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Dive into the research topics where Alvin H. Crawford is active.

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Featured researches published by Alvin H. Crawford.


Spine | 2007

A pedicle screw construct gives an enhanced posterior correction of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis when compared with other constructs: myth or reality.

Vagmin Vora; Alvin H. Crawford; Nadir Babekhir; Oheneba Boachie-Adjei; Lawrence G. Lenke; Melissa Peskin; Gina Charles; Yongjung Kim

Study Design. Tricenter retrospective cohort study of 72 patients who underwent posterior correction of Lenke 1 adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Each center represented a single surgeon using only one type of construct. Objective. Compare the initial postoperative and 2-year follow-up correction of Lenke 1 AIS curves, after accounting for the preoperative flexibility of the curves. Summary of Background Data. There are multiple reports in literature of the enhanced posterior corrective ability of the pedicle screw in the treatment of AIS. Unfortunately, none of these reports took into account the preoperative flexibility of the curve. It stands to reason that rigid curves will not correct as much as flexible curves irrespective of the nature of the construct. Methods. Groups were as follows: Group 1 (proximal and distal hooks and segmental intraspinous collar button wires), 24 patients; Group 2 (proximal hooks, distal screws, and apical sublaminar wires), 23 patients; and Group 3 (pedicle screws only), 25 patients. The postoperative correction percentage was expressed as a ratio of the preoperative flexibility and was termed Cincinnati correction index (CCI). Mathematically speaking the CCI equals (postoperative correction/preoperative erect Cobb angle) divided by (supine bending preoperative correction/preoperative erect Cobb angle). The postoperative sagittal correction was also measured Results. CCI 2 (at 2-year follow-up) for Group 1 was 1.71, for Group 2 was 1.34, and for Group 3 was 1.41. The differences were not statistically significant. Within Group 1, however, there was a statistically significant difference between CCI (1.95) and CCI 2 (1.71), indicating a statistically significant loss of correction over 2 years. However, in terms of absolute values, there was only a 4° (average) difference between the initial and the 2-year postoperative Cobb measurement, rendering the loss off correction clinically insignificant. No such statistically or clinically significant differences were noted within Groups 2 and 3. Group 1 and Group 3 constructs further lordosed the curve by 8° and 11°, respectively, whereas the Group 2 construct retained or marginally increased the preoperative kyphosis. Conclusion. The Group 3 (pedicle screw only) construct did not give an enhanced correction of Lenke 1 AIS, when the preoperative flexibility of the curve was considered. Also, contrary to popular belief, the pedicle screw construct has a lordosing effect on the thoracic spine. Therefore, we think that there is no significant advantage in using a relatively expensive pedicle screw construct in the correction of Lenke 1 AIS.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1982

The Cincinnati incision: a comprehensive approach for surgical procedures of the foot and ankle in childhood.

Alvin H. Crawford; J L Marxen; D L Osterfeld

We are describing a transverse incision that we have found useful in performing surgical procedures involving extensive dissection of the posterior, medical, and lateral aspects of the foot and ankle. Operative procedures using this incision have been performed on 154 feet in ninety-nine patients who were less than fifteen years old and who had an average follow-up of eighteen months. The incision is transverse and extends from the anteromedial to the anterolateral aspect of the foot over the back of the ankle at the level of the tibiotaler joint. Depending on the requirements of the procedure, either the anteromedial or posterolateral portion of the incision, or the complete incision, may be used. The incision improves visualization of the medial, posterior, and lateral aspects of the foot and ankle, while at the same time resulting in excellent healing of the wound and an improved cosmetic appearance compared with the more commonly used vertical incisions.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2001

The effect of surgical timing on the perioperative complications of treatment of supracondylar humeral fractures in children.

Charles T. Mehlman; William M. Strub; Dennis R. Roy; Eric J. Wall; Alvin H. Crawford

Background: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the perioperative complication rates associated with early surgical treatment (eight hours or less following injury) and delayed surgical treatment (more than eight hours following injury) of displaced supracondylar humeral fractures in children. Methods: Fifty-two patients had early surgical treatment and 146 patients had delayed surgical treatment of a displaced supracondylar humeral fracture. The perioperative complication rates of the two groups were compared with the use of bivariate and multivariate statistical methods. Results: There was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to the need for conversion to formal open reduction and internal fixation (p = 0.56), pin-track infection (p = 0.12), or iatrogenic nerve injury (p = 0.72). No compartment syndromes occurred in either group. Power analysis revealed that our study had an 86% power to detect a 20% difference between the two groups if one existed. Conclusions: We were unable to identify any significant difference, with regard to perioperative complication rates, between early and delayed treatment of displaced supracondylar humeral fractures. Within the parameters outlined in our study, we think that the timing of surgical intervention can be either early or delayed as deemed appropriate by the surgeon.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1986

Neurofibromatosis in Children

Alvin H. Crawford

Neurofibromatosis occurs once in every 3,000 live births. Café au lait spots are the most common presenting lesion. Five spots with a diameter of at least 0.5 cm. should be considered diagnostic in children. Spinal deformity is the most common bony lesion. Scoliosis varies from mild nonprogressive forms to hairpin curvatures. Four types of pseudarthrosis of the tibia can be distinguished, with progressively more serious prognoses. The incidence of neoplasia greatly exceeds that of the general population.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1998

Complications of intramedullary fixation of pediatric forearm fractures.

Mark C. Cullen; Dennis R. Roy; Eric Giza; Alvin H. Crawford

A retrospective review of 20 children with forearm fractures treated with intramedullary fixation is presented. Indications for surgery included fracture malreduction, open fracture, polytrauma, unstable fracture pattern, and compartment syndrome. Both radius and ulna were fractured in patients. Intramedullary fixation of both bones was performed in eight cases, ulna alone in nine, and isolated radius in three. A limited open approach to one or both bones was necessary for insertion of the intramedullary rod in 15 of 20 cases, including the eight open fractures. Eighteen complications occurred in 10 of 20 patients, including hardware migration, infection, loss of reduction, reoperation, nerve injury, significant decreased range of motion, synostosis, muscle entrapment, and delayed union. Despite the complications, 17 patients had excellent and two had good outcomes. Although excellent clinical results can be expected with intramedullary fixation, complications related to the surgical technique can be expected.


Journal of The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons | 1999

Neurofibromatosis in Children: The Role of the Orthopaedist

Alvin H. Crawford; Elizabeth K. Schorry

Type 1 neurofibromatosis (NF-1), also known as von Recklinghausen disease, is one of the most common human single-gene disorders, affecting at least 1 million persons throughout the world. It encompasses a spectrum of multifaceted disorders and may present with a wide range of clinical manifestations, including abnormalities of the skin, nervous tissue, bones, and soft tissues. The condition can be conclusively diagnosed when two of seven criteria established by the National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference are met. Most children with NF-1 have no major orthopaedic problems. For those with musculoskeletal involvement, the most important issue is early recognition. Spinal deformity, congenital tibial dysplasia (congenital bowing and pseudarthrosis), and disorders of excessive bone and soft-tissue growth are the three types of musculoskeletal manifestations that require evaluation. Statistics gathered from the Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Neurofibromatosis Center database show the incidence of spinal deformity in children with NF-1 to be 23.6%; pectus deformity, 4.3%; limb-length inequality, 7.1%; congenital tibial dysplasia, 5.7%; hemihypertrophy, 1.4%; and plexiform neurofibromas, 25%. The orthopaedic complications can be managed, but only rarely are they cured.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1996

Association of Antithrombotic Factor Deficiencies and Hypofibrinolysis with Legg-Perthes Disease*

Charles J. Glueck; Alvin H. Crawford; Dennis R. Roy; Richard A. Freiberg; Helen I. Glueck; Davis Stroop

Thirty-three (75 per cent) of forty-four unselected children who had Legg-Perthes disease were found to have coagulation abnormalities. Twenty-three children had thrombophilia (a deficiency in antithrombotic factor C or S, with an increased tendency toward thrombosis); nineteen of the twenty-three children had protein-C deficiency and four had protein-S deficiency. Seven children had a high level (0.25 gram per liter or more) of lipoprotein(a), a thrombogenic, atherogenic lipoprotein associated with osteonecrosis in adults. Three children had hypofibrinolysis (a reduced ability to lyse clots). The mean age of the children when the Legg-Perthes disease was first diagnosed was 5.8 ± 2.7 years, and the mean age at the time of the present study was 10.1 ± 4.4 years. At least one of the first-degree relatives of eleven of the nineteen probands who had a low protein-C level had a low protein-C level as well; all of these low levels represented previously undiagnosed familial protein-C deficiency. The eleven probands who had familial protein-C deficiency were more likely to have early onset of Legg-Perthes disease (at or before the age of five years) than the eleven children who had normal levels of protein C, protein S, and lipoprotein(a) as well as normal fibrinolytic activity (chi-square = 6.6; p = 0.01). At least one first-degree relative of one of the four probands who had a low protein-S level had a low protein-S level and previously undiagnosed familial protein-S deficiency. At least one first-degree relative of six of the seven probands who had a high level of lipoprotein(a) had a familial high level of lipoprotein(a). Six of the seven children who had a high level of lipoprotein(a) also had a low level of stimulated tissue-plasminogen activator activity, the major initiator of fibrinolysis. At least one first-degree relative of one of the three probands who had normal levels of protein C, protein S, and lipoprotein(a) but low stimulated tissue-plasminogen activator activity also had low stimulated tissue-plasminogen activator activity (familial hypofibrinolysis). Legg-Perthes disease, thrombophlebitis, premature myocardial infarction, and stroke, which are ramifications of the familial thrombophilic-hypofibrinolytic disorders, were common in the first and second-degree relatives of the thirty-three children with Legg-Perthes disease who also had thrombophilic-hypofibrinolytic disorders. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Protein-C or S deficiency, hypofibrinolysis, or a high level of lipoprotein(a) may result in thrombotic venous occlusion of the femur, which leads to the venous hypertension and osteonecrosis of the femoral head characteristic of Legg-Perthes disease. When Legg-Perthes disease develops in a child, the levels of proteins C and S, lipoprotein(a), and stimulated fibrinolysis should be measured. Early diagnosis of protein-C or S deficiency, hypofibrinolysis, or a high level of lipoprotein(a) in such children may open avenues for pharmacological preventive therapy to reduce thrombophilia, stimulate fibrinolysis, or lower the level of lipoprotein(a), potentially ameliorating the Legg-Perthes disease process.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2008

Complications of Titanium and Stainless Steel Elastic Nail Fixation of Pediatric Femoral Fractures

Eric J. Wall; Viral V. Jain; Vagmin Vora; Charles T. Mehlman; Alvin H. Crawford

BACKGROUND In vitro mechanical studies have demonstrated equal or superior fixation of pediatric femoral fractures with use of titanium elastic nails as compared with stainless steel elastic nails, and the biomechanical properties of titanium are often considered to be superior to those of stainless steel for intramedullary fracture fixation. We are not aware of any clinical studies in the literature that have directly compared stainless steel and titanium elastic nails for the fixation of pediatric femoral fractures. The purpose of the present study was to compare the complications associated with the use of similarly designed titanium and stainless steel elastic nails for the fixation of pediatric femoral fractures. METHODS A group of fifty-six children with femoral fractures that were treated with titanium elastic nails was compared with another group of forty-eight children with femoral fractures that were treated with stainless steel elastic nails. Both nail types were of similar design, and a similar retrograde insertion technique was used. The groups were compared with regard to complications as well as insertion and extraction time. Major complications were defined as malunion with sagittal angulation of >15 degrees and coronal angulation of >10 degrees, nail irritation requiring revision surgery, infection, delayed union, and rod breakage. Minor complications were defined as nail irritation or superficial infection not requiring surgery. RESULTS The malunion rate was nearly four times higher in association with the titanium nails (23.2%; thirteen of fifty-six) as compared with the stainless steel nails (6.3%; three of forty-eight) (p = 0.017, chi-square test; odds ratio = 4.535 [95% confidence interval, 1.208 to 17.029]). The rate of major complications was 35.7% (twenty of fifty-six) for titanium nails and 16.7% (eight of forty-eight) for stainless steel nails. The rates of minor complications were similar for the two groups, as were the insertion times and extraction times. The supplier price of one titanium nail ranges from


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1996

Open Fracture of the Tibia in Children

Mark C. Cullen; Dennis R. Roy; Alvin H. Crawford; Joseph Assenmacher; Martin S. Levy; Daling Wen

259 to


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 1989

Fractures and rickets in very low birth weight infants: conservative management and outcome.

Winston W. K. Koo; Roberta Sherman; Paul Succop; Susan Krug-Wispe; Reginald C. Tsang; Jean J. Steichen; Alvin H. Crawford; Alan E. Oestreich

328, depending on size, whereas the price of one stainless steel nail would be

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Eric J. Wall

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Charles T. Mehlman

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Dennis R. Roy

Shriners Hospitals for Children

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Shital N. Parikh

Boston Children's Hospital

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Viral V. Jain

University of Cincinnati

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Donita I. Bylski-Austrow

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Peter O. Newton

Boston Children's Hospital

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Elizabeth K. Schorry

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Lawrence G. Lenke

Washington University in St. Louis

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Marios G. Lykissas

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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