Clinical orthopaedics and related research
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A clinical study was undertaken to evaluate the pneumatic tourniquet setting required for adequate hemostasis in extremity surgery. After induction of anesthesia, the pneumatic tourniquet pressure at which the peripheral pulse disappeared was determined using a Doppler stethoscope. ⋯ Maximum pressures utilized were 255 mm Hg in the upper extremity and 305 mm Hg in the lower extremity. This simple, noninvasive technique uses tourniquet pressure settings well below those recommended in standard reference texts without sacrificing the adequacy of hemostasis to obtain a "bloodless field."
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Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. · Jul 1983
Case ReportsAvulsion fractures of the tibial tubercle in adolescents. A report of bilateral fractures and a review of the literature.
Avulsion fractures of the tibial tubercle prior to epiphyseal closure are being treated with greater frequency. Watson-Jones Types I and III fractures are the most common; both require open reduction and internal fixation. Type II fractures respond to closed reduction and plaster immobilization. ⋯ Type III fractures occurred most often in older adolescents. Types I and II fractures occurred in younger patients. No reports of growth disturbance of the proximal tibial epiphysis occurring after a Type III fracture were found.
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Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. · May 1983
Case ReportsUse of radionuclide method in preoperative and intraoperative diagnosis of osteoid osteoma of the spine. Case report.
A 24-year-old man with persistent low back pain and right sciatica, was found to have an osteoid osteoma of the right pedicle of the second lumbar vertebra. 99mTc-MDP bone scan and CAT scan produced an early diagnosis of the lesion. Intraoperative 99mTc-MDP in vitro combined with imaging and quantitative activity measurements were useful for accurate localization and complete removal. The method is simple and can be performed in every nuclear medicine department, with no need for special operating room facilities.
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Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. · May 1983
Case ReportsThe treatment of severe scoliosis in osteogenesis imperfecta. Case report.
Surgical stabilization of the scoliotic spine in osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is technically difficult owing to the mechanical weakness of the bone. Brittle bone makes instrumentation of the spine a procedure all too often associated with complications. Combining the instrumentation of the OI spine, both anteriorly and posteriorly, with the use of methylmethacrylate to augment the fixation may prove valuable as a surgical technique. This usage of methylmethacrylate in correcting severe scoliosis in OI has not been previously reported.
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To investigate whether effort-related dorsal forearm pain could be due to an increase of the intracompartmental pressure (ICP) in the dorsal forearm compartment, the normal range of the ICP at rest and during exercise was first determined in 11 volunteers using a wick catheter. The ICP at rest was 6 mm Hg (range, 2-11 mm Hg), and during exercise the pressure rose to about six times the resting level. ⋯ In six patients the pressure at rest and/or during exercise was more than twice that of the normal persons or that of the healthy forearm. After fasciotomy four of these six patients were relieved of pain within three weeks, which might suggest a relation between ICP and pain.