and cortical bone in vitro. Semicircular sections of human proximal femoral cortex were reamed to fit metal cylinders of each alloy. The cylinders were then fitted in the bone, loaded and rotated in physiological saline. Ti-alloy resulted in more wear both of the bone and of the metal than did Co-Cr alloy. Metal wear was reduced and bone wear was increased by shot-blasting, a procedure which introduces surface residual stresses and roughens the metal surface. We conclude that when there is gross motion between a metal implant and bone, Ti-alloy is likely to generate more wear debris than Co-Cr alloy. The least wear both of bone and of metal was produced by polished Co-Cr.


J Cordero L Munuera MD Folgueira

We implanted cylinders of cobalt-chrome or titanium, with smooth or porous surfaces, into rabbit bones which had been inoculated with suspensions of Staphylococcus aureus in various doses. The bacterial concentration required to produce infection of porous-coated titanium implants was 2.5 times smaller than that necessary to infect implants with polished surfaces. Porous-coated cobalt-chromium implants required bacterial concentrations that were 40 times smaller than those needed to infect implants with polished surfaces, and 15 times smaller than those required to infect porous-coated titanium implants. The other advantages and disadvantages of the various implants, such as improved osseointegration, larger ion-release surfaces, surface wear and relative stiffness, must be weighed against the higher infection rates in the porous-coated implants, and particularly in the cobalt-chromium implants.


VV Raut PD Siney BM Wroblewski

We report a prospective study of 57 one-stage cemented revisions of total hip replacement for deep infection with an actively discharging sinus. The average follow-up was 7 years 4 months. Seven patients had required rerevisions, but at latest follow-up, infection was under control in 49 (86%). A discharging sinus is not, in itself, a contraindication to one-stage revision of a hip replacement.


PJ James IA Butcher ER Gardner DL Hamblen

We investigated the incidence of cephalosporin-resistant bacteria in infected hip arthroplasties. Of 740 patients having hip replacement or related procedures performed over three years, 30 had positive bacteriological cultures from tissue removed at the time of surgery. In 18 of the 30 cultures Staphylococcus epidermidis was grown and 12 of these were methicillin-resistant. A prospective study of skin swabs taken from 100 consecutive patients at the time of admission for THR showed methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis in 25. This cephalosporin-resistant organism was shown to be the commonest proven cause of infection, and its presence as a skin commensal raises important questions about current antibiotic prophylaxis for joint replacement.


RK Marti HM Schuller MJ van Steijn

Dysplastic acetabula were augmented during total hip replacement by superolateral autografts. In cases of primary arthroplasty these were taken from the excised femoral head and in revision surgery from the iliac crest. Two or (usually) three small grafts were used to facilitate revascularisation; they were fixed with lag screws to the roughened iliac bone above the acetabulum. We reviewed 84 hips (63 primary arthroplasties and 21 revisions) more than five years (mean 10.1) after operation. All but one of the grafts showed consolidation within three months and they had become structurally integrated with the iliac bone, as evidenced by the trabecular reorientation. Resorption, which has caused early socket failure when large bone grafts have been used, did not occur.


S Inao E Gotoh M Ando

We performed total hip replacement on 25 congenitally dislocated hips using corticocancellous bone from the femoral neck as a bone graft to reconstruct the deficient acetabulum. Two patients (two hips) died less than five years after surgery and three hips developed deep infection. We reviewed the remaining 20 hips at an average interval of 8.4 years (5.2 to 12.9). Their functional scores (modified Merle d'Aubigne and Postel) averaged 5.7 for pain, 5.1 for walking ability, and 4.2 for range of motion. Radiographs showed union and remodelling of the grafted bone in every case. There were radiological signs of aseptic loosening in three sockets (15%) without collapse of the grafted bone. None of the femoral stems was loose. No revision operation has been performed. Our results confirm the usefulness in the long term of femoral autografts for severe acetabular deficiency.


T Azuma H Yasuda K Okagaki K Sakai

We report the results of 24 acetabular reconstructions in which cemented polyethylene cups and tamped corticocancellous allografts were used for severe acetabular bone deficiency. Eleven hips had type-II (cavitary) bone deficiency and 13 had type-III (combined) defects. At a mean follow-up of 5.8 years, two components had migrated more than 5 mm and had accompanying radiolucent zones of more than 2 mm width. A radiolucency 5 mm wide was also seen in zone III of an acetabular implant which had not migrated. None of the patients had required revision because of loosening or infection.


H Dejour M Bonnin

Anterior tibial translation was measured in both knees using the radiological Lachman test and the lateral monopodal stance tests in 281 patients with unilateral anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture. Measurements of translation in the medial compartment were more useful than those in the lateral compartment. Measurement of anterior tibial translation in the medial compartment using the radiological Lachman test showed ACL rupture in 92% of cases compared with 70% for the lateral monopodal stance test. In normal and in ACL-ruptured knees the monopodal stance test showed that every 10 degrees increase in posterior inclination of the tibial plateau was associated with a 6 mm increase in anterior tibial translation; the radiological Lachman test showed a 3 mm increase for every 10 degrees increase in tibial slope.


RF Adam SB Watson JW Jarratt J Noble JS Watson

The long-term functional result of exposed total knee arthroplasty, treated by flap cover, is presented and the results compared with those of a randomly selected control group. The wound was successfully covered and the prosthesis was preserved in 76% of cases, but the final functional score was not as good as in those with primary wound healing.


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TJ Spalding J Kiss P Kyberd A Turner-Smith AH Simpson

We measured the driver reaction times of 40 patients before total knee replacement (TKR) and 4, 6, 8 and 10 weeks after operation. The ability to perform an emergency stop was assessed as the time taken to achieve a brake pressure of 100 N after a visual stimulus. There were 18 drivers and 11 non-drivers; the latter had longer reaction times. In drivers, the ability to transfer the right foot from accelerator to brake pedal did not recover to preoperative levels for eight weeks after right TKR and was unchanged after left TKR. Patients should be advised that they should not drive for at least eight weeks after right TKR.


T Toyone K Takahashi H Kitahara M Yamagata M Murakami H Moriya

We carried out MRI studies of 74 patients with end-plate and vertebral bone-marrow changes associated with degenerative lumbar disc disease. Abnormalities were classified into type A, with decreased signal intensities, and type B, with increased signal intensities on T1-weighted spin-echo images. Twenty-seven (73%) of the 37 patients with type-A changes had low back pain, in contrast to only four (11%) of the 37 patients with type-B changes. Lateral flexion-extension radiographs showed hypermobility in 26 patients (70%) with type-A changes, and in only six (16%) with type-B changes. Type-A changes correlated with segmental hypermobility and low back pain, while type-B changes were more common in patients with stable degenerative disc disease.


An operation for radical resection of a tumour of the vertebral body and part of the neural arch is described. The approach is posterior and from both sides of the spine. The posterior approach is used to remove the healthy part of the neural arch, mobilise the dura, divide involved nerve roots and carry out the posterolateral parts of the spinal osteotomies or disc divisions. On one side, usually the right, the sides of the vertebral body or bodies are freed and the osteotomies or disc divisions are extended. Then from the other side, a posterolateral thoracotomy or lumbotomy allows completion of the dissection with radical resection by rolling the specimen away from the dura. Ten operations are reported in which up to three and a half vertebrae were resected. Spinal reconstruction was by internal fixation and grafting preferably with vascularised bone. The results were satisfactory after follow-up for as long as eight years.


MJ McMaster

Five patients with classical Ehlers-Danlos syndrome developed severe spinal deformities. Two were shown to have type-VI collagen abnormalities. Three had a double structural scoliosis of the thoracic and lumbar regions, one had a single thoracic scoliosis and one had a thoracic kyphosis. The curves first developed before the age of four years, and were not controlled by bracing. Major corrective surgery with posterior fusion was performed at a mean age of 11 years 8 months. Excessive blood loss could be controlled and although wound haematoma and dehiscence were common, they did not provide major problems. The spinal fusions healed satisfactorily.


JY de la Caffiniere F Pelisse M de la Caffiniere

We report the use of a new method of locked intramedullary flexible osteosynthesis (LIFO) in the treatment of 118 unstable fractures of the femur and tibia. The implant utilises a set of flexible pins with a separate locking device for their proximal ends. The LIFO system proved capable of stabilising unstable fractures, and most of the complications occurred during the early testing. At follow-up, 19 of 21 femoral fractures had healed; one become infected and one showed defective callus. Of the 78 tibial shaft fractures, five failed to consolidate and five had inadequate callus. Reaming of the tibial medullary canal was never necessary. Of 28 open fractures only one became infected. The system was most difficult to use in comminuted distal fractures of the tibia, with five failures of healing in 19 cases; these cases require considerable technical proficiency. The flexibility of the system appears to promote earlier consolidation of open fractures, and normal consolidation times for fractures with interfragmentary gaps of up to 10 to 12 mm. A comparative study of callus density in tibial fractures showed a mean improvement of 50 days in cases treated by the LIFO system compared with similar cases treated by rigid nailing.


MF Gargan R Gundle AH Simpson

Osteotomy has been used in the treatment of unstable intertrochanteric hip fractures in an attempt to increase the stability of the fracture fragments. We have assessed this stability in a randomised prospective trial on 100 consecutive patients, all having fixation by an AO dynamic hip screw, comparing anatomical reduction with two types of osteotomy. The groups were similar in terms of age, gender, mental test score, and fracture configuration. There were more failures of fixation in the osteotomy groups, and the operations took longer. We found no clear benefit from osteotomy and therefore recommend anatomical reduction and fixation by a sliding hip screw in most cases. Rarely, a fracture configuration which does not allow load-sharing between the fracture fragments and the device may benefit from an osteotomy or the use of an alternative implant.


H John R Rosso U Neff A Bodoky P Regazzoni F Harder

We treated 49 patients at an average age of 80 years (75 to 90) with distal mostly intraarticular humeral fractures by open reduction. There were 8 class A, 13 class B and 28 class C fractures on Muller's classification. The patients were reviewed at a postoperative average of 18 months. The patients' assessment of the result was very good in 31%, good in 49%, fair in 15% and poor in 5%. The flexion-extension range was very good in 41%, good in 44% and fair in 15%. The incidence of implant failure, pseudarthrosis of the olecranon osteotomy and ulnar nerve lesion was no higher in these elderly patients than in younger patients. Old age is not a contraindication to open reduction and internal fixation; it is important to restore full function.


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PH Wilde IP Torode DR Dickens WG Cole

Over a nine-year period, 20 feet with persistently symptomatic talocalcaneal coalition were treated by resection of the bar. The 17 patients were all under 16 years of age. Excellent or good long-term results were achieved in the ten feet in which preoperative coronal CT had shown that the area of coalition measured 50% or less of the area of the posterior facet of the calcaneum. In these feet heel valgus was less than 16 degrees and there were no radiographic signs of arthritis of the posterior talocalcaneal joint. Talar beaking was present in 70% of these feet but it did not impair the clinical result. Fair or poor results were observed in the ten feet in which preoperative CT had shown the area of relative coalition to be greater than 50%. In these feet, heel valgus was greater than 16 degrees and most had narrowing of the posterior talocalcaneal joint and impingement of the lateral process of the talus on the calcaneum.


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T Ishii S Miyagawa K Hayashi

We report the cases of three children with chronic injuries of the medial tibial malleolus caused by traction injuries during sport. All three had the triad of swelling of the medial malleolus, tenderness over its anterior part, and pain on forced valgus movement of the foot. Radiographs showed bilateral accessory ossification centres and MRI demonstrated partial avulsion or avulsion fracture of the apophyseal cartilage and fragmentation of the accessory centres. A review of 134 young basketball players showed that 25% had tenderness of the anterior medial malleolus. This high rate indicates that traction apophysitis of the medial malleolus is not uncommon in children as a sports-related disorder.


Y Nietosvaara

Both knees of 50 normal children aged from birth to 18 years were examined by ultrasonography to measure the angles of the bony intercondylar and the cartilaginous sulcus on the patellar surface of the femur. The osseous angle was inversely related to the age of the child and was completely flat in the youngest children. During growth it gradually gained depth to assume the shape of the overlying articular cartilage by adolescence. At all ages, however, the angle of the cartilaginous sulcus was between 134 degrees and 155 degrees. This suggests that the configuration of the patellar articulation is already well developed at birth.


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S Kenan MM Lewis IF Abdelwahab M Klein

We present a case of subperiosteal giant-cell reparative granuloma followed over six years showing the complete evolution from the early phase of subperiosteal haematoma to the end stage of an ossified haematoma. Such lesions, although they are histologically similar to true giant-cell tumours, can be distinguished by the patients' age, their location on the diaphysis, and by their radiological and histological features.


MA Craigen GC Bennet MacKenzie R Reid

We reviewed the records and radiographs of seven children who presented with knee pain, local tenderness over the medial femoral condyle, and radiological irregularity of the distal medial metaphysis of the femur suggestive of malignancy. In the five patients who had biopsies, histological changes were consistent with musculotendinous avulsion, and the dissection of ten cadavers confirmed the site to be the insertion of part of the adductor magnus. The recognition of this lesion and knowledge of its benign nature may avoid unnecessary anxiety and needless biopsy.


TE Hems RE Clutton MA Glasby

An experimental model was established to investigate the possibility of repairing cervical nerve roots avulsed from the spinal cord, as occurs in traction injuries of the brachial plexus. In five sheep the C6 root was avulsed and the ventral root was reattached using freeze-thawed muscle as a short graft (0.5 cm). Recovery was assessed after one year by electrophysiology and histology. Stimulation of the root produced muscle contractions in four out of five sheep. Action potentials were recorded distal to the grafts in all five sheep. Histological examination showed regenerated fibres in the ventral roots in all cases. These fibres could be traced distally to the brachial plexus. Our study confirms that motor fibres can regenerate out of the spinal cord into the ventral roots and reinnervate muscles, and suggests that reimplantation of avulsed roots is a surgical option in selected cases of traction injury of the brachial plexus.


F Lintner G Bohm M Huber R Scholz

We studied the fixation of a cementless titanium femoral prosthesis partially coated with hydroxyapatite ceramic (HAC) 10.4 months after implantation. Histomorphological investigation showed extensive new bone formation between the HAC coating and the bone bed; morphometry showed bone contact indices of up to 91.60%. There were a number of resorption lacunae on the HAC coat with depths of up to 76.6 microns and widths of up to 453 microns. Our results confirmed that considerable bone remodelling had taken place and that the apatite-coated prosthesis had united with bone despite the lack of appreciable immediate press-fit. Hydroxyapatite particles which had been released did not appear to show any negative effects on the stability of the implant.


SA Jacobsson K Djerf I Ivarsson O Wahlstrom

We studied the effect of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs on the fixation of hydroxyapatite-coated implants. Cylindrical plugs of pure titanium, coated with hydroxyapatite (HA), were inserted into both femora of 10 adult rabbits, 5 of which received 7 daily doses of 30 mg diclofenac. Three weeks after implantation the interface strengths were measured by the pull-out test. The mean peak force for the diclofenac-treated group was 290 +/- 57 N compared with 369 +/- 37 N for the control group (p < 0.025). We conclude that the inhibitory effect of diclofenac on bone repair is not neutralised by HA-coating of an implant.


E Itoi Newman DK Kuechle BF Morrey KN An

The stabilising effects on the glenohumeral joint of each of the rotator-cuff muscles and of the biceps were studied with the arm in abduction and external rotation in 13 cadaver shoulders. The muscles were loaded one at a time with forces proportional to their cross-sectional areas. We recorded the positions of the humeral head before and after the application to the humerus of an anterior force of 1.5 kg. When the capsule was intact, the anterior displacement with the subscapularis loaded was significantly larger than with the other muscles loaded (p = 0.0009). With the capsule vented, the displacement with the biceps loaded was significantly smaller than that with the subscapularis loaded (p = 0.0052). After creating an imitation Bankart lesion, the displacement with the biceps loaded was significantly less than with any of the rotator-cuff muscles loaded (p = 0.0132). We conclude that in the intact shoulder, the subscapularis is the least important anterior stabiliser, and that the biceps becomes more important than the rotator-cuff muscles as stability from the capsuloligamentous structure decreases. Strengthening of the biceps as well as the rotator-cuff muscles should be part of the rehabilitation programme for anterior shoulder instability.


SS Apte J Kenwright

We studied the cellular response to physeal distraction in the growth plates of skeletally immature rabbits. We used a new method of labelling and detection of proliferating cells with bromodeoxyuridine (BUdR) and an anti-BUdR antibody. The application of an external fixator but no distraction force produced no changes in the growth plates. After five days of distraction at a maximum force of 20 N, the growth plate became thicker, mainly because of an increase in the number of hypertrophic chondrocytes, but there was no evidence of increased cell proliferation. Recent fractures were seen at the junction of growth plate and metaphysis but the increase in bone length was insignificant. After ten days of distraction at the same maximum force, the chondrocyte columns had become disorganised and cell proliferation was significantly decreased. There was an increase in bone length due to distraction of the fracture gap. In this model, physeal distraction did not stimulate cell proliferation, but actually inhibited it. The apparent increase in growth-plate thickness produced by distraction is not due to increased cell production, but results from inhibition of endochondral ossification and the consequent accumulation of hypertrophic chondrocytes. Any growth after distraction depends on the ability of growth-plate chondrocytes to divide. The decrease in proliferative activity which we found after ten days of distraction suggests the need for caution in the use of such procedures in young children.


JG Warner D Bramley PR Kay

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FC Oner HR de Vries

A Shalom O Khermosh S Wientroub

DN Kreibich IR Scott JM Wells M Saleh

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A Adeniran WF Merriam

Plantar heel pain Pages 850 - 850
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Need for randomised trials Pages 850 - 850
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