Six children with entrapment of the medial epicondyle in the elbow after closed reduction of a posterior dislocation were seen an average of 14 weeks after injury. The elbows were painful and the average range of flexion was 22 degrees. Two children had ulnar nerve involvement which recovered after operation. The epicondyle was removed from the joint and either reattached to the humerus or excised, and the muscles reattached. Two children had anterior transposition of the ulnar nerve, one for pre-operative hyperaesthesia, and the other to relieve tension on the nerve. At follow-up, at an average of 15 months after operation, flexion had increased fivefold, none of the children had pain and all were leading normal lives.
Two hundred and twenty patients with active spinal tuberculosis were seen at the Orthopaedic Centre, Tunis, between 1965 and 1975. Fifty adults and 11 children were paraplegic, this being particularly associated with infection of the mid-thoracic spine and with marked kyphosis. The number of diseased vertebrae ranged up to 7, the average kyphosis measuring 53 degrees and the worst being 140 degrees. Patients had been paralysed for an average of 4 months before seeking treatment. Thirty seven patients were treated by chemotherapy alone and 26 with the addition of anterior decompression and grafting. The selection of treatment was arbitrary. The average follow up was nearly three years. Sixty eight percent of the medical group had complete neurological recovery and 19% partial recovery, against 38% and 31% respectively for the surgical group. Mortality in the medical group was 5% compared with 23% after surgery. Patients in either group who showed no sign of improvement within six months of the beginning of treatment failed to recover. The prognosis was better in children and in patients with partial paraplegia but was not influenced by the duration of paraplegia.
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