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Featured researches published by Bruno Fuchs.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2000

The Results of Repair of Massive Tears of the Rotator Cuff

Christian Gerber; Bruno Fuchs; Juerg Hodler

Background: Massive tears of the tendons of the rotator cuff cause atrophy and fatty degeneration of the rotator cuff muscles and painful loss of function of the shoulder. Repair of massive rotator cuff tears is often followed by retears of the tendons, additional muscular degeneration, and a poor clinical outcome. The purposes of this study were to determine whether a new method of repair of rotator cuff tendons can yield a lower retear rate and a better clinical outcome than previously reported methods, to assess the muscular changes following repair of massive tears of the musculotendinous units, and to correlate findings on magnetic resonance imaging with the clinical results. Methods: Twenty-nine massive rotator cuff tears involving complete detachment of at least two tendons were repaired operatively with use of a new laboratory-tested technique in a prospective study. At least two years (average, thirty-seven months; range, twenty-four to sixty-one months) postoperatively, twenty-seven patients were evaluated clinically and with magnetic resonance imaging to determine the clinical outcome, the integrity of the repair, and the condition of the rotator cuff muscles. Results: The age and gender-adjusted Constant score improved from an average of 49 percent preoperatively to an average of 85 percent postoperatively, corresponding to a subjective shoulder value of 78 percent of that of a normal shoulder. Pain-free flexion improved from an average of 92 degrees to an average of 142 degrees, and abduction improved from an average of 82 degrees to an average of 137 degrees. Pain decreased and performance of activities of daily living improved significantly (p < 0.05). The seventeen patients who had a structurally successful repair all had an excellent clinical outcome. Muscle atrophy could not be reversed except in successfully repaired supraspinatus musculotendinous units. Fatty degeneration increased in all muscles. Conclusions: The method of repair of massive rotator cuff tears that was used in this study yielded a comparatively low retear rate and good-to-excellent clinical results; however, the repair did not result in substantial reversal of muscular atrophy and fatty degeneration. Retears occurred more often in patients who had had a shorter interval between the onset of the symptoms and the operation (p < 0.05). Patients who had a retear had improvement of the shoulder compared with the preoperative state, but they had less improvement than did those who had a successful repair.


Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery | 1999

Fatty degeneration of the muscles of the rotator cuff: assessment by computed tomography versus magnetic resonance imaging.

Bruno Fuchs; Dominik Weishaupt; Marco Zanetti; Juerg Hodler; Christian Gerber

Forty-one patients scheduled for shoulder surgery underwent computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination of their affected shoulder to verify whether fatty degeneration of the rotator cuff muscles could reproducibly be assessed by CT or by MRI and whether the grading with the 2 methods was comparable. In addition, rotator cuff muscle cross-sectional areas were measured on parasagittal MRI scans to establish a possible correlation between rotator cuff muscle atrophy and fatty degeneration. Interobserver reproducibility for grading fatty degeneration was good to excellent for CT and for MRI. The correlation between MRI and CT was fair to moderate and remained unsatisfactory, even if the classification system was simplified with only a 3- rather than a 5-grade scale as originally proposed. The degree of fatty degeneration was significantly related to the amount of atrophy of the respective muscles.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2005

Operative management of sacral chordoma.

Bruno Fuchs; Ian D. Dickey; Michael J. Yaszemski; Carrie Y. Inwards; Franklin H. Sim

BACKGROUND Sacrococcygeal chordoma presents a difficult diagnostic and therapeutic problem, with a high rate of local recurrence. The purpose of this report is to define the importance of adequate surgical treatment for optimum outcome and survival. METHODS Fifty-two patients underwent surgical treatment for sacrococcygeal chordoma between 1980 and 2001. The series included eighteen female patients and thirty-four male patients, with an average age of fifty-six years (range, thirteen to seventy-six years) at the time of the diagnosis. The surgical approach depended on the level and extent of the lesion, with a posterior approach performed in twenty-two patients and a combined anteroposterior approach used in thirty. A wide surgical margin was achieved in twenty-one patients. RESULTS At an average of 7.8 years (range, 2.1 to twenty-three years) postoperatively, twenty-three patients were alive with no evidence of disease. Twenty-three patients (44%) had local recurrence. The rate of recurrence-free survival was 59% at five years and 46% at ten years. The overall survival rates were 74%, 52%, and 47% at five years, ten years, and fifteen years, respectively. The most important predictor of survival was a wide margin. All patients with a wide margin survived, and this survival rate was significantly different from that for patients who had had either marginal or intralesional excision (p = 0.0001). Of the twenty-one patients with a wide margin, seventeen (81%) had undergone a combined anteroposterior approach and only four had been treated with a posterior approach. CONCLUSIONS A wide surgical margin is the most important predictor of survival and of local recurrence in patients with sacrococcygeal chordoma. Use of a combined anteroposterior approach increases the likelihood of obtaining a wide margin. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Therapeutic Level IV.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2006

Clinical and Structural Results of Open Repair of an Isolated One-Tendon Tear of the Rotator Cuff

Bruno Fuchs; Michael K. Gilbart; Juerg Hodler; Christian Gerber

BACKGROUND The clinical outcomes of open rotator cuff repair are well established, but the structural results and their effect on clinical outcome are poorly known. We assessed the structural changes in the musculotendinous units after open rotator cuff repair and correlated these findings with the clinical outcome to establish a benchmark for future series. METHODS Thirty-two consecutive standardized open repairs of a single tendon tear of the rotator cuff were analyzed in twenty-one men and eleven women with an average age of 59.0 years. The supraspinatus tendon was involved in twenty-two patients and the subscapularis tendon, in ten. The clinical outcome, including the Constant score, was assessed prospectively for all patients at an average of thirty-eight months postoperatively. The structural outcome was assessed on standardized magnetic resonance imaging scans. RESULTS The mean overall subjective shoulder value was 82.8% of the value for a normal shoulder. On the average, the age and gender-adjusted Constant score increased from 63.9% preoperatively to 94.5% postoperatively (p < 0.0001); the score for pain, from 6.8 points to 13.2 points (p < 0.0001); and the score for activities of daily living, from 11.2 points to 17.9 points (p < 0.0001). The overall rerupture rate was 13% (four of the thirty-two shoulders). All reruptures were distinctly smaller than the original tear. Muscular atrophy or fatty infiltration did not significantly decrease after the tendon repair. In fact, fatty infiltration in the supraspinatus (p < 0.0053) and infraspinatus (p < 0.003) muscles increased significantly. CONCLUSIONS Direct open repair of a complete, isolated tear of one tendon of the rotator cuff resulted in significant subjective and objective improvement and very high patient satisfaction. Successful direct repair was not associated with a decrease in preoperative muscular atrophy and was associated with increased fatty infiltration of the muscle.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2002

Etiology of osteosarcoma

Bruno Fuchs; Douglas J. Pritchard

Although the prognosis and quality of life of patients with osteosarcoma were improved significantly during the past decades, the pathogenesis and etiology of this disease remain obscure. Significant interest and effort in this cancer led to the identification of numerous etiologic agents. Several chemical agents such as beryllium, viruses such as FBJ, subsequently found to contain the src-oncogene, and radiation were shown to be potent inducers of osteosarcoma. Pagets disease, electrical burn, or trauma all are thought to be other factors that may contribute to the pathogenesis. More recently, patients with hereditary diseases such as Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, Bloom syndrome, and Li-Fraumeni syndrome were found to have an increased risk of having osteosarcoma develop. During the past few years, the molecular analysis brought a wealth of new information with numerous genes that were associated with osteosarcoma and its clinical disease progression. They can be categorized into self-sufficiency in growth signals, insensitivity to growth inhibitory signals, evasion of apoptosis, limitless replicative potential, sustained angiogenesis, and tissue evasion and metastasis. Although the understanding of these processes in osteosarcoma still is incomplete, it may have the potential to significantly affect the patient care in the future.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2000

Posterior-Inferior Capsular Shift for the Treatment of Recurrent, Voluntary Posterior Subluxation of the Shoulder*

Bruno Fuchs; Bernhard Jost; Christian Gerber

Background: The treatment of recurrent posterior instability of the shoulder, especially when it is associated with voluntary subluxation, remains controversial, and operative correction generally is not advised. Methods: The results of operative correction of recurrent posterior subluxation in a consecutive series of twenty-six shoulders in twenty-four patients were reviewed. Eighteen shoulders were on the dominant side. The average age of the patients was twenty-four years (range, fifteen to thirty-three years). All of the patients had involuntary as well as voluntary posterior instability, but none had a psychiatric disorder. Only five patients had sustained a definite injury that had initiated the instability. Seven shoulders had had previous operations. A program of nonoperative treatment for a duration of at least three months had failed to control the symptoms in all patients. The twenty-six shoulders were treated with a posterior-inferior capsular shift procedure, which included repair of a so-called posterior Bankart lesion in seven shoulders. In addition, one of the shoulders had a posterior bone block and three shoulders (in two patients) had an osteotomy of the posterior part of the glenoid because of excessive glenoid retroversion. The outcome was assessed by means of a personal interview and a clinical examination, which included calculations of a score according to the system of Constant and Murley and the performance of the Simple Shoulder Test, and by means of a radiographic examination, with standardized radiographs and computerized tomography scanning. Results: At an average of 7.6 years (range, 1.8 to 14.6 years) after the operation, the patients estimated that the function of the shoulder was an average of 86 percent of that of a normal shoulder. The average relative score according to the system of Constant and Murley was 91 percent. The subjective result was excellent for sixteen shoulders, good for eight, and fair for two. More than half of all of the patients were able to perform all activities of the Simple Shoulder Test, but eight patients (eight shoulders; 31 percent) still had discomfort at night. Five patients (21 percent) changed their profession because of the shoulder. All but one shoulder had a nearly normal active range of motion. The instability recurred in six (23 percent) of the twenty-six shoulders; three recurrences were in shoulders that had had a primary operation, and three were in shoulders that had had an operation on the posterior aspect of the shoulder before the index procedure. The instability did not recur in four shoulders that had had previous operations on the anterior aspect of the shoulder. The subjective shoulder value, which was the patients estimation of the value of the affected shoulder as a percentage of that of an entirely normal shoulder, was significantly higher for the stable shoulders (91 percent) than for the unstable shoulders (72 percent) (p < 0.05). The relative score according to the system of Constant and Murley was also higher for the stable shoulders (93 percent) than for the unstable shoulders (87 percent), but the difference was not found to be significant, with the numbers available. The joints were found to be well centered radiographically, and only six shoulders showed minimum signs of osteoarthritis. Computerized tomography scanning revealed an average glenoid retroversion of 3.2 degrees (range, 17 degrees of retroversion to 22 degrees of anteversion). When only the shoulders that had not had a posterior bone block or an osteotomy of the posterior aspect of the glenoid were considered, the average glenoid retroversion of those that had recurrent instability was 12.5 degrees, whereas it was only 6.2 degrees for those that remained stable (p < 0.05). Conclusions: Overall, operative correction of voluntary posterior instability of the shoulder yielded very satisfactory intermediate-term clinical results. Recurrence was associated with a previous operation on the posterior aspect of the shoulder or with a new traumatic injury of an involved shoulder on the dominant side. The prevalence of recurrence did not increase over time, and clinically detectable osteoarthritis did not develop.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2004

Dedifferentiated Chondrosarcoma: The Role of Chemotherapy with Updated Outcomes

Ian D. Dickey; Peter S. Rose; Bruno Fuchs; Lester E. Wold; Scott H. Okuno; Franklin H. Sim; Sean P. Scully

BACKGROUND There are very few published data on the survival of patients with dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma, or, more specifically, on the efficacy and role of chemotherapy, especially in the era of modern diagnostic and treatment modalities. The current study examines the influence of advancements in imaging and chemotherapy on outcome and serves as an extension to a previous study published in 1986. METHODS Forty-two patients with dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma who had presented to our institution between 1986 and 2000 were identified, and a retrospective chart review was performed. The study group included twenty-four men and eighteen women with an average age of sixty-six years. The diagnosis of dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma was verified histologically, and data on treatment, adjuvant therapy, and survival were obtained from the medical records of all patients. All patients had been followed for a minimum of twenty-four months. RESULTS The tumors were classified, according to the system of the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society, as grade IIA (five), grade IIB (twenty-six), and grade III (eleven). Three patients underwent biopsy only, eighteen had a limb-sacrificing procedure, and twenty-one had a limb-sparing procedure. In the group of patients who underwent resection, the surgical margins were classified as intralesional in three, marginal in two, wide in nineteen, and radical in fifteen. Twenty-seven patients received neoadjuvant therapy; of these, twenty-three received chemotherapy only, two received radiotherapy only, and two received combined therapy. The median survival time was 7.5 months, and the five-year rate of disease-free survival was 7.1%. With the numbers available, there was no significant difference in the rate of disease-free survival with respect to the use of chemotherapy (p = 0.54), the location of surgical margins (p = 0.14), the histological subtype (p = 0.87), the tumor stage at the time of diagnosis (p = 0.43), the tumor size (p = 0.79), or the performance of limb-sparing as opposed to limb-sacrificing procedures (p = 0.42). CONCLUSIONS Despite advances in diagnostic modalities and adjuvant therapies, dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma continues to carry a poor prognosis. While local control is achieved in the majority of cases, distant disease remains the greatest clinical challenge, developing in 90% of patients. Efforts are needed to continue to encourage earlier diagnosis and to develop effective adjuvant therapies for the control of distant disease. The routine use of current adjuvant chemotherapy and its inherent risks in this population should be reconsidered.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2002

Relationship between surgical margins and local recurrence in sarcomas of the spine.

Robert Talac; Michael J. Yaszemski; Bradford L. Currier; Bruno Fuchs; Mark B. Dekutoski; Choll W. Kim; Franklin H. Sim

The combination of improved resection, stabilization, and fusion techniques allows for more aggressive removal of malignant spinal tumors with acceptable mortality and morbidity. Thirty consecutive patients with primary sarcomas of the mobile spine, who were operated on at the authors’ institution from January 1970 to December 2000, were included in the current study. Demographic information, tumor location, type of resection, resection margins, local recurrence, and overall survival data were retrieved and analyzed. Treatment consisted of en bloc resection in 12 patients (40%) and piecemeal resections in 18 patients (60%). The resection was classified as wide in seven patients (23.3%), marginal in three patients (10%), and intralesional in 20 patients (66.7%). Pathology reports showed tumor-free resection margins in 12 patients (40%). In the remaining 18 patients (60%), resection margins were positive and resulted in a fivefold increase in the risk of a local recurrence. Ninety-two percent of the patients with local recurrence died of sequelae associated with the local recurrence. Primary sarcomas of the mobile spine in certain cases, can be removed completely with tumor-free resection margins. En bloc resection with tumor-free margins provides substantial improvement in overall survival.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2002

Bowel and bladder function after major sacral resection

Larry T. Todd; Michael J. Yaszemski; Bradford L. Currier; Bruno Fuchs; Choll W. Kim; Franklin H. Sim

Major sacral resection generally is reserved for patients with malignant lesions. Because of the uncommon nature of these diseases, little is known about outcomes of surgical treatment. The current authors describe the retrospective analysis of bowel and bladder function in patients having major sacral resection at their institution during a 10-year period. Fifty-three patients were identified. In patients who had unilateral sacrectomy, in whom the contralateral sacral nerves were preserved, normal bowel and bladder function was retained in 87% and 89%, respectively. In patients who had bilateral S2-S5 nerve roots sacrificed, all had abnormal bowel and bladder function. In patients who had bilateral S3-S5 resection, normal bowel and bladder function was retained in 40% and 25%, respectively. In patients who had bilateral S4-S5 resection, with preservation of the S3 nerves bilaterally, normal bowel and bladder function was retained in 100% and 69%, respectively. In patients who had asymmetric sacral resections, with preservation of at least one S3 nerve root, normal bowel and bladder function was retained in 67% and 60%, respectively. These results show that unilateral resection of sacral roots or preservation of at least one S3 root in bilateral resection preserves bowel and bladder function in the majority of patients.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2004

Vascular endothelial growth factor expression is up-regulated by EWS-ETS oncoproteins and Sp1 and may represent an independent predictor of survival in Ewing's sarcoma.

Bruno Fuchs; Carrie Y. Inwards; Ralf Janknecht

Purpose: Tumor markers ideally allow monitoring and prediction of disease progression. In Ewing’s sarcoma, a devastating childhood cancer, only a few reliable prognostic markers have been identified. To this end, we analyzed the expression of four tumor-promoting proteins, cyclin D1, HER2/Neu, Mdm2, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), in Ewing’s sarcoma. Experimental Design and Results: Thirty-one tissue samples from patients with Ewing’s sarcoma were stained with antibodies against cyclin D1, HER2/Neu, Mdm2, or VEGF. Whereas no significant expression of HER2/Neu and Mdm2 was detected, positive cyclin D1 and VEGF staining was observed in 42% and 55% of all tumors, respectively. Importantly, VEGF expression was found to be an independent negative predictor of survival in Ewing’s sarcoma patients, whereas cyclin D1 expression did not correlate with survival in these patients. Consistently, the Ewing’s sarcoma-specific EWS-ETS oncoproteins were capable of activating both the cyclin D1 and VEGF promoters in transient transfections of tissue culture cells. Furthermore, this activation was enhanced by coexpression of the Sp1 transcription factor. Using a mammalian two-hybrid system, some evidence was obtained that this may involve a physical interaction between EWS-ETS and Sp1 proteins. Conclusions: Our data reveal that VEGF may serve as a prognostic marker in Ewing’s sarcoma patients and provide a molecular mechanism by which VEGF and cyclin D1 expression is up-regulated in approximately half of all Ewing’s sarcomas.

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