1.Operative Treatment of the Bony Mallet Finger.
Bum Soo KIM ; Sung Do CHO ; Yong Sun CHO ; Tae Woo PARK ; Jae Yong BYUN
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1998;33(2):416-422
Although there are various methods of operative treatment for hony mallet finger, the operative technique is not so easy and complications such as joint stiffness, sott tissue prohlems, infection, change of nail shape and arthrosis are common. The authors performed operations for 26 cases of hony mallet fingers, fixing the hony frapment by Kirschner wire, pull-out wire suture and miniscrew respectively, from Jan. l988 to Jun. l996. The results were as follows. l. According to Niechajev's classification. there were 3 cases of type B, 7 cases of type C, l4 cases of type D, and 2 cases of type E. And 11 cases were accompanied hy crushing injury. 2. Involved fingers were third finger in 11cases, fit'th finger in 7 cases, fourth finger in 5 cases, second finger in 2 cases. and thumb in I case. 3. The hony mallet finger was caused hy occupational injury in l6 cases, direct blow in 7 cases and sports injury in 3 cases. 4. The fractured fragment was fixed hy Kirschner wire in 9 cases, by pull-out suture in 9 cases and by miniscrew in 8 cases. 5. The results were evaluated hy Kanies scale. Sixteen cases had satisfactory results. Seven cases (87.5%) were satisfactory in miniscrew fixations. 5 cascs (55.6%) in pull-out wire suture methocls and 2 cases (22.2%) in Kirschner wire tixations. 6. The complications were joint incongruity in 4 cases, dorsal prominece in 6 cases, painful limitation of motion in 2 cases which were treated by arthrodesis, pin site infection in 2 cases and hreakage of wire suture in 1 case. 7. The miniscrew fixation offered relatively firm fixation, low complication rate, and good results. so it can be considered as one of the good methods of treatment for hony mallet finger.
Arthrodesis
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Athletic Injuries
;
Classification
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Fingers*
;
Joints
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Occupational Injuries
;
Sutures
;
Thumb
2.Pigmented Villonodular Synovitis of the Hip Joint
Soo Ho LEE ; Key Yong KIM ; Tae Yun CHO
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1995;30(1):145-151
Plgmented villonodular synovitis is a benigh lesion that develops in joint lining and is characterized by an exuberant inflammation. Many authors have discussed etiology, clinical and radiological features, pathology and treatment regarding the disease. This occurs most commonly in the knee joint as a monoarticular proliferative process, but rarely in the hip joint. It is a nonneoplastic disease but may develop as an aggressive local process with bone and joint destruction. Sometimes clinician can not detect it in early time because of its nonspecific clinical findings and misdiagnose it as sarcomatous process. So, early diagnosis of hip joint involvement is necessary because destruction of the femoral head and acetabulum is the ultimate outcome if treatment is not intiated. We report two cases of pigmented villonodular synovitis involving the hip joint, which were diagnosed and treated in our department.
Acetabulum
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Early Diagnosis
;
Head
;
Hip Joint
;
Hip
;
Inflammation
;
Joints
;
Knee Joint
;
Pathology
;
Synovitis
;
Synovitis, Pigmented Villonodular
3.A Benign Chondroblastoma in the Greater Trochanter of Femur: A Case Report
Key Yong KIM ; Duk Yun CHO ; Young Tae KIM
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1976;11(1):123-126
Benign chondroblastoma of bone is a relatively rare primary bone tumor which develops in the 2nd to 3rd decade involving the epiphysis of the long bone. The over-all reported cases of the world have been lesser than 400 after determining the entity as benign chondroblastoma in 1942 by Jaffe and Lichtenstein. A case of the benign chondroblastoma with involvement of the greater trochanter of the femur of a 19 years old boy is presented. The conclusive diagaosis was led by histological examination. Considerable new bone formation and bony spicules which might be derived from previous multiple puncture made us to confuse with osteogenic sarcoma. The specimen was composed of reddish brown hemorrhagic and fragile tissue with scattered either yellowish gritty calcified material or bluish translucent ones. The postoperative course has been smooth and there has been no evidence of recurrence for postoperative 15 months.
Chondroblastoma
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Epiphyses
;
Femur
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Osteogenesis
;
Osteosarcoma
;
Punctures
;
Recurrence
4.Metastatic Carcinoma of the Talus from Breast Carcinoma
Key Yong KIM ; Duk Yun CHO ; Tae Whan KIM
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1977;12(4):811-815
A rare case of a metastatic lesion of breast carcinoma in the talus of the left foot, approximately 14 months after simple mastectomy including resection of axillary lymph node is reported. The operation was undertaken 14 months prior to this admission and gradual onset of pain, swelling and redness were noticed about the left ankle. X-ray showed irregular osteolytic changes on the superolateral aspect of the body and the superior aspect of the neck of the left talus without periosteal reaction, Metastasis was confirmed by biopsy and pathological findings were also submitted.
Ankle
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Biopsy
;
Breast Neoplasms
;
Breast
;
Foot
;
Lymph Nodes
;
Mastectomy, Simple
;
Neck
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Talus
5.Extraosseous Tuberculosis of the Extremities
Key Yong KIM ; Young Tae KIM ; Who Shin CHO
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1980;15(2):242-247
Extraosseous tuberculosis of the extremities is relatively rare even in the wide spread incidence of bone and joint tuberculosis. And few reports about extraosseous tuberculosis of the extremities have been published in the literatures. Eight cases of the extraosseous tuberculosis of the extremities were experienced at the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, National Medical Center, from 1975 to Sep. 1979. Five out of 8 extraosseous tuberculosis were tenosynovitis and the others were bursitis in location. All cases were surgically excised and combined with antituberculous chemotherapy, and primarily cured.
Bursitis
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Drug Therapy
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Extremities
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Incidence
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Tenosynovitis
;
Tuberculosis
;
Tuberculosis, Osteoarticular
6.Treatment of ectopic pregnancy by the laparoscopy guided methotrexate injection.
Sang Sik CHUN ; Yong Tae HAN ; Sun Mie LEE ; Young Lae CHO ; Tae Ho LEE
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 1991;34(4):523-528
No abstract available.
Female
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Laparoscopy*
;
Methotrexate*
;
Pregnancy
;
Pregnancy, Ectopic*
7.The Treatment of the Cervical Spondylosis.
Yung Tae KIM ; Choon Sung LEE ; Yong Sun CHO ; Tae Ha YUM
Journal of Korean Society of Spine Surgery 1997;4(1):59-66
No abstract available.
Spondylosis*
8.A case of lichen aureus.
Sang Hyun CHO ; Tae Yoon KIM ; Si Yong KIM ; Baik Kee CHO ; Won HOUH
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1992;30(3):402-406
No abstract available.
Lichens*
9.Significance of MRI Cord Signal Patterns in Acute Spinal Trauma.
Yung Tae KIM ; Choon Seong LEE ; Yong Sun CHO ; Sung Jin CHO ; Chung Gon CHOI
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1997;32(1):40-45
In the diagnosis of acute spinal trauma, meticulous physical examination and history taking is the most important tool and auxilliary support support can be given by plain X-ray, CT or myelography, etc. But these cannot show the state of cord injury directly. On the contrary, MRI shows the cord directly as well as the soft and bony tissues. We analysed retrospectively 39 patients who suffered from acute spinal trauma at the level of cervical and thoracic spine and had their spine MRI taken. We verified the meaningful correlation between the signal change in the spinal cord on MRI and the degree of neurologic deficit and prognosis, using Frankel classification and trauma motor index at the time of admission and the final follow-up.
Classification
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Diagnosis
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
;
Myelography
;
Neurologic Manifestations
;
Physical Examination
;
Prognosis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Spinal Cord
;
Spine
10.Horizontal Tear of the Meniscus.
Sung Do CHO ; Dong Bae SHIN ; Yong Sun CHO ; Tae Woo PARK ; Young Kyu KIM
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1998;33(7):1737-1742
Horizontal tear of the meniscus occurs most commonly in older patients. The tear begins initially with a simple horizontal cleavage which divides the meniscus into superior and inferior leaves resembling a fish mouth and which may become a flap or more complex tear with time if subjected to repeated injury. Thirty-four patients(36knees/40menisci) with horizontal tear of the meniscus, treated with arthroscopic partial meniscectomy except in 3 extensive tears at Ulsan University Hospital from Jan. 1993 to Jun. 1996, were analyzed to investigate the factors that may be associated with this type of meniscal tear, and the results were as follows; 1. The tears commonly occurred in labor workers(61.7%) and without obvious trauma history(67.6%), and the average age at the time of surgery was 44 years. 2. The most common site of the tear was posterior horn of the medial meniscus (62.5%). 3. The 40 horizontal tears consisted of 12 horizontaVcleavage(30%), 3 horizontaVflap(7.5%), and 25 horizontaUdegenerative complex tears(62.5%). 4. Degenerative changes were frequently noted in both arthroscopy(69.5%) and roentgenography (72.2%).
Animals
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Horns
;
Humans
;
Menisci, Tibial
;
Mouth
;
Radiography
;
Ulsan