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Query: UNIPROT:P50502 (
Hip
)
7,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hundred and ten consecutive cases in acute and various stages of chronicity were studied. Incidence regarding age, sex, bone affected and complications was established. The optimum way to manage
osteomyelitis
in different stages was sought. It was found that in acute stage early decompression of bone leads to resolution of disease.
Hip
involvement leads to necrosis of capital epiphysis and should be treated on an emergency basis. In the sub-acute stage it is necessary to protect the weakened bone. In chronic stage, we suggest sequestrectomy only after adequate involucrum has formed properly. Antibiotics in acute stage should be instituted as early as possible and should be continued for three weeks after the fever subsides. Antibiotics in sub-acute and chronic stage are given only in cases of reactivation of infection and around the time of surgery. Surgery, when required should be performed without too much soft tissue damage especially the covering periosteum. But repeated surgery should be avoided as they lead to cicatrization of muscles and further sequestration of bone.
...
PMID:Natural course of hematogenous pyogenic osteomyelitis (a retrospective study of 110 cases). 180
Hip
ultrasound was performed on 44 children (114 exams) presenting with a painful hip or a limp thought to be due to hip disease. Effusions were found in 20 patients (21 hips).
Hip
ultrasound in combination with aspiration of the joint was found to be useful in diagnosis of
osteomyelitis
and septic joints, transient synovitis, trauma, and traumatic synovitis. We had no false positives or false negatives for hip effusions by ultrasound. In previous reports, absolute measurements have been relied upon for determination of hip effusions. We present a characteristic appearance of a capsule with and without abnormal joints fluid. The results of these 44 patients are summarized.
...
PMID:High-resolution hip ultrasound in the limping child. 249 45
Septic arthritis is usually seen in children as an acute febrile illness induced by septicemia, local inoculation of a joint caused by trauma or adjacent
osteomyelitis
. It also occurs in adults particulary those with debilitating disease or sepsis at other sites. It normally happens in knee joints, but rarely in hip joints. A 65-year-old patient suffered from hip pain and febrile episodes intermittently for two months. Diagnostic hip aspiration was performed with 60 ml pus drained. The aspirate grew Staphylococcus aureus.
Hip
arthrotomy was performed with extensive debridement. Eighteen months later, this patient received total hip replacement and he has remained well for 8 years, with no evidence of infection or of implants loosening.
...
PMID:Septic arthritis of adult hip treated by total hip replacement--a case report. 910 8
A retrospective study was done to review the clinical experience of septic arthritis and
osteomyelitis
in the newborns in our centre. Case records of all the neonates born from January 1989 to August 1994 and those admitted to outborn nursery from 1985 to 1993 were reviewed. Diagnosis of septic arthritis/
osteomyelitis
was made in the presence of relevant clinical signs and supported by positive culture from blood or joint fluid and abnormal X-ray or ultrasound findings. The incidence of septic arthritis and
osteomyelitis
among inborn babies was 1 in 1500. There were 25 neonates with mean gestational age 34.5 (range 27-40) weeks and mean birth weight 2269 (range 990-4750) gms. Limitation of movement (64%) and local swelling (60%) were commonest presentations. A total of 33 joints were involved in 25 babies. Eight babies (32%) had multiple joint involvement.
Hip
and knee were the most commonly involved joints (48% each). In 19 babies (76%) joint involvement occurred in association with a generalized septicemic illness while 6 babies (24%) had localised signs and symptoms. Joint aspirate was positive for gram stain or culture in 12 (48%) and 10 babies (40%) had positive blood culture. Klebsiella pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus were commonest isolates. Radiological changes were seen in 13 (52%) babies. All were treated with appropriate antibiotics and open surgical drainage was done in 5 (20%) cases. Bone and joint infections are important complications in sick septicemic neonates and need early diagnosis, appropriate management with antibiotics, surgical drainage in selected cases to prevent long term morbidity.
...
PMID:Bone and joint infection in neonates. 1077 99
Knee rotationplasty was initially proposed for the reconstruction of the knee joint in the congenital hypoplasia of the femur. Its application was extended to functional reconstruction of the knee joint after wide resection of malignant bone or soft tissue tumor around the knee. It has also been shown to salvage a failed knee-sparing surgery due to infection or the aseptic loosening of the prosthesis.
Hip
rotationplasty has been described as a method for the reconstuction of hip function, as well as in the knee joint, in the case of a primary malignant tumor of the proximal part of the femur in children. It has also been described as having a surgical application for the severe congenital deficiency of the proximal part of the femur to reconstruct hip and knee joints, as well as for the massive bone defect of the proximal part of the femur due to infection to mimic a functional femoral shaft. This article reports a case where the hip joint was secondarily reconstructed with hip rotationplasty after subtotal resection of the femur due to infection of the hip hemiarthroplastic prosthesis and
osteomyelitis
of the hip joint and femur.
...
PMID:Hip rotationplasty with antibiotic-loaded bone cement spacer for severe infection following limb-sparing surgery. 1929 68
Idiopathic transient osteoporosis of the hip is a rare condition that was first described in a series women in their third trimester of pregnancy. The clinical course is usually benign and self-limiting. Magnetic resonance is very useful for the diagnosis. Differential diagnoses include avascular necrosis of the femoral head, septic arthritis of the hip,
osteomyelitis
, stress fractures, primary or secondary neoplastic processes, and referred pain from the spine or genitourinary tract in pregnant women. The authors present a case of idiopathic transient osteoporosis of the pelvis in a young nonpregnant woman with insidious hip pain with no antecedent infection or trauma.
Hip
Int
PMID:Idiopathic transient osteoporosis of the pelvis in a non-pregnant young woman: a case study. 1945 7
A case of Cryptococcus neoformans
osteomyelitis
involving both the femur and rib is reported. A 50-year-old male presented with a 1-month history of a persistently painful right hip. Radiography revealed an osteolytic area in the subcapital region of the right femoral neck and trochanteric region, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an intramedullary lesion in the peritrochanteric region. A Tc99m whole body bone scan showed significantly increased uptake in the posterior aspect of the right 7th rib as well as the right femoral region. Hemiarthroplasty with a bipolar prosthesis was performed. Because a permeative osteolytic lesion was identified intraoperatively, surgical resection was also performed. A culture from intraoperative specimens yielded C. neoformans. The rib infection was not treated surgically. Intravenous fluconazole was administered postoperatively. The patient became seronegative for cryptococcal antigen with no further illness over the next five years.
Hip
Int
PMID:Bifocal cryptococcal osteomyelitis: management of a patient with concurrent femur and rib infections. 2181 49
The aim of this study was to evaluate the postoperative morbidity at the donor site and the long-term outcome after the harvest of bicortical iliac bone grafts, including the iliac crest and the anterior superior iliac spine (ASIS), by using a confirmed score. We retrospectively examined 54 consecutive patients who had had vascularised iliac bone grafts harvested to reconstruct different parts of the mandible. We used the Harris
Hip
Score to evaluate objectively the long-term postoperative morbidity at the donor site. Of 54 patients, 20 were female (37%) and 34 male (63%), with a mean age of 49 years (range 12-81). The causes of the bony defects were malignancy (n=37, 69%), benign tumours (n=7, 13%),
osteomyelitis
(n=9, 17%), and atrophy of the alveolar ridge (n=1, 2%). All transplants healed adequately. A total of 38/52 patients (73%) had a score of more than 80 points, which defines clinical success. Vascularised iliac bone grafts offer excellent bony dimensions with optimal shape to be used for reconstruction of different parts of the mandible. They can be harvested bicortically, including the iliac crest and the ASIS, with acceptable morbidity at the donor site. The Harris
Hip
Score is an appropriate tool for the evaluation of long-term impairment at the donor site after the harvest of vascularised iliac bone grafts, and it could be used to compare the results of different studies.
...
PMID:Functional long-term results after the harvest of vascularised iliac bone grafts bicortically with the anterior superior iliac spine included. 2267 14
Hip
and pelvic pain during pregnancy or after delivery is a common problem in young females, and in most cases this problem has a self-limiting course. The patient described in this case suffered from severe hip pain after childbirth. MR imaging study was performed and it showed arthritis of bilateral hip joints and
osteomyelitis
of femoral heads with an abscess in the surrounding muscle. Infection, such as septic arthritis or
osteomyelitis
, is an extremely rare cause of peripartum joint pain. The patient's clinical symptoms and laboratory findings improved with antibiotic therapy. However, limitation of motion of the bilateral hip joints persisted although the patient continued rehabilitative therapy for 15 months, and the patient had to undergo bilateral total hip replacement. Hereby, we present a case of severe
osteomyelitis
and pyogenic arthritis of bilateral femoral heads and hip joints after delivery, which eventually required bilateral total hip replacement.
...
PMID:Osteomyelitis of Bilateral Femoral Heads After Childbirth: A Case Report. 2616 59
Hip
disorders in a pediatric population are a diagnostic challenge. The aim of the study is to assess the role of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the evaluation of non-traumatic hip disorders in a series of Egyptian patients and to review the literature on the most common hip conditions. Seventy two consecutive patients [40 males (55.6%) and 32 females (44.4)] with acute onset of hip complaints unrelated to trauma or falls were recruited. All patients underwent an initial full clinical assessment and blood tests as well as contrast enhanced MRI of both hips. The most common diagnosis in this group of Egyptian patients was transient synovitis in 29 (40.3%) cases, followed by seronegative enthesopathy and arthropathy syndrome in 8 (11.1%), septic arthritis in 10 (13.9%), tuberculous arthritis in 4 (5.6%), sickle-cell disease in 7 (9.7%), complicated with septic arthritis in 3 (4.2%), transient bone marrow edema (BME) in 3 (4.2%),
osteomyelitis
in 2 (2.8%), osteosarcoma in 2 (2.8%), sciatic nerve injury in 1 (1.4%), leukemia with BME in 1 (1.4%), coxa vara of both hips and L5/S1 facet joint ankylosis in 1 (1.4%), and a benign bone cyst in 1 (1.4%). MRI studies showed hip effusion in a total of 51 patients (70.8%), joint space narrowing in 9 (12.5%), and BME in 15(20.8%). MRI is a sensitive tool for assessing hip disorders in a pediatric population and can play an important role in both diagnosis and management of different hip disorders, irrespective of the underlying pathology.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging features of hip disorders in an Egyptian pediatric population. 2649 65
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