The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Mar 1986
Biomechanical study of the ligamentous system of the acromioclavicular joint.
The ligamentous structures of the acromioclavicular joint were studied by gross examination and quantitative measurement in twelve human cadaver specimens. Distances between insertions at various extreme positions of the clavicle were studied with the biplane radiographic technique. Ligamentous contributions to joint constraint under displacements were determined by performing load-displacement tests along with sequential sectioning of the ligaments. ⋯ The trapezoid ligament contributed less constraint to movement of the clavicle in both the horizontal and the vertical plane except when the clavicle moved in axial compression toward the acromion process. The various contributions of different ligaments to constraint changed not only with the direction of joint displacement but also with the amount of loading and displacement. For many directions of displacement, the acromioclavicular joint contributed a greater amount to constraint at smaller degrees of displacement, while the coracoclavicular ligaments, primarily the conoid ligament, contributed a greater amount of constraint with larger amounts of displacement.
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The reported incidence of patellar problems after total knee replacement has ranged from 5 to 30 per cent. Patellar dislocation is infrequent but can cause disabling symptoms. Between January 1974 and May 1982, eleven patients (twelve knees) with symptomatic lateral dislocation of the patella after total knee replacement were treated at The Hospital for Special Surgery by realignment of the extensor mechanism. ⋯ The design of the implant did not appear to be a factor causing dislocation in this group. The patellar dislocation was treated by proximal realignment of the quadriceps in ten knees, lateral retinacular release alone in one, and revision of the tibial and femoral components combined with proximal realignment in one. After an average follow-up of thirty-four months (range, twenty-four to fifty-seven months), the results according to The Hospital for Special Surgery knee-rating scale were excellent in ten knees and good in two, and there had been no redislocations.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Dec 1985
Induced moderate hypotensive anesthesia for spinal fusion and Harrington-rod instrumentation.
The effect of moderate hypotensive anesthesia on blood loss, need for transfusion, and length of surgery of forty-nine patients who underwent posterior spinal fusion and Harrington-rod instrumentation was compared retrospectively. Twenty-seven patients were given enflurane as the main anesthetic agent, with fentanyl supplementation, and their blood pressure was maintained at twenty to thirty millimeters of mercury less than the preoperative systolic blood pressure. These patients were compared with twenty-two patients who had been anesthetized with nitrous oxide, oxygen, and narcotic technique and were normotensive throughout the duration of the anesthesia. ⋯ Moderate hypotensive anesthesia was found to significantly decrease the average blood loss by nearly 40 per cent, reduce the need for transfusion by nearly 45 per cent, and shorten the average operating time by nearly 10 per cent. No complications attributable to the anesthetic technique occurred. The findings of this study suggest that moderate hypotensive anesthesia with enflurane and fentanyl supplementation may be of benefit in scoliosis surgery by reducing blood loss, the need for blood replacement, and operating time.
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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Sep 1985
Case ReportsRecurrent dislocation of the patella treated by the modified Roux-Goldthwait procedure. A prospective study of forty-seven knees.
We studied the results in forty-seven knees in thirty-seven patients - ten male and twenty-seven female - who had recurrent dislocation of the patella and were treated by a modified Roux-Goldthwait procedure (lateral retinacular release, medial transfer of the lateral patellar tendon without advancement, plication of the medial retinaculum, and advancement of the vastus medialis). Ten of the female patients had bilateral dislocation. The results were analyzed after follow-ups ranging from 3.0 to 16.3 years (average, 5.8 years). ⋯ Preliminary results indicated that a modified Maquet procedure, in addition to realignment, may be indicated for patients with severe chondromalacia. This study demonstrated that the modified Roux-Goldthwait procedure, without advancement of the tibial attachment of the patellar ligament, can stabilize the patella without increasing patellofemoral compression. The procedure does not relieve the symptoms of severe chondromalacia of the patella but realignment is the first step in treatment of any form of patellofemoral arthrosis.