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股骨骨折。最终结果:梅尔文·S·亨德森医学博士(1883 - 1954):1936年美国骨科学会第5任主席。

Fractures of the femur. End results : Melvin S. Henderson MD (1883-1954): the 5th president of the AAOS 1936.

作者信息

Henderson Melvin S

出版信息

Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2008 Jan;466(1):41-6. doi: 10.1007/s11999-007-0033-2.

Abstract

Melvin Starkey Henderson was born in St. Paul, Minnesota and received his early schooling there and in Winnipeg, Manitoba [4]. He received his undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Toronto. He then interned in the City and County Hospital in his home town of St. Paul, and in 1907 went to work as an assistant with the founders of the recently formed Mayo Clinic, William James and Charles Horace Mayo. To further his training and evidently at the suggestion of the Mayo brothers, in 1911 Dr. Henderson went abroad to work under Sir Robert Jones in Liverpool and then Sir Harold Stiles in Edinburgh. He returned to organize and direct the section of orthopaedic surgery at the Mayo Clinic and spent his entire professional career there. Dr. Henderson was involved in many national and international organizations, and was a founder and first President of the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgeons when it was established at the Kahler Hotel in Rochester, Minnesota, on June 5, 1934, after several previous organizational meetings [5]. Wickstrom [5], describing the organization of the Board, commented, “After all, in the opinion of the East coast establishment, Dr. Henderson (who was born in St. Paul, was educated in Canada, and had his beginning with the Mayo brothers as a clinical assistant riding a bicycle around Rochester, making house calls on the Mayo brothers’ patients) was a mere upstart.” However, at the time Dr. Henderson was 50 years old and had been President of the American Orthopaedic Association and Clinical Orthopaedic Society, as well as prominent in the American Medical Association and other organizations. Dr. Henderson was one of three of the first 15 AAOS Presidents (the other two being Drs. Philip D. Wilson and John C. Wilson, Sr.) who had a son who succeeded him as President. He was greatly respected for his organizational abilities, particularly at the Board, whose objectives were uncertain in the beginning and required sage guidance [5]. We reproduce here an article in which Dr. Henderson reviewed 222 consecutive cases of femur fractures, 165 of which had been referred late because of complications of fractures treated elsewhere (clearly, by 1921, the Mayo Clinic was a referral source for others) [2]. Followup could not have been easy at a time when patients often came from a distance and travel was difficult, but it was described when available and in 40 of the 57 recent fractures, Henderson reported 87.5% were “cured.” Of the 165 old fractures, he was able to trace 143 (87%), a remarkable figure even today. He reported 90% of the femoral neck fractures were cured by various sorts of nonsurgical (6 patients) or surgical reconstructive (39 patients) means; 85% of the femoral shaft fractures were cured by either nonoperative (29 patients) or operative (69 patients) means. While he did not use the sort of outcomes we use today (the earliest orthopaedic outcome instruments were not introduced for four more decades: by Carroll B. Larson in 1963 [3] and William H. Harris in 1969 [1]), we can only presume Henderson meant union was achieved when patients were “cured” since nonunion or malunion would not have likely produced good results. That being the case, his rate of union was remarkable and would be enviable today in these sometimes difficult situations, attesting to his understanding of the individual situations and his skills. [Figure: see text] 1. Harris WH. Traumatic arthritis of the hip after dislocation and acetabular fractures: treatment by mold arthroplasty: an end-result study using a new method of result evaluation. . 1969;51:737–755. 2. Henderson MS. Fractures of the femur: end results. . 1921;3:520–528. 3. Larson CB. Rating scale for hip disabilities. . 1963;31:85–93. 4. Mostofi SB. . London, UK: Springer; 2005. 5. Wickstrom JK. Fifty years of the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery: 1934. . 1990;257:3–10.

摘要

梅尔文·斯塔基·亨德森出生于明尼苏达州圣保罗市,早年在那里以及加拿大马尼托巴省温尼伯市接受教育[4]。他在多伦多大学获得本科学位和医学学位。随后,他在故乡圣保罗市的市县医院实习,并于1907年作为助手,与新成立的梅奥诊所的创始人威廉·詹姆斯和查尔斯·霍勒斯·梅奥共事。为了进一步深造,显然也是在梅奥兄弟的建议下,1911年亨德森医生出国,先在利物浦的罗伯特·琼斯爵士手下工作,后在爱丁堡的哈罗德·斯泰尔斯爵士手下工作。回国后,他组织并领导了梅奥诊所的骨外科部门,并在那里度过了他的整个职业生涯。亨德森医生参与了许多国家和国际组织,1934年6月5日,在美国明尼苏达州罗切斯特市的凯勒酒店举行了几次前期组织会议后,美国骨外科医师委员会成立,他是该委员会的创始人之一,并担任首任主席[5]。威克斯特伦[5]在描述委员会的组建时评论道:“毕竟,在东海岸权威人士看来,亨德森医生(出生于圣保罗市,在加拿大接受教育,最初是作为临床助理骑着自行车在罗切斯特市四处奔波,为梅奥兄弟的病人上门看病)不过是个暴发户。”然而,当时亨德森医生已50岁,曾担任美国矫形外科学会和临床矫形外科学会主席,在美国医学协会和其他组织中也颇具影响力。亨德森医生是美国骨外科医师学会前15任主席中的三位(另外两位是菲利普·D·威尔逊医生和约翰·C·威尔逊医生),他们的儿子后来接任了主席职位。他因其组织能力而备受尊敬,尤其是在委员会,该委员会起初目标并不明确,需要明智的指导[5]。我们在此转载一篇文章,亨德森医生在文中回顾了222例连续的股骨骨折病例,其中165例因在其他地方治疗骨折的并发症而转诊较晚(显然,到1921年时,梅奥诊所已成为其他地方的转诊机构)[2]。在那个患者常常来自远方且交通不便的时代,随访并非易事,但只要有随访信息他都会进行描述,在最近的57例骨折病例中,有40例,亨德森报告称87.5%“治愈”。在165例陈旧性骨折中,他能够追踪到143例(87%),即使在今天,这也是个了不起的数字。他报告称,90%的股骨颈骨折通过各种非手术(6例患者)或手术重建(39例患者)方法治愈;85%的股骨干骨折通过非手术(29例患者)或手术(69例患者)方法治愈。虽然他没有使用我们如今使用的那种结果评估方式(最早的矫形外科结果评估工具在四十多年后才被引入:卡罗尔·B·拉尔森于1963年[3],威廉·H·哈里斯于1969年[1]),但我们只能推测,当患者“治愈”时亨德森指的是实现了骨折愈合,因为骨不连或畸形愈合不太可能产生良好的结果。即便如此,他的骨折愈合率非常显著,在如今这些有时很棘手的情况下也会令人羡慕,这证明了他对个体情况的理解和他的专业技能。[图:见原文] 1. 哈里斯·W·H。髋关节脱位和髋臼骨折后创伤性关节炎:通过模具关节成形术治疗:使用一种新的结果评估方法的最终结果研究。《骨与关节外科杂志》。1969;51:737 - 755。2. 亨德森·M·S。股骨骨折:最终结果。《骨与关节外科杂志》。1921;3:520 - 528。3. 拉尔森·C·B。髋关节残疾评分量表。《骨与关节外科杂志》。1963;31:85 - 93。4. 莫斯托菲·S·B。《英国伦敦:施普林格出版社;2005年》。5. 威克斯特伦·J·K。美国骨外科医师委员会五十年:1934年。《骨与关节外科杂志》。1990;257:3 - 10。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/ed2b/2505283/99c16d832fa4/11999_2007_33_Figa_HTML.jpg

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