He was appointed as a Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon in Nottingham in 1973. He was awarded an honorary title in Orthopaedic and Accident Surgery by the University of Nottingham in 1993, in recognition of his research and teaching in musculoskeletal trauma.[1] He served as president of the British Orthopaedic Association in 1995.[2] He held the presidency of the AO Foundation, a not-for-profit research and treatment centre for muscular trauma patients, from 1996 to 1998.[3]
Colton specialised in the treatment of skeletal injuries in both adults and children, with an emphasis on post-trauma reconstruction. He introduced the recognised Colton Classification of Olecranon Fractures in 1973.[11] He assisted his colleague Robert Mulholland to treat mountaineer Doug Scott, three weeks after he had badly fractured both legs in 1977 near the summit of Baintha Brakk in the Himalayas.[12] In September 1990, Colton, with his colleague John Webb, performed a bone graft on Prince Charles to restructure his fractured right arm following a polo accident.[13][14] The operation was covered by The Times newspaper in a front-page article.[15]
In 1991, he operated on motorcycling world champion Ron Haslam, who had sustained an open fracture of his leg in a racing crash. When Haslam had fully recovered, he took Colton around the Donington Park race track on the back of a Norton motorbike.[16] After Kenyan conservationist Richard Leakey was critically injured when the light aircraft he was piloting crashed in Kenya in 1993, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands paid for Colton to fly out to Nairobi to assess the treatment options. After ten operations in Nottingham, attempting to reconstruct his crushed legs, Colton eventually had to amputate both of Leakey's lower legs.[17]
Colton retired from surgical practice in 1997, partly in response to NHS healthcare reforms with which he disagreed.[18] Colton was granted Freedom of the City of London in 2007.[19] In 2015 he criticised the Labour Party's use of a fracture X-ray in its General Election campaign.[20] The "Chris Colton Trauma Lecture" is delivered each year at the University of Nottingham's Fracture Forum.[1]
Medical education
Colton has published articles and chapters in over 70 journals[11][21][22][23] and books, including co-authoring the medical reference book, Atlas of Orthopaedic Surgical Approaches.[24]
He was Executive Editor of the AO Surgery Reference online guide for orthopaedic surgeons 2005–2011.[25]
^"AO Presidents". www.aofoundation.org. Retrieved 21 January 2020.
^Rowles, J. M.; Kirsh, G.; Macey, A. C.; Colton, C. L. (April 1992). "The use of injury scoring in the evaluation of the Kegworth M1 aircrash". The Journal of Trauma. 32 (4): 441–447. doi:10.1097/00005373-199204000-00006. ISSN0022-5282. PMID1569616.
^Johnson, J. R. (1988). "Orthopaedics. The principles and practice of musculoskeletal surgery. S. P. F. Hughes, M. K. D'A. Benson and C. L. Colton. 250 × 185 mm. Pp. 1077. Illustrated. 1987. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone. £125.00". British Journal of Surgery. 75 (6): 623. doi:10.1002/bjs.1800750647. ISSN1365-2168.
^Stableforth, P. G. (1992). "Atlas of orthopaedic surgical approaches. C. L. Colton and A. J. Hall. 286 × 225 mm. Pp. 216 + viii. Illustrated. 1991. Oxford: Butterworth-Heineniann. £80". BJS (British Journal of Surgery). 79 (4): 377. doi:10.1002/bjs.1800790446. ISSN1365-2168.