Publications by authors named "HUGHSTON J"

We evaluated the results of a surgical procedure to correct medial subluxation of the patella in 63 patients (65 knees), most of whom had undergone a lateral retinacular release. We performed a direct repair or a reconstruction of the lateral patellotibial ligament using locally available tissue such as strips of iliotibial band or patellar tendon. Followup averaged 53.

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This review focuses on the complications of extensor mechanism surgery for symptomatic patellar malalignment and ways to avoid those complications. We combined a review of new and referred patients who had complications resulting from extensor mechanism surgery with a review of selected literature specifically addressing similar complications. By studying the pathologic anatomy at the time of arthrotomy, it was possible in many cases to determine the causes of adverse outcomes with this type of surgery.

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Forty-one of fifty patients (fifty knees) who had had a repair of an acute tear of the medial ligaments, a procedure in which repair of the posterior oblique ligament and the semimembranosus complex was emphasized, were re-evaluated after an average duration of follow-up of twenty-two years (range, eighteen to thirty years). The ages of the patients at the time of the injury had ranged from fifteen to twenty-one years. In twenty-four of the forty-one knees, the anterior cruciate ligament had been torn.

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Twenty-five cases of diffuse pigmented villonodular synovitis of the knee in 23 patients were reviewed to determine the results of surgical treatment. All the cases met strict histologic criteria for diagnosis. Long-term clinical follow-up data (average, 58 months) were available for all patients.

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Twenty-five cases of diffuse pigmented villonodular synovitis of the knee in 23 patients were reviewed to identify characteristic clinical presentations and histologic findings. All cases met strict histologic criteria for diagnosis. Clinical presentation consisted of insidious and progressive symptoms of significant joint swelling with discomfort, but not isolated pain.

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The diagnostic accuracy of the clinical examination for intraarticular injuries of the knee was documented by arthroscopy over a 6-month period. Two-hundred ninety patients (296 knees) were evaluated by history, physical examination, and standard radiographs. Supplemental diagnostic studies included 41 magnetic resonance images, 2 arthrograms, and 1 previous arthroscopy that had been recently performed.

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A knowledge of the patterns of injury to the components of the iliotibial tract allows a clearer interpretation of motion limits testing in patients with abnormal anterior tibial translation of the knee (anterior cruciate ligament-deficient knees). Eighty-two consecutive patients with acute knee injuries were classified as anteromedial-anterolateral rotatory instability (anterior cruciate ligament-deficient) based on the abnormal motion demonstrated by clinical examination tests for instability. At surgery, injuries to the intraarticular and extraarticular anatomic structures were identified and correlated to the abnormal grades of motion demonstrated by the knee motion limits examination.

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A questionnaire using a system of visual analog scales was developed for analyzing subjective knee complaints. This system was tested on 117 consecutive patients who had undergone knee surgery and 65 patients at their initial office evaluation of a knee disorder. The validity of and patient affinity for this type of questionnaire was compared with that of three other established subjective evaluation methods.

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Twenty-nine adult patients (30 knees) who failed conservative treatment had surgical excision of a non-rheumatoid cyst. To determine the effectiveness of this surgical procedure, we reviewed the cases of 24 patients (25 knees) who were available for subjective and objective follow up. Twenty of the 25 knees (80%) were rated excellent or good.

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Twenty-nine cases of pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVS) of the knee in 27 patients were reviewed to determine characteristic roentgenographic findings. All cases met strict histologic criteria for diagnosis. Four cases were localized PVS (LPVS), and 25 cases were diffuse PVS (DPVS).

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For 15 years (1955 to 1970), I was plowing "new ground" pretty much by myself. When you plow behind an old mule and hit a stump hole full of cottonmouth moccasins, you have to get on the move in a hurry and figure out some solution to the predicament or you won't get your corn planted. So, I was not treating the overweight, knock-kneed, loose-jointed, teenaged girl, but the young boy or girl who thought that he or she was an athlete and had dreams of being a star.

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Miyakawa patellectomy.

J Bone Joint Surg Am

December 1988

A Miyakawa patellectomy was done in seventeen patients (twenty knees) for either osteoarthritis or chondromalacia of the patella, or both, secondary to malfunction of the extensor mechanism. Patients who had had a patellar fracture were not included in the series. The Miyakawa patellectomy realigns the extensor mechanism, with the proper tension, and centers the functional pull of the quadriceps tendon and patellar ligament.

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We reviewed the clinical records and operative notes of 28 patients with fractures of the posterolateral tibial plateau seen at our institution from 1949 to 1982. Five of the 28 patients had chronic depressions of the posterolateral tibial plateau after initial treatment elsewhere. All five were disabled because of significant functional instability when the knee was in flexion.

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We examined 54 patients (60 knees) referred to us because of their failure to improve, or because of a worsening of their preoperative symptoms, following an arthroscopic lateral retinacular release. Thirty knees developed medial subluxation of the patella postoperatively. This disabling condition is new to us.

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To determine the effectiveness of nonoperative and operative treatment of initial acute patellar dislocation, we reviewed the charts of 399 patients with the diagnosis of an acute dislocation, seen during a 30 year period. One hundred patients (103 knees) met the criteria for inclusion in the study. The average age of the patient at injury was 21.

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Over a 10 year period, 24 of 54 acute PCL tears in cases of straight medial instability demonstrated an absent or an equivocal posterior drawer test. Most of these (22, 91.6%) were contact injuries, and in the 11 cases where the mechanism of injury was known (45.

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We evaluated the surgical results of 42 consecutive patients with spontaneous rupture of the Achilles tendon treated from 1973 to 1984 to determine the causes of rupture and to evaluate our treatment methods. Patients were divided into early and late repair groups and their charts reviewed to determine common clinical features. A new method of repair with early functional range of motion exercises before casting was used and compared to other techniques in common use.

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Based on an extensive review of the literature and dissections of 17 fresh-frozen knee specimens, the authors divide the lateral fascia lata of the knee into two functional components: the iliopatellar band and the iliotibial tract. Aponeurotic, superficial, middle, deep, and capsulo-osseous layers contribute to these two functional components. The superficial layer of the iliotibial tract, combined with the deep, and capsulo-osseous layers, is hypothesized to function as an anterolateral ligament of the knee.

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In summation, the solution to many complications of anterior cruciate ligament surgery seems to be increasing the surgeon's knowledge of its complex anatomy and surgical techniques. Once the surgeon has learned firsthand the details of a relatively successful procedure, he can perform it on anatomic specimens for finesse. All he needs then is appropriate instrumentation and a postoperative protocol for rehabilitation under his direct supervision.

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