Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1990
Case ReportsMassive wear of a steel ball head by ceramic fragments in the polyethylene acetabular cup after revision of a total hip prosthesis with fractured ceramic ball.
The purpose of this case study of severe metallosis is to draw the attention of orthopedic surgeons to extremely serious results of this kind in the event of the fracture of the ceramic ball in a total hip prosthesis. Eleven months after implantation of a KJF hip prosthesis with an aluminum oxide ceramic ball in combination with a polyethylene acetabular cup, fracture of the ceramic ball was observed. After examining the polyethylene cup during the revision operation, the operating orthopedic surgeon merely replaced the fractured ceramic ball with a metal ball head made of stainless steel. ⋯ It is these extremely hard ceramic fragments that were responsible for the massive wear of the steel ball head, the hardness of which is approximately ten times less than that of aluminum oxide ceramic. The fracture of the ceramic ball further resulted in damage to the metal taper of the stemmed femoral component. In cases of this kind it is consequently absolutely essential to remove both the polyethylene cup and the ball head, and--if necessary--the femoral component as well.
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Temporary impairment of blood supply has been suggested to cause bone remodeling. The degradation of cells and matrix and the attraction of resorbing cells were examined in this study. ⋯ Both supernatant from the aged bone specimens and ground bone particles exhibited significant chemotactic activity that was specifically attracting monocytes. It is suggested that soluble bone matrix proteins or degeneration products liberated during ischemic damage to cortical bone initiate the resorptive process.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1990
Clinical TrialLimb lengthening and three-dimensional deformity corrections. A retrospective clinical study.
Different methods of limb lengthening as used at the Orthopedic Surgery Clinic of the Medical School, University of Zagreb, are compared. The results of operations performed between 1979 and 1989 on 111 patients are presented. These patients were subjected to surgery aimed at length equalization of limbs and/or correction of three-dimensional deformities. ⋯ These advantages manifest themselves in a reduced number of operations, lower incidence of infection and improved bone regeneration. It is preferable to perform corticotomy at the metaphysis site because of its optimum blood supply and its higher potential for osteogenesis. With corticotomy performed at the diaphysis site, satisfactory results were observed in only one-third of the cases.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1990
Case ReportsTransient palsy of hip abductors after a fall on the buttocks.
A fall on the buttocks caused monolateral transient palsy of the hip abductors in two patients. Palsy could be ascribed to acute entrapment of the superior gluteal nerve between the piriformis muscle and the incisura ischiadica major.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jan 1990
Prognosis of primary anterior shoulder dislocation in young adults.
From 1982 to 1987, 194 patients with 196 primary traumatic anterior shoulder dislocations were treated in our hospital. One hundred and sixty-six patients with 168 shoulder dislocations (87%) were available for study at follow-up an average of 4 years after treatment. The most important prognostic factor in relation to recurrence was the age of the patient at the time of the primary dislocation. ⋯ Athletes in this age group had no worse a prognosis as to recurrence than non-athletes. A fracture of the greater tuberosity improved the prognosis significantly (P less than 0.01). Neither the presence of a Hill-Sachs lesion nor the period of immobilization influenced the recurrence rate in patients aged 30 years and younger.