There is a lack of clinical and experimental studies of the treatment of incompletely transected tendons. The controversy concerning the source of flexor tendon nutrients is of important clinical concern in healing of the injured tendon; thus, the flexor tendon blood supply has cited as a reason for using specific tendon suture techniques, and as a rationale for preserving the superficialis tendon and its vincula during tendon repair surgery. Our knowledge of the normal physiology of digital flexor tendons and the mechanism of their healing process is deficient. The aim of this study was to investigate the relative importance of the synovial fluid and the blood supply respectively for the healing of partially severed flexor tendons. We observed the sequential histological and vascular changes which occur in healing of the partial lacerations in the dorsal and plantar aspects of the tendons. We observed the vascularities of the two partially severed tendon groups after injection of microfil and india ink through the femoral artery. In the healing process there was no sequential histological difference between the dorsal and the plantar severed tendons. The vascularity patterns of the healing tendons were significantly increased and the hypervascularity of dorsal severed tendons was greater than that of plantar severed tendons. Partially severed tendons were completely healed without surgical repair with dense collagen fibers without adhesion in most cases. We concluded from this study that the blood vessels appeared to play a significant role in the healing of the severed flexor tendons. An intact synovial environment did not seem to be required for healing of the severed tendon. It is not necessary to surgically repair the partially severed tendon for prevention of rupture and adhesion.
A retrospective study was performed in 37 patients who underwent innominate osteotomy for the treatment of Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease. The majority of the patients (81%) were more than 6 years old, and the mean age was 7 years and 6 months. Thirty five hips were Catterall group III or IV, and 2 hips that had clinical and radiological "head at risk" signs were group II. The time interval between surgery and the final follow-up ranged from 2 to 6 years with a mean of 3 years and 10 months. Twenty five of 37 patients had good clinical results, and radiographs showed that the sphericity of the femoral head in the older age (> 8 years) group was poorer, which demonstrated a similar pattern to the clinical results in this age group. We conclude that innominate osteotomy is a safe and effective procedure in severe Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease and this operation should be carefully selected as a treatment method in the appropriate age group.
The results of fifty-eight congenitally dislocated hips in fifty-four children, who were between two months and eleven years old when treatment was begun, have been reviewed. Thirteen hips were treated by closed reduction, seventeen hips by open reduction, seventeen hips by Salter's innominate osteotomy, five hips by Klisic operation, and six hips by other operations. At an average 5.1 year follow-up (range, three to twelve years), a 91% satisfactory result was obtained when treatment was started under two years of age. With preoperative traction, in the cases when the femoral head was pulled down below to the zero station, the clinical result was satisfactory in 83%. We think that the treatment of congenital dislocation of the hip should be started before two years of age and that the femoral head should be pulled down below to the zero station to prevent avascular necrosis, and to obtain a satisfactory result.
Our experience includes seven cases of ossifying fibroma. The condition also appears in the literature under diagnostic names such as congenital fibrous dysplasia, congenital osteitis fibrosa, congenital fibrous defect of the tibia, and osteofibrous dysplasia of the tibia and fibula. The lesions develop in childhood and are located in the diaphysis of the tibia, or fibula. Of seven patients, we performed wide excision with free vascularized fibular graft in five cases, wide resection of the distal one-third of the fibula in one case, and curettage and bone graft in one case. Two of the patients who had wide excision with free vascularized fibular graft had recurrence. One case of recurrence occurred where incomplete wide excision with free-vascularized fibular graft was performed because the lesion was too close to the distal epiphysis of the tibia. One of the patients who had curettage and bone graft also had recurrence. It was concluded that children who have an ossifying fibroma requiring surgery can safely be treated with wide excision with or without free-vascularized fibular graft.
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