Type II syndactyly or synpolydactyly. (25/62)

A new family with syndactyly type II or synpolydactyly is described with 16 affected members in six generations. No other major skeletal or extraskeletal malformations were present, but the association with minor local anomalies may be a common feature. Various metacarpal or metatarsal abnormalities may be part of this type of syndactyly. The family pedigree confirms the autosomal dominant mode of inheritance with incomplete penetrance and the frequent occurrence of non-manifesting heterozygotes resulting in 'skipped generations'.  (+info)

The late results of tarsometatarsal joint injuries. (26/62)

The late results of tarsometatarsal injuries in 33 patients have been reviewed. The average follow-up period was 15 years (range 11 to 20 years). Methods of treatment included cast immobilisation, and closed or open reduction with or without internal fixation. All patients noted diminishing symptoms after injury and all but six returned to their former occupation. Neither the initial fracture type nor the treatment had any apparent bearing on subsequent function; nor was there any correlation between radiographic assessment of the injury and the patient's symptoms.  (+info)

Longitudinal bone growth after sciatic denervation in rats. (27/62)

The right sciatic nerve of 50 one-month-old male rats was cut under general anaesthesia. Groups of animals were sacrificed at intervals of up to 12 weeks after operation and the length of the femora, tibiae and first and fifth metatarsals were measured with a caliper accurate to 0.05 mm. From the first week, both metatarsals were between 3% and 5% shorter on the denervated side, but there was no further increase of the discrepancy. The femora were less than 1% longer in the denervated limb at the second and eighth week. No difference was found between the lengths of the tibiae. The various factors which could possibly be responsible for these findings are discussed.  (+info)

Interactions between calciotropic hormones. (28/62)

The metatarsal cytochemical bioassay (CBA) for parathyroid hormone (PTH) was adapted to study interactions between PTH and certain vitamin D metabolites. Thus, while they had no effect in the system alone, both 1,25(OH)2D3 and 25(OH)D3 caused a dose-dependent potentiation of PTH-stimulated glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in the hypertrophic chondrocytes of the rat metatarsal. 1,25(OH)2D3 was about 1000 times more potent than 25(OH)D3. Specificity is indicated by the lack of a similar effect when either oestradiol or 1,24,25(OH)3D3 or a lactone derivative of 1,25(OH)2D3 was used. Furthermore, the rapidity of the effect of 1,25(OH)2D3 and 25(OH)D3, within 8 minutes, favours a membranophilic mechanism rather than the conventional nuclear mechanism of steroid hormone action.  (+info)

A comparison of Keller's arthroplasty and distal metatarsal osteotomy in the treatment of adult hallux valgus. (29/62)

A prospective trial is reported which compares distal osteotomy of the first metatarsal with Keller's arthroplasty in the treatment of adult hallux valgus. A total of 33 patients attended for review at least three years after operation. Symptomatic improvement, as assessed by patient satisfaction, pain relief, cosmetic improvement and restoration of function, was similar in the two groups. Objective measurement showed that the range of movement of the metatarsophalangeal joint was better maintained after osteotomy, as was the relationship of the sesamoid bones to the head of the first metatarsal. Correction of the valgus deformity also was significantly better in the patients who underwent osteotomy and in these patients the first intermetatarsal angle was reduced to within normal limits. There was no evidence that initial degenerative changes or subluxation at the metatarsophalangeal joint compromised a successful result from osteotomy.  (+info)

Effects of age and diet on the development of mechanical strength by the third metacarpal and metatarsal bones of young horses. (30/62)

The application of transmission ultrasonics to the equine cannon holds promise as a method of monitoring metacarpal and metatarsal development, quality and integrity under a variety of experimental and field conditions. The validity of relating the velocities of sound pulses transmitted through the cannon to the mechanical breaking strengths of these bones was tested in two studies. Breaking strengths calculated from the sound velocities through sections of the metacarpal bones from 14 yearling ponies and 12 yearling horses were highly correlated with the mechanical breaking strengths of those sections (r = .907 and .927, respectively; P less than .01). Sound velocities through the cannons of the horses before sacrifice ranged from 2,453 to 3,130 m/s and were correlated with their mechanically determined breaking strengths (193 to 262 X 10(6) N/M2; r = .673; P less than .01). The correlation coefficient increased to .912 when the sound velocities were adjusted for the sound-delaying effects of the overlying soft tissues. In a third study, 13 horses were weaned at 2 to 4 mo of age and were fed diets providing either 100 or 130% of National Research Council (NRC) energy and protein recommendations. Metacarpal and metatarsal development was monitored monthly for 15 mo via transmission ultrasonics. Sound velocities, breaking strengths calculated from velocities adjusted for estimated soft tissue cover, measured bone mediolateral diameters and cannon diameters minus estimated soft tissue increased as quadratic functions of chronologic age (r greater than .840; P less than .0001). None of these variables was significantly affected by diet, leg or sex. These studies have demonstrated that the use of transmission ultrasonics to estimate and monitor metacarpal and metatarsal breaking strengths in the live horse is reliable, reproducible, simple, accurate and valid. They also suggest that NRC energy and protein recommendations meet the requirements for maximum bone growth and development in well-managed young equines.  (+info)

Scintigraphic manifestations of infraction of the second metatarsal (Freiberg's disease). (31/62)

Two patients with Freiberg's infraction of the second metatarsal are presented. The scintigraphic pattern of a photopenic defect with hyperactive collar is demonstrated as evidence of the existence of avascular necrosis or infarction in this entity. The photopenia was appreciated only on pinhole collimator images in our first patient. The later revascularization phase of avascular necrosis with diffuse increase in uptake is demonstrated scintigraphically in the second patient.  (+info)

Ewing's sarcoma in bones of the hands and feet: a clinicopathologic study and review of the literature. (32/62)

Review of current data from the Intergroup Ewing's Sarcoma Study (IESS) shows that Ewing's sarcoma (ES) is rare in bones of the hands and feet. Only 12 of 377 evaluable patients in the first two IESS studies had a primary tumor in these small, distal bones. The age distribution was typical for that seen in patients with ES at other sites. Males were affected twice as often as females, and tumors in the bones of the feet were much more common than those in the hands. All signs and symptoms were local in distribution. As in other sites, the dominant histologic pattern was categorized as diffuse. With the exception of those patients with lesions in the calcaneus, the prognosis for disease-free survival was excellent. A literature review of cases of ES reported in bones of the hands and feet showed generally comparable results.  (+info)