The Journal of hand surgery, European volume
-
J Hand Surg Eur Vol · Dec 2004
Treatment of cubital tunnel syndrome by frontal partial medial epicondylectomy. A retrospective series of 55 cases.
The outcomes of 55 cases of cubital tunnel syndrome treated by a partial frontal epicondylectomy are presented at a mean follow-up of 38 months follow-up. According to McGowan classification, 25 cases were grade I (45%), 12 grade II (22%) and 18 grade III (33%). The results (Wilson and Krout classification) were excellent or good in 41 patients (75%), fair in nine patients and unchanged in five, without any worsening or recurrence. ⋯ The satisfaction rate was 93%. This technique preserves bony protection, the blood supply and gliding tissues for the nerve and nerve recovery were comparable to other surgical procedures. Residual pain at the osteotomy site was not a serious problem.
-
J Hand Surg Eur Vol · Dec 2004
The Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT): better presentation of surgical trials in the Journal of Hand Surgery.
To assure readers that study results are scientifically valid, the methods of a clinical trial should be described adequately. Since randomization, blinding, and intention-to-treat-analysis are major bias-reducing techniques, these aspects should be reported most accurately. The Consolidated standards of reporting trials (CONSORT) are recommendations to improve the reporting of trials. ⋯ This article presents the CONSORT recommendations and explains some of their main aspects. From now on, the Journal of Hand Surgery will use CONSORT to assist authors of randomized controlled trials in improving the description of their studies. We believe that this decision increases the scientific validity of study reports and helps readers when critically appraising articles.