Der Unfallchirurg
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The improvement and acceleration of fracture healing has been a component of medical practice since fractures have been treated. The aim is not only to fulfill the basic principles of fracture healing, such as reduction, retention, soft tissue coverage and infection prevention but also to reduce negative influences on fracture healing and promote positive factors. Nicotine, alcohol, diabetes and malnutrition can negatively affect fracture healing and should be appropriately controlled during fracture treatment; however, it is far more difficult to develop medicinal treatment strategies that lead to improvement and acceleration of fracture healing. ⋯ Systemic medication to improve fracture healing will not be part of the clinical routine in the foreseeable future as the available data for already approved drugs and drugs under development do not currently justify routine administration. However, the currently known data should encourage the potential of known medications to be completely exhausted in fracture healing studies as well as novel therapy options in the sense of positive effects on fracture healing in order to improve patient care.
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Historical Article
[The history of spondylolisthesis : The nineteenth century: early case reports, terminology, etiology and pathogenesis].
The author describes the history of research and development of knowledge on lumbar spondylolisthesis. Based on the available literature, early case reports, creation of the terminology and etiological concepts are presented.
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In ancient times as well as in the Middle Ages treatment options for discogenic nerve compression syndrome were limited and usually not very specific because of low anatomical and pathophysiological knowledge. The stretch rack (scamnum Hippocratis) was particularly prominent but was widely used as a therapeutic device for very different spinal disorders. Since the beginning of the nineteenth century anatomical knowledge increased and the advances in the fields of asepsis, anesthesia and surgery resulted in an increase in surgical interventions on the spine. ⋯ In 1964 the American orthopedic surgeon Lyman Smith (1912-1991) introduced chemonucleolysis, a minimally invasive technique consisting only of a cannula and the proteolytic enzyme chymopapain, which is injected into the disc compartment to dissolve the displaced disc material. In 1975 the Japanese orthopedic surgeon Sadahisa Hijikata described percutaneous discectomy for the first time, which was a further minimally invasive surgical technique. Further variants of minimally invasive surgical procedures, such as percutaneous laser discectomy in 1986 and percutaneous endoscopic microdiscectomy in 1997, were also introduced; however, open discectomy, especially microdiscectomy remains the therapeutic gold standard for lumbar disc herniation.
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The application of mechanical principles to problems of the spine dates to antiquity. Significant developments related to spinal anatomy and biomechanical behaviour made by Renaissance and post-Renaissance scholars through the end of the 19th century laid a strong foundation for the developments since that time. The objective of this article is to provide a historical overview of spine biomechanics with a focus on the developments in the 20th century. The topics of spine loading, spinal posture and stability, spinal kinematics, spinal injury, and surgical strategies were reviewed.
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This article presents a retrospective look at spinal implants of the 1970s and 1980s. ⋯ The basic principle of spinal fixators (internal and external) is contained in the complete product range of dorsal stabilizing implants from practically all manufacturers worldwide and has become taken for granted.