TL;DR: Attention to great detail when lengthening the bone and skilled and detailed postoperative care will allow excellent results to be obtained, and time alone will tell what, biologically, is the best method for lengthening a long bone.
Abstract: While there are new techniques for lengthening long bones, there are, nevertheless, contraindications and preoperative considerations for lengthening the femur or tibia, such as the presence of acetabular dysplasia, fixed deformity around joints, peripheral vascular and metabolic bone disease, and the age of the patient. Lengthening a long bone may be associated with many complications, especially in a congenitally short bone. It is important to anticipate and prevent complications, especially nonunion, subluxation of joints, muscle contractures, and neurologic complications. Lengthening of the femur and tibia are not for the occasional operator. However, as Bosworth noted in 1938, attention to great detail when lengthening the bone and skilled and detailed postoperative care will allow excellent results to be obtained. Time alone will tell what, biologically, is the best method for lengthening a long bone.
TL;DR: The Tanner and Witehouse 20 (TW20) bone age showed less inter-observer bias than the radius, ulna and short bone age or the carpal bone age when three observers independently assessed the same sample of radiographs.
Abstract: One hundred radiographs of the left hand and wrist from 40 children with chronic renal insufficiency or end-stage renal disease were examined to determine which method of bone age estimation provided the most useful information in these children. The Tanner and Whitehouse method showed better repeatability than the Greulich and Pyle atlas or the Buckler handbook when a sample of the radiographs were assessed twice by the same observer. The Tanner and Witehouse 20 (TW20) bone age showed less inter-observer bias than the radius, ulna and short bone age or the carpal bone age when three observers independently assessed the same sample of radiographs. TW20 was the most useful method of bone age assessment in this study of British children. An unexpected finding was that the carpal bones were significantly more retarded than the radius, ulna and short bones. Separate assessment of the carpal bone age may provide extra information of clinical relevance.
TL;DR: The report indicates that short bone and long bone FRP could reveal different characteristics in some aspects, including the choice of the therapeutic approach, and its differentiation from more aggressive lesions, especially osteosarcoma and osteomyelitis should still be taken into consideration.
TL;DR: Minimal osteosynthesis with Kirschner's wires is a reliable and adequate method of the treatment of open unstable short bone fractures caused by explosive devices.
Abstract: Aim. To evaluate minimal fixation method with Kirschner’s wires in the treatment of open fractures of the hand and foot short bones, caused by explosive devices. Method. There were 270 wounded persons with open fractures of hand and foot short bones, who were surgically treated at the Department of Surgery at the Osijek University Hospital. The stabilization of an unstable open fracture was performed with intramedullary positioned Kirschner’s wires. In a few cases, satisfactory stabilization was achieved with Kirschner’s wires positioned percutaneously alongside the wound and perpendicularly through the fracture. In the rest of the wounded, plaster immobilization was sufficient after surgical treatment and fracture reposition. Results. Among 270 persons with 412 open hand and foot bone fractures, 49% had fracture only in the feet, 27% only in the hands, and 24% in both hands and feet. Unstable short bone fractures were found in 56 patients (21%). Such fractures were stabilized with Kirschner’s wires (n=71). In 58 patients (21%) partial hand and foot amputations had to be performed. Reconstructive operations to improve pseudarthrosis after minimal osteosynthesis were performed on 5 short bones (7%). Osteitis was found on four short bones (6%) after minimal osteosynthesis. Conclusion. Minimal osteosynthesis with Kirschner’s wires is a reliable and adequate method of the treatment of open unstable short bone fractures caused by explosive devices.
TL;DR: The purpose of this report is to document this unusual event that occurred in such a short bone as the distal phalanx of the fifth toe, mimicking a dermatologic entity.
Abstract: Chondroblastoma is an uncommon primary bone tumor, mainly found in the epiphyses of long bones. We describe a 9-year-old girl who presented with a chondroblastoma as a subungual mass in the fifth toe. Radiographs showed an expansive, calcified tumor of the distal phalanx. Histologic examination after excision revealed chondroid differentiation, active mitosis, multinucleated giant cells, calcification, and necrosis. There was no recurrence of the lesion after surgical excision. The purpose of this report is to document this unusual event that occurred in such a short bone as the distal phalanx of the fifth toe, mimicking a dermatologic entity.