Results from 26 hips of 24 Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease patients were evaluated retrospectively. There were 22 male and two female patients in the study group. The mean age of the patients was 8.3 years and the mean follow-up was 13.03 years. All the patients were older than 6 years of age and all of them had lateral pillar group C hips. The patients were treated with intertrochanteric uniplanar varus osteotomy. All the patients were mature at the time of the last evaluation. Radiological end results were evaluated according to Stulberg's classification. Six hips healed with spherical congruency (Stulberg class 1 or 2), 19 with aspherical congruency (Stulberg class 3 or 4) and one with aspherical incongruency (Stulberg class 5). Six of 14 hips treated before 9 years of age healed with spherical congruency but all hips treated after 9 years of age healed with Stulberg class 3, 4 or 5 results. Trochanteric overgrowth was evident in 20 hips. The results of this radiological outcome study showed that Herring class C hips treated with proximal femoral varus osteotomy had a poor outcome, especially after 9 years of age in this group of patients.
Compartment syndrome (CS) is a threatening condition characterized by excessive tissue pressure accumulation associated with acute trauma. Compartment syndrome causes a significant reduction in blood flow with subsequent muscle and nerve ischemic necrosis. Recently, reports have described the importance of intramuscular pressure measurements as a basis for CS diagnosis. Unfortunately, the measuring devices that were utilized produced results with unsatisfactory reliability, making a diagnosis and subsequent treatment challenging. Here, we report the use of an anesthesia pressure monitoring device with greater precision for pressure measurements, as well as real-time monitoring of intraoperative compartment pressure decompression efficacy. This device enabled the accurate diagnosis and rapid treatment of a thenar compartment syndrome (TCS) in the left hand of a diabetic female in an emergency setting. She presented extreme pain in the thumb flexion-extension (FE). Her condition was complicated by diabetic cellulitis, primarily of Staphylococcus aureus. Consequently, successful microsurgery in the thenar space, together with debridement, resulted in remarkable pain relief during FE of the thumb metacarpophalangeal (MCP) and interphalangeal (IP) joints, as well as the disappearance of the infection by Day 10. Subsequent one- to two-year follow-up assessments revealed marked recovery.
Posterior dislocation of the shoulder is extremely rare condition. Common etiologic causes are extreme trauma, epilepsy and electroconvulsive therapy. Most cases are misdiagnosed due to inappropriate phisical examination and/or inadequate radiologic evaluation. In the literature several operation technics are described. Here we present a case with posterior dislocation of left shoulder after succesful treatment of right shoulder.
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