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1980 Congenital dislocation of the hip in infantile idiopathic scoliosis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1980 Nov;62-B(4):447-9. Congenital dislocation of the hip in infantile idiopathic scoliosis.Hooper G. The incidence of congenital dislocation of the hip in 156 children with infantile idiopathic scoliosis was 6.4 per cent, approximately 10 times its frequency in the general population. In both of these deformities there was a predominance of girls (eight girls: two boys). In unilateral dislocation of the hip the convexity of the thoracic scoliosis was on the same side as the dislocation. Eight out of the 10 children with both deformities also had plagiocephaly.

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1980 Prognosis in infantile idiopathic scoliosis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1980 May;62-B(2):151-4. Prognosis in infantile idiopathic scoliosis.Thompson SK, Bentley G.
A review was performed of 86 cases of infantile idiopathic scoliosis treated between 1962 and 1979. The single primary curves were classified as resolving, stable, progressive with a low rib--vertebra angle difference (RVAD) and progressive with a high RVAD. Two single primary curves subsequently developed a second curve and 17 were double when first diagnosed. Prognosis was difficult to establish before the age of five years. Only 18 per cent of curves showing progression beyond 50 degrees reached that point before the age of four. Conversely, if a scoliosis of 50 degrees or more was present before the age of four it always progressed. A more favourable outcome was indicated by male sex, a left-sided curve, a low initial curve measurement, an RVAD of less than 20 degrees in the initial radiograph, and the onset of scoliosis in the first year of life.

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1980 Scoliosis in symptomatic spondylolisthesis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1980 May;62-B(2):155-7. Scoliosis in symptomatic spondylolisthesis.McPhee IB, O'Brien JP. The association between spondylolisthesis and scoliosis was studied in 84 patients who presented during a 30-year period with symptomatic spondylolisthesis. The incidence of scoliosis was 42 per cent, the majority of cases being lumbar or thoracolumbar curves of less than 15 degrees. The incidence was highest in the group of patients with spondylolisthesis at L4--5 where all except one had scoliosis. Scoliosis was present in 47 per cent of patients with dysplastic spondylolisthesis at the lumbosacral junction; in this group, the incidence of scoliosis was greater where the displacement exceeded 25 per cent. The lowest incidence (25 per cent) was found in the group with isthmic spondylolisthesis at the lumbosacral junction. There appeared to be no relationship between excessive lumbar lordosis or tightness of the hamstrings and scoliosis.

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1980 Stability of the scoliotic spine after fusion

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1980 Feb;62-B(1):59-64. Stability of the scoliotic spine after fusion.McMaster MJ. The factors during and after operation which influence the development of a solid and stable posterior spinal fusion have been evaluated in 406 patients with scoliosis. The patients were managed in three different ways and all pseudarthroses were accurately detected by exploring the spines six months after the attempted fusion. The incidence of pseudarthroses was significantly lowered from 25 per cent in Group I to 3.8 per cent in Group III by the application of Harrington instrumentation and the use of large amounts of autogenous iliac bone grafts in addition to an interfacetal fusion. Early mobilisation 7 to 10 days after operation and a return to normal activities in a well-moulded underarm plaster jacket did not have a detrimental effect on the development of the fusion or the early maintenance of correction. Those spines with supplementary bone grafts stabilised more rapidly and had better maintenance of correction with only minimal loss after removal of all external support at 10 months.

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1980 The natural history of scoliosis in myelodysplasia

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1980 Feb;62-B(1):54-8. The natural history of scoliosis in myelodysplasia.Piggott H.
Two hundred and fifty cases of myelodysplasia were reviewed in relation to spinal deformity. Approximately half of the children had, or were expected to develop, curves severe enough to need operations and only 10 per cent maintained completely undeformed spines. The most frequent deformity was scoliosis which could be subdivided into congenital and developmental types. The latter was of mixed aetiology, neuromuscular imbalance and asymmetry of the neural arch both contributing, while in some cases no causative factors could be identified. The best early indicator that developmental scoliosis was likely to appear was a high segmental level of both the neurological deficit and the neural arch defect. Deformity was very unlikely to start after the age of nine years.

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1980 The scintigraphic assessment of the scoliotic spine after fusion

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1980 Feb;62-B(1):65-72. The scintigraphic assessment of the scoliotic spine after fusion.McMaster MJ, Merrick MV.
Scintigraphy using technetium-labelled methylene diphosphonate was performed on 110 scoliotic patients six months after an attempted fusion and the findings compared with those at exploration to detect the possible sites of pseudarthroses. The majority of patients (65 per cent) had a uniform uptake of isotope over the fused area and all but one had a solid fusion. A second group (35 per cent) had a more patchy uptake and eight of the nine patients with pseudarthroses were in this group. Pseudarthroses were detected as localised areas of increased uptake but there were also a number of false positives and scans that were difficult to interpret due to continuing new bone formation in immature fusions. In those scans performed after one year the pseudarthroses which had been missed were seen more clearly in contrast to the diminished generalised activity in the fused area.

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1981 A short-term follow-up of patients with mild scoliosis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1981;63B(4):523-5. A short-term follow-up of patients with mild scoliosis.Scott MM, Piggott H.
Thirty patients with mild idiopathic scoliosis were reviewed between 7 and 17 years after spinal maturity. These patients were not treated surgically because they were cosmetically acceptable, and unlikely to progress further. Standardised radiographs taken at spinal maturity and at review were comparable, so any change represented true progression in a fully mature spine. There was an increase of lateral curvature in 60 per cent of the patients; this was small and always under 10 degrees. No change was seen in rotation. Lateral curves over 30 degrees, with rotation of 25 degrees or more, were found to be almost twice as likely to progress. It is suggested that caution should be exercised in leaving these curves untreated, and follow-up into early adult life is advisable.

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1981 Immunofluorescent staining for collagen and proteoglycan in normal and scoliotic intervertebral discs

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1981;63B(4):529-34. Links Immunofluorescent staining for collagen and proteoglycan in normal and scoliotic intervertebral discs.Beard HK, Roberts S, O'Brien JP. Specific antisera to collagen Types I, II and III and proteoglycan were used to investigate the distributions of these molecules in normal human intervertebral discs. Immunofluorescent staining indicated the presence of small amounts of Type III collagen located pericellularly in normal adult intervertebral discs. This finding had not been demonstrated previously by other methods. Similar specimens of intervertebral discs from 17 patients with scoliosis of varying aetiologies were examined, but no evidence was obtained for primary connective tissue defects. Secondary changes, especially marked vascularisation of the inner annulus, were apparent in a number of scoliotic discs, and some of these showed enhanced staining for collagen Type I and proteoglycan, and intercellular matrix staining for Type III collagen.

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1981 Juvenile idiopathic scoliosis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1981 Feb;63-B(1):61-6.
Juvenile idiopathic scoliosis.Figueiredo UM, James JI. A series of 98 patients with juvenile idiopathic scoliosis have been analysed. This showed that between the ages of four and six there was a higher incidence in boys whereas between seven and nine years of age, the proportion of girls was higher. Regardless of sex and age the majority of the curves were convex to the right and the single thoracic curve was the commonest pattern. Spontaneous resolution occurred in seven patients: in four the curves resolved within two years; in the three others the curves resolved in three, four and five years respectively. Forty-four per cent of all patients were managed conservatively and in 56 per cent spinal fusion was carried out.

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1982 A transverse bar system to supplement Harrington distraction instrumentation in scoliosis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1982;64(2):226-7. A transverse bar system to supplement Harrington distraction instrumentation in scoliosis. A radiological study during operation.Ransford AO, Edgar MA.

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1982 Dwyer instrumentation in the treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1982;64(5):536-41. Dwyer instrumentation in the treatment of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.Hsu LC, Zucherman J, Tang SC, Leong JC.
Twenty-eight patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis treated by anterior spinal fusion with Dwyer instrumentation were reviewed. The average length of follow-up was 6.9 years. This technique produced better correction of lateral curvature and rotation than Harrington instrumentation, particularly in the thoracolumbar and lumbar region. The length of spine requiring fusion was also shorter. There is, however, a tendency for Dwyer instrumentation to lead to kyphosis. Morbidity was significant and included one case of paraplegia, four cases of deep infection and one case of instrument failure. All of these complications, except one case of deep infection, occurred in patients with curves with an apex above the seventh thoracic vertebra.

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1982 Pre-operative correction in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1982;64(5):530-5. Pre-operative correction in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.Edgar MA, Chapman RH, Glasgow MM.
One hundred and sixty-seven patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis were allocated prospectively to one of three different groups for correction before undergoing posterior spinal fusion and Harrington instrumentation, In group 1 single curves were corrected by a Risser turnbuckle plaster jacket and double curves by halo-pelvic traction. In Group 2 patients performed Cotrel dynamic traction for three weeks and this was followed by correction in a plaster cast. In Group 3 patients were given Cotrel dynamic traction for one week only and the operation was performed without a plaster cast. There was no significant difference in the overall correction achieved among the patients in the three groups except that double curves corrected slightly better in Group 2. The correction achieved by Cotrel dynamic traction after three weeks was not significantly different from that obtained at 48 hours. An anteroposterior radiograph of the spine taken during Cotrel dynamic traction was a valuable guide to the mobility of the curve and is preferable to radiographs of the patients bending laterally, particularly with respect to curves over 70 degrees. The paper concludes that correction before operation is not required routinely in adolescent idiopathic curves unless the deformity is a severe and rigid one in which case a radiograph during Cotrel traction is a useful assessment.

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1982 Scoliosis associated with osteogenesis imperfecta

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1982;64(1):36-43. Scoliosis associated with osteogenesis imperfecta.Yong-Hing K, MacEwen GD.
A survey was conducted to document the results of bracing and spinal fusion for scoliosis associated with osteogenesis imperfecta. Observations were made of 121 patients who underwent treatment by bracing or spinal fusion and who had been treated by 51 orthopaedic surgeons in 14 countries. The average curve before bracing measured 43 degrees. The braces were ineffective in stopping progression even in small curves. We were unable to determine whether braces slowed the rate of progression of curvature. The average age at fusion was 15 years 7 months, the average curve before operation measured 74 degrees, and the average correction was 36 per cent. The high incidence of complications was related to the size of the curve before spinal fusion, the use of Harrington instrumentation, and the presence of associated kyphosis. In the absence of pseudarthrosis or kyphosis, late bending of the fused spine did not seem to occur.

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1982 Spontaneous transposition of the spinal cord

J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1982;64(4):413-5. Spontaneous transposition of the spinal cord.Carvell JE, Dickson

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