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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 75 - 75
1 Mar 2013
Ichikawa R Funayama A Fujie A Kawasakiya S
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Introduction

Acetabular dysplasia is a common cause of osteoarthritis of the hip. Chiari pelvic osteotomy enables medialization of the center of the femoral head and improvement of coverage over the femoral head for hip dysplasia and prevents or delays progression of degenerative arthritis. We reviewed 104 patients after this augmentation procedure.

Patients and methods

Between 1989 and 2000, 167 patients with developmental dysplasia of the hip had undergone the surgery at university hospital. Among them, 104 patients were able to be traced after surgery for more than 10 years. The mean follow-up period was 15.5 years. There were 96 women and 8 men with an average age of 34.3 years at surgery. The average angle of osteotomy was 6.6 degree craniad to the horizontal plane. Ratio of migration of the distal pelvis was 42%.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 1, Issue 4 | Pages 55 - 63
7 Apr 2020
Terjesen T Horn J

Aims. When the present study was initiated, we changed the treatment for late-detected developmental dislocation of the hip (DDH) from several weeks of skin traction to markedly shorter traction time. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate this change, with special emphasis on the rate of stable closed reduction according to patient age, the development of the acetabulum, and the outcome at skeletal maturity. Methods. From 1996 to 2005, 49 children (52 hips) were treated for late-detected DDH. Their mean age was 13.3 months (3 to 33) at reduction. Prereduction skin traction was used for a mean of 11 days (0 to 27). Gentle closed reduction under general anaesthesia was attempted in all the hips. Concurrent pelvic osteotomy was not performed. The hips were evaluated at one, three and five years after reduction, at age eight to ten years, and at skeletal maturity. Mean age at the last follow-up was 15.7 years (13 to 21). Results. Stable closed reduction was obtained in 36 hips (69%). Open reduction was more often necessary in patients ≥ 18 months of age at reduction (50%) compared with those under 18 months (24%). Residual hip dysplasia/subluxation occurred in 12 hips and was significantly associated with avascular necrosis (AVN) and with high acetabular index and low femoral head coverage the first years after reduction. Further surgery, mostly pelvic and femoral osteotomies to correct subluxation, was performed in eight hips (15%). The radiological outcome at skeletal maturity was satisfactory (Severin grades 1 or 2) in 43 hips (83%). Conclusions. Gentle closed reduction can be attempted in children up to three years of age, but is likely to be less successful in children aged over 18 months. There is a marked trend to spontaneous improvement of the acetabulum after reduction, even in patients aged over 18 months and therefore simultaneous pelvic osteotomy is not always necessary


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 46 - 46
1 Aug 2018
Yasunaga Y Tanaka R Yamasaki T Syouji T Adachi N
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Adolescent and young adult patients with a history of DDH and residual hip dysplasia tend to have an early presentation of symptoms. In these patients, a severe acetabular dysplasia, aspheric femoral head and/or high greater trochanter are often observed. We evaluated the long-term results of rotational acetabular osteotomy (RAO) for symptomatic hip dysplasia in patients younger than 21 years. We performed 492 RAOs for hip dysplasia from 1987 to 2017. In these cases, patients younger than 21 years at the time of surgery were 40 patients (46 hips). We evaluated 34 patients (40 hips, follow-up rate; 85%) retrospectively. There were 32 females and two males; their mean age at the time of surgery was 17.8 years (12–21). The mean follow-up period was 16.8 years (1–30). In eight hips, isolated RAO was not adequate to correct instability and/or congruency. For these hips, four varus femoral osteotomies, two valgus femoral osteotomies and two greater trochanter displacement were combined with RAO. The mean clinical score (JOA) was improved from 80 to 90 significantly at the final follow-up. The mean CE angle was improved from −3.4 (−35–10) degrees to 27 (8–42) degrees, acetabular roof angle from 30 (15–60) degrees to 6.7 (−3–30) degrees, head lateralization index from 0.665 (0.5–1.0) to 0.614 (0.429–0.7) postoperatively. Radiographic OA progression was observed in four hips, but no hip was converted to THA. The RAO is an effective technique for surgical correction of a relatively severe dysplastic hip in adolescent and young adults


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 84-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 254 - 255
1 Nov 2002
Shih C Hsieh P Yang W Lee Z
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The periacetabular osteotomies are effective but technically demanding surgical procedures in the treatment of adult dysplastic hips. We developed a modified technique which combines the two most popular surgeries: the rotational acetabular osteotomy (RAO), and the Bernese osteotomy. Transtrochanteric approach was used in our new spherical osteotomy and provided a good surgical exposure for redirecting the acetabulum with minimal complications. This article describes the surgical procedures in detail and reports the preliminary results in the first 32 hips. As the experiences are encouraging in terms of technical ease and reproducibility, the authors feel that this new osteotomy with transtrochanteric exposure is an ideal choice of surgery in treating residual hip dysplasia in the adult. Key words: osteotomy, periacetabular, hip dysplasia, adult


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 575 - 575
1 Nov 2011
Beaulé PE Banga K
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Purpose: The surgical correction of FAI deformity is a well accepted treatment in patients presenting with hip pain with associated labral-chondral damage. The anterior approach with assisted hip arthroscopy provides access to the anterior head-neck junction with potentially quicker recovery for patients. The purpose of this study is to present the safety and efficacy of this approach in performing impingement surgery. Method: Forty-eight Hueter procedures were performed in 45 patients (13 males and 32 females). Mean age was 42.09 years (range, 21–65 years), and mean BMI was 24.31(range, 21–33). The scope was performed first to deal with intra-articular damage. All patients were diagnosed with CAM type FAI with labral pathology based on MRI arthrogram with an alpha angle > 50.5 degrees. Results: At a mean follow-up of 21.8 months (range 12–30 months), Harris Hip scores improved from 64.66 (range, 42.0–93.0) to 79.97 (range, 47.0–96.0). There were 5 re-operations at a mean time of 15.2 months (range, 4–22). One had a repeat hip scope for intra-articular adhesions, and another for recurrent traumatic tear of the labrum. Three cases with residual hip dysplasia had corrective surgery with a peri-acetabular osteotomy at an average of 16.67 months (range, 15–18 months). Conclusion: Overall, we have found this to be a reliable, safe and reproducible approach to the treatment of FAI. This is a day care procedure as compared to the classic open procedure. Uncorrected hip dysplasia in the presence of a CAM deformity is a risk factor for early failure


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 8 | Pages 935 - 942
1 Aug 2023
Bradley CS Verma Y Maddock CL Wedge JH Gargan MF Kelley SP

Aims

Brace treatment is the cornerstone of managing developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH), yet there is a lack of evidence-based treatment protocols, which results in wide variations in practice. To resolve this, we have developed a comprehensive nonoperative treatment protocol conforming to published consensus principles, with well-defined a priori criteria for inclusion and successful treatment.

Methods

This was a single-centre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study of a consecutive series of infants with ultrasound-confirmed DDH who underwent a comprehensive nonoperative brace management protocol in a unified multidisciplinary clinic between January 2012 and December 2016 with five-year follow-up radiographs. The radiological outcomes were acetabular index-lateral edge (AI-L), acetabular index-sourcil (AI-S), centre-edge angle (CEA), acetabular depth ratio (ADR), International Hip Dysplasia Institute (IHDI) grade, and evidence of avascular necrosis (AVN). At five years, each hip was classified as normal (< 1 SD), borderline dysplastic (1 to 2 SDs), or dysplastic (> 2 SDs) based on validated radiological norm-referenced values.


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 7, Issue 6 | Pages 36 - 39
1 Dec 2018