12 research outputs found

    Prevalence of degenerative joint complaints of the lower extremity: a representative study

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    As part of the international campaign of the bone and joint decade, we aimed to present epidemiological data on the prevalence of major joint complaints in a Central European region. Ten thousand subjects aged between 14 and 65, selected randomly by the Hungarian central office of statistics from three counties in southern Hungary, were surveyed using our own questionnaire based on widely accepted scoring systems in the literature, focusing on major degenerative joint complaints, and using the short form 36 (SF-36) questionnaire. We found that the prevalence of hip pain in the observed group was 22.2%, the prevalence of knee pain 30.3%, and frequent ankle pain occurred in 9.7%. The results of the SF-36 questionnaire showed that with the exception of social function, neither of the values of the examined health dimensions reached levels of other international surveys. Details of the survey and the possible causes of the higher prevalence are discussed, along with the results of the SF-36 questionnaire

    The role of preoperative bone scan for determining the treatment method for femoral neck fracture

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    To evaluate the role of preoperative bone scintigraphy in determining the operative treatment method for femoral neck fracture, we reviewed the data of 83 patients who underwent preoperative bone scanning after femoral neck fracture. Fractures were classified using the Garden staging system. Radioisotope uptake in femoral heads was evaluated visually. Of 28 patients with Garden stage I or II, radioactivity of the femoral head was normal in 26, partially reduced in one, and generally reduced in one patient. Twenty-seven patients were treated by closed reduction and multiple pinning, and one patient was treated by bipolar hemiarthroplasty. Of 55 patients with Garden stage III or IV, femoral-head radioactivity was normal in three, partially reduced in seven and generally reduced in 45 patients. Fifty-four patients were treated by bipolar hemiarthroplasty or total hip arthroplasty, and one patient was treated by closed reduction and multiple pinning. In only one of the 83 cases was the operative method changed because of bone scan findings. Isotope uptake of the femoral head after femoral neck fracture generally corresponded with the degree of fracture displacement. Preoperative bone scans appear to have no significant role to play in determining the operative treatment method for femoral neck fracture
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