Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jun 2001
Correlation between the Q angle and the patella position: a clinical and axial computed tomography evaluation.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the significance of the Q angle with respect to the patella position. Fifty-six knee joints of 34 patients (15 bilateral) with chronic patellofemoral pain were prospectively evaluated. All patients were examined by the same orthopaedic surgeon (R. ⋯ Similar results were found in patients with pain only on one side. In conclusion, there is no significance between the Q angle and the position of patella. The diagnostic relevance of the Q angle could not be established.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jun 2001
Functional results after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction using the patellar ligament bone-tendon-bone technique.
This study evaluates the outcome after surgical repair of the cruciate ligament in 129 patients (physical examination plus questionnaire) and another 49 patients (questionnaire only) after a mean interval of 3.2 years. A modified Lysholm score and the OAK score together with KT 1000 arthrometry were used. ⋯ The overall OAK objective score was good or excellent in 81%. Elongation as measured by KT 1000 arthrometry was 1.0 mm (67 N) and 1.2 mm (90 N) on average compared with the contralateral knee.
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Low tibial osteotomy is one of the significant advances of ankle reconstruction techniques that has been made recently in an effort to halt arthritis in its early stages and leave fusion as the last, not the only, alternative treatment of ankle arthritis. From 1989 to 1995, we performed 18 low tibial osteotomies which included 6 cases of post-traumatic arthritis and 12 cases of degenerative arthritis. The ages of the 7 male and 11 female patients ranged from 18 to 78 years with an average of 41.9 years. ⋯ Complications included one case of late infection and two cases of implant failure, none of which led to nonunion. The indication for low tibial osteotomy is the intermediate stage of moderate ankle arthritis with a medial joint lesion and intact lateral facet. Using pressure redistribution on the joint surface, this procedure is an alternative treatment for ankle arthritis which may save an arthritic ankle from the fate of fusion or at least postpone fusion surgery.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jun 2001
Biography Historical ArticleFemoral neck fracture--the cause of death of Emperor Charles IV.
We present the oldest documented case of femoral neck fracture of a particular person in the history of orthopaedic surgery. Examination of the skeleton of Charles IV, the King of Bohemia and Roman Emperor living in XIVth century has revealed a fracture of the left femoral neck. This fracture was most probably an indirect cause of his death as it resulted in pneumonia, the immediate cause of death. This fact has been confirmed by contemporary chronicles.
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Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Jun 2001
The musculocutaneous sural artery flap for soft-tissue coverage after calcaneal fracture.
Soft-tissue defects following calcaneal fractures can be covered in a relatively easy and safe procedure. We have modified the familiar distally based sural artery flap by lifting a part of the gastrocnemius muscle. With an inferior pedicle, this musulocutaneous flap can be rotated onto the defect on the sole of the foot and on the heel. ⋯ One patient demanded further revisions, and the flap was partially lost, but the remaining defect was covered after open treatment. This new musculocutaneous sural artery flap can be used for covering even an extensive defect after calcaneal fractures and seems to be a reliable procedure. Morbidity at the donor site is low, and in the case of failure, the free flap remains an alternative.