Publication | Closed Access
BONE GRAFTS AND CHRONIC OSTEOMYELITIS
34
Citations
12
References
1971
Year
Limb ReconstructionOsteopathyBone RepairPathologySurgeryOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryOsteomyelitisBone DiseaseInfected Bone CavityOsteoarthritisOrthopaedicsBone CavityVascularized Bone GraftMaxillofacial SurgeryCancellous Bone GraftsDentoalveolar SurgeryCraniofacial SurgeryMedicine
1. In the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis the most troublesome factor is the infected bone cavity. This is seldom obliterated spontaneously by bone regeneration. The number of procedures designed to fill the cavity, since the beginning of the century, show how much it troubles the surgeon. 2. The use of bone grafts in the treatment of chronic osteomyelitis has been studied. One hundred and twenty cases are reviewed (the largest series in the literature), the follow-up being between two and ten years. The most common lesion was a bone cavity, with or without a sequestrum. 3. Treatment must include the removal of infected soft tissues as well as sclerosed bone, and must be done under appropriate antibiotic control. The value of cancellous bone grafts in filling infected cavities in the metaphysio-epiphysial regions is especially emphasised. 4. The results were gratifying, only four relapses occurring in 120 cases.
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