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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study was to evaluate our long-term results of operative ankle arthroscopy in local anaesthesia, without tourniquet and antibiotic prophylaxis, and to see whether we could produce the same results other investigators had published using general anaesthesia. Between 1987 and 1992, 51 operative ankle arthroscopies were performed--all as out-patient procedures. Thirty-six patients had local anaesthesia, 7 had general anaesthesia, one had spinal anaesthesia and one had epidural anaesthesia. No prophylactic antibiotics were given. Indications for surgery were the same for patients who had local anaesthesia as for those who had the other types of anaesthesia. Nineteen patients had partial synovectomies, 8 had removals of osteophytes, 7 had debridements of osteochondral fractures, 6 had debridements of mild degenerative osteoarthritis, 3 had loose bodies and 2 had
septic arthritis
. After a mean of 3 years (range 1-8) the patients were sent a questionnaire. They were asked to rate activity level,
pain
, swelling, and limb stiffness on a four-grade scale pre- and postoperatively and to rate their total subjective improvement. They were also asked if they would undergo the same procedure again knowing the outcome of the procedure. Forty-five patients (88%) were available for follow-up. Thirty-four patients (76%) were improved, 10 remained unchanged, and one became worse after surgery. No correlation existed between preoperative symptom duration, sex, trauma, type of anaesthesia, postoperative diagnosis or type of surgical procedure. Minor complications occurred in 11% of patients. Eighty-four percent of the patients said they would undergo the same procedure again. The type of anaesthesia used did not influence this decision.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Late follow-up results of operative ankle arthroscopy in patients under local anaesthesia. 853 51
A study was done of 44 metaphyseal dissociation fractures of the proximal tibia in 42 patients (27 men and 15 women, aged 22 to 77 years; mean, 42 years). Follow-up ranged from 6 months to 4 years. There were 2 study groups: a retrospective group (group 1, 22 fractures) given a variety of treatments ranging from casts to dual plates, and a prospective group (group 2, 22 fractures) treated by combining external fixation and optional minimal internal fixation. There were 12 comminuted fractures in group 1 and 20 in group 2 (P < 0.01). All fractures eventually healed, with an average healing time in group 1 of 3.8 months, and 5.3 months in group 2. There was one delayed union in group 2. Results were graded from poor to excellent, based on
pain
, range-of-motion, and malunion. There were 6 poor and 4 fair results in group 1, and no poor and 3 fair results in group 2. Complications included 6 deep infections, 5 in group 1 (1 requiring a free-flap procedure); and 1 pin-tract infection resulting in
septic arthritis
in group 2. There were 7 gastrocnemius flaps required in group 1, and 1 in group 2. The results of this study suggest that patients treated with external fixation had better results with less infection and soft-tissue complications than those treated with conventional internal fixation.
...
PMID:Metaphyseal dissociation fractures of the proximal tibia. An analysis of treatment and complications. 854 64
By definition, monoarticular arthritis means one-joint involvement, even though, in fact, such a condition is often an oligoarthritis because as many as two or three separate joints will be involved. Arthritis is often limited and may regress, so that it is frequently misdiagnosed. Sometimes, a monoarticular condition may be a polyarthritis onset (i.e., rheumatoid arthritis). Monoarticular arthritis can be caused by many factors, such as infections (
septic arthritis
), nonspecific inflammatory processes (reactive arthritis), crystals deposition (gout, CPPD crystal deposition disease), trauma, neoplasm (pigmented villonodular synovitis), immunologic conditions (amyloidosis) and hormonal changes (parathyroid disease). Its onset is usually acute and sometimes dramatic, with fever,
pain
and joint swelling, so that a decision must be made promptly to stop rapid illness evolution and to prevent the irreversible destruction of cartilage and bone (especially in
septic arthritis
). Diagnostic studies are performed with mono-bilateral radiographs of the joint. Radiographic findings (i.e., soft tissue swelling, joint effusion, widening and thinning of joint spaces, bone erosions and destruction of bone surface) are typical of the disease, but some findings (e.g., type of evolution and progression), laboratory tests, synovial biopsy and arthroscopy can differentiate infectious from inflammatory forms. Scintigraphy can depict isotopic joint uptake, before articular abnormalities are demonstrated with radiography, thanks to its high sensitivity; nevertheless, because of its low specificity, scintigraphy may miss some kinds of lesions (including osteoarthritis) and cannot easily differentiate osteomyelitis from
septic arthritis
. CT and MRI play a secondary, though not negligible, role, especially to study such deep infections as psoas abscesses, which may mimic arthritides.
...
PMID:[Monoarthritis]. 868 51
Nineteen children under the age of two with salmonella
septic arthritis
(SSA) of the shoulder presented to Mukinge Hospital between 1st January 1992 and 31st March 1993. There were 13 boys and six girls. All patients were below the 50th centile for weight. The most common presentation was swelling, pyrexia and non-use of the arm.
Pain
was not always present. All patients were anaemic but in many cases had both WBC and ESR in the normal range. All patients were treated with drainage and antibiotics. All made a good recovery and were discharged
pain
free, apyrexial and using the affected arm. One patient was re-admitted because of recurrent infection. Nine patients reviewed after one month had continued good function with no clinical sign of infection. We conclude that where intestinal salmonella are endemic, low nutritional status is likely to be a factor in the development of a bacteraemia, and that the intra-articular extension of the proximal humeral metaphysis and repetitive minor trauma to the joint are predisposing factors to the development of shoulder infection.
...
PMID:Salmonella septic arthritis of the shoulder in Zambian children. 876 88
The incidence of invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) infections in primary varicella appears to be increasing. GAS infections complicating varicella range from cellulitis, abscess, and
septic arthritis
to life-threatening necrotizing fasciitis and pyomyositis in association with GAS toxic shock syndrome (TSS). Four patients admitted in 1 year to the Children's Hospital and Medical Center in Seattle, whose care included evaluation and treatment by the Orthopaedic service, are presented to illustrate this spectrum. Three had a delay in diagnosis, including discharge from previous emergency department visits. One patient with polyarticular
septic arthritis
was treated with diagnostic aspiration and intravenous antibiotics. The remainder required urgent surgical debridement for treatment of deep infection. Patients with necrotizing fasciitis or pyomyositis had life-threatening complications of TSS, including hypotension, adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), coagulopathy, and acute renal failure. These patients required aggressive fluid resuscitation and prolonged intensive care unit support. Diagnostic imaging studies were obtained in one patient with necrotizing pyomyositis but may have served only to delay definitive treatment. Recognition of the potential for secondary GAS infections and a high index of suspicion for the presence of necrotizing soft-tissue infection are essential in the evaluation of any child with fever and localized extremity
pain
with varicella.
...
PMID:Orthopaedic manifestations of invasive group A streptococcal infections complicating primary varicella. 878 12
Transient synovitis is the most common cause of acute hip pain in children three to 10 years of age. Children with this condition typically present with hip pain for one to three days, accompanied by limping or the refusal to bear weight. Transient synovitis has an uncertain etiology and remains a diagnosis of exclusion. First,
septic arthritis
must be ruled out, since femoral head destruction, degenerative arthritis and permanent deformity can occur if
septic arthritis
is not treated promptly.
Septic arthritis
should be suspected in a patient with severe
pain
or spasm on hip movement or palpation, a temperature higher than 37.5 degrees C (99.5 degrees F) and an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 20 mm per hour or greater. Hip aspiration is the diagnostic procedure of choice if
septic arthritis
is suspected. Treatment of transient synovitis consists of bed rest and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, with regular temperature checks to exclude the onset of fever. If significant
pain
and limping persist seven to 10 days after the initial presentation, the patient should be reevaluated.
...
PMID:Transient synovitis of the hip in children. 885 81
Pain
and swelling at the first metatarsophalangeal joint can be caused by acute calcific periarthritis (ACP), an inflammatory condition resulting from deposition of hydroxyapatite crystals. A case is reported of a 23-year-old man in whom ACP was initially mistaken for gout,
septic arthritis
, and cellulitis. The diagnosis of ACP is based on the finding of inflammation around a joint along with radiographic evidence of periarticular soft tissue calcifications. Calcifications may disappear over time, as they did in this case. Failure to recognize this condition can lead to unnecessary testing and inappropriate treatment.
...
PMID:Hydroxyapatite pseudopodagra in a young man: acute calcific periarthritis of the first metatarsophalangeal joint. 892 43
Osteomyelitis of the sternocosto-clavicular (SCC) articulation is a rare infection usually caused by Staphylococcus aureus and enterobacteria. It usually occurs in individuals with osteoarticular disease or predisposing factors. Prolonged antibiotic treatment and articular puncture are generally accepted. Authors do not agree on an established protocol. We report three cases of SCC
septic arthritis
in two previously healthy patients with two foci of infection (one perianal abscess and one dental extraction) and in one adult patient with Still's disease.
Pain
and intense inflammation was referred to the shoulder, with scarce leukocytosis and fever reaching 38 degrees C. The germs responsible were S. aureus, Bacteroides fragilis and B. oralis. Two of the patients had local, regional abscesses. Long-term antibiotic treatment failed in all cases and surgery for SCC resection and myoplasty of the pectoralis major muscle was required. Recovery was good and shoulder and arm mobility was excellent. We propose medical treatment and articular diagnostic-therapeutic puncture as the first line of therapy for this disease. When evolution is poor or when complications appear, such as abscesses or mediastinitis, we conclude that radical debridement and myoplasty of the pectoralis major muscle are indicated.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of sternoclavicular osteomyelitis]. 901 15
Twenty-five patients, 11 to 19 years in age, were treated with hip arthrodesis for an incapacitating painful and stiff hip. Clinical diagnoses included avascular necrosis (AVN) associated with slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) (7 patients), posttraumatic AVN (6),
septic arthritis
(4), complication of treatment of developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) (4), pathologic fracture of femoral neck through bone cyst with resulting AVN (2), Perthes disease (1), and idiopathic chondrolysis (1). Preoperative motion was minimal or absent in 13 patients, limited in 12, and very painful in 23 patients. A two-incision surgical approach was utilized, providing for an intra-articular fusion technique and internal fixation with precise positioning. The surgical technique described avoids any dissection of the hip abductor musculature or a deforming osteotomy of the proximal femur. Twelve complications occurred in 10 patients, 9 of which required additional operative treatment. At an average postoperative follow-up of 6 years, 10 months, the overall activity level was greatly increased over the preoperative activity level secondary to the relief of
pain
. Hip arthrodesis is the acceptable salvage procedure for the otherwise healthy, active adolescent or young adult with unilateral hip disease characterized by incapacitating
pain
and/or an unacceptable fixed position.
...
PMID:Intra-articular hip arthrodesis without subtrochanteric osteotomy in adolescents: technique and short-term follow-up. 911 92
Septic arthritis
of the hip joint is a condition that can often lead to partial or complete destruction of the hip joint, causing severe functional disability. Reports in the literature indicate that optimal management of these patients is unclear. Our report presents a follow-up of 37 patients (44 hips) who had
septic arthritis
during infancy or childhood. In general, patients at follow-up had a poor anatomical appearance radiographically, although
pain
and activity restriction were minimal. Results suggest that surgical efforts should be directed primarily at correcting limb length discrepancy and malalignment of the mechanical axes. In general, patients with a hip deformity of type I-III had a good functional outcome, whereas patients with hip deformity type IV with an instable hip joint had an unsatisfactory outcome. Any indication for hip replacement in these patients should be based not only on radiological findings, but also on the functional situation.
...
PMID:[Late sequelae of coxitis in infants]. 944 92
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