Aims. Although there are various pelvic osteotomies for acetabular dysplasia of the hip, shelf operations offer effective and minimally invasive osteotomy. Our study aimed to assess outcomes following modified Spitzy shelf
Introduction. Joint preserving procedures have gained popularity in an attempt to delay arthroplasty in young, dysplastic hips. Excellent results can be achieved with peri-acetabular osteotomy (PAO) in congruent non-arthritic hips. The role of salvage procedures such as the Shelf
Introduction: Stable cup anchorage in dysplastic hips is a key problem of THA. The pupose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of a cementless cup without
Introduction: Various techniques have been described for cup position in deficient acetabuli. Medialization allows an optimal cup position in the true acetabulum affording cover of the implant in the superolateral area by the bony roof and avoiding the need for a structural graft to cover the protruding lateral edge of the cup. Materials and Methods: During the last 5 years 51 cases of cup medialization have been done during Resurfacing Replacement or THR with hard-hard bearing surfaces (mean follow up 35.2 month). 15 cases were done with the medial
Aim. Shelf
Aim. This study presents the early results of a novel procedure, both in timing and surgical technique, aimed to treat those cases of congenital hip dysplasia that present late or fail conservative treatment. Methods. 48 patients and 55 hips treated over the period from December 2004 to February 2011 were retrospectively reviewed. All were treated with adductor and psoas tenotomy, open reduction, capsulorrhaphy and
Introduction: Persistent acetabular dysplasia is a recognized cause of premature hip arthritis. Treatment options include joint preservation (acetabuloplasty/osteotomy) or salvage procedures (THR). Presence of a deficient acetabulum and an elevated acetabular centre make THR technically demanding with uncertain outcome. Shelf ace-tabuloplasty is a viable option, however, most reports in the literature focus on results in children and adolescents. Aim: To investigate the functional and radiological outcome of shelf
Aim: To investigate the functional and radiological outcome of shelf
Aim: To investigate the functional and radiological outcome of shelf
Background: Hip dysplasia is a complex developmental process. Untreated acetabular dysplasia is the most common cause of secondary hip osteoarthiritis. With increased interest in redirectional pelvic osteotomies, the role of the shelf procedure needs to be re-defined. Aim of the study: to investigate the effectiveness of the shelf procedure in adults with symptomatic acetabular dysplasia by assessing the functional and radiological outcome at a minimum of five years follow-up. Material and Methods: Seventy-six consecutive adults with symptomatic acetabular dysplasia treated with acetabular shelf augmentation, have been followed up for an average period of 11 years (range: 6–14). The mean age was thirty-three years (range: 17–60 years). The Oxford hip score (OHS) was used for clinical assessment. Centre-edge angle (CEA) and acetabular angle (AA) were measured to determine femoral head coverage. Osteoarthiritis severity was based primarily on the width of the joint space using the De Mourgues classification. Survivorship analyses using conversion to THR as an endpoint were performed. logrank test was used to compare the outcome of the shelf against the variables of age, preoperative osteoarthiritis, preoperative and postoperative AA, CEA angles. Results: The shelf procedure improved the mean preoperative CEA from 11° (range: 20° to 17°) to 50° postoperatively (range: 30° to 70°) and the mean preoperative AA from 52° (range: 46° to 64°) to 32° postoperatively (range: 18° to 57°). The Mean OHS was 34.6 (hip score maximum: 48). Thirty percent of hips needed THR at an average duration of 7.3 years. Survival analysis using conversion to THR as an endpoint was 86% (CI, 76%–95%) at five years and 46% (CI, 27%–65%) at ten years. The survival in the 44 patients with only slight or no joint space narrowing was 97% (CI, 93%–100%) at 5 years and 75% (CI, 51%–100%) at 10 years. This was significantly higher (p= 0.0007) than the survival in the 32 patients with moderate or severe osteoarthiritis, which was 76% (CI, 55%–89%) at 5 years and 22% (CI, 5%–38%) at 10 years. There was no significant relationship between survival and age (p= 0.37), pre and postoperative centre-edge angle (p= 0.39), or acetabular angle (p= 0.85). Conclusion: Shelf
In elderly patients with osteoarthritis and protrusio who require arthroplasty, dislocation of the hip is difficult due to migration of the femoral head. Traditionally, neck osteotomy is performed in situ, so this is not always achieved. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to describe a partial resection of the posterior wall in severe protrusio. This is a descriptive observational study, which describes the surgical technique of the partial resection of the posterior wall during hip arthroplasty in patients with severe acetabular protrusio operated on between January 2007 and February 2017.Aims
Methods
For the treatment of the acetabular dysplasia in the early childhood the spherical periacetabular osteotomy of the ilium is a well-recognized procedure. 52 hips of 35 patients treated with a periacetabular osteotomy between 1969 and 1985 we followed-up after 14 to 31 years. At the time of operation the average age was 2,8 years. The measurement of the anterio-posterior radiographs showed a normalization of the acetabular roof obliquity in 79% of the cases. However, there were only 46% of the cases with a normal center-edge angle. 42% had a medium pathologic angle of 20 to 30 °. In 12 % we saw severe pathology with angles smaller than 20. Fife cases (10%) presented radiologic signs of osteoarthritis and three a slight incongruence between head and acetabulum. Rare cases of postoperative complications are presented. The low incidence of radiographic osteoarthritis supports the view that the spherical periacetabular osteotomy is an appropriate surgical procedure to treat acetabular dysplasia in early childhood.
Over half of postpartum women experience pelvic ring or hip pain, with multiple anatomic locations involved. The sacroiliac joints, pubic symphysis, lumbar spine and pelvic girdle are all well documented pain generators. However, despite the prevalence of postpartum hip pain, there is a paucity of literature regarding underlying soft tissue intra-articular etiologies. The purpose of this systematic review is to document and assess the available evidence regarding underlying intra-articular soft tissue etiologies of peri- and postpartum hip pain. Three online databases (Embase, PubMed and Ovid [MEDLINE]) were searched from database inception until April 11, 2021. The inclusion criteria were English language studies, human studies, and those regarding symptomatic labral pathology in the peri- or postpartum period. Exclusion criteria were animal studies, commentaries, book chapters, review articles and technical studies. All titles, relevant abstracts and full-text articles were screened by two reviewers independently. Descriptive characteristics including the study design, sample size, sex ratio, mean age, clinical and radiographic findings, pathology, subsequent management and outcomes were documented. The methodological quality of the included studies was assessed using the Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies (MINORS) instrument. The initial search identified 2472 studies. A systemic screening and assessment of eligibility identified 5 articles that satisfied the inclusion criteria. Twenty-two females were included. Twenty patients presented with labral pathology that necessitated hip arthroscopy with labral debridement or repair with or without
This retrospective matched cohort study tested the hypothesis that an incomplete periacetabular
Introduction. Acetabular osteotomy is considered to be an alternative treatment for acetabular dysplasia, particularly in adolescents and young adults because the long-term results of total hip arthroplasty (THA) in such patients remain controversial. To our knowledge, few reports have described the relationship between the types of osteotomies and surgical difficulty. We compared the operative and clinical results of THA following the 3 main types of acetabular osteotomies, including Chiari osteotomy, rotational periacetabular osteotomy (RAO), and shelf
The aim of this research was to elaborate indications for application of some methods of surgical treatment of DDH in teenagers. There are some significant problems with surgical treatment of DDH in teenagers. The most serious one is that the results of routine reconstructive methods usually satisfy neither the patients nor the orthopaedists. In addition, in most of the cases it is too early for total hip arthroplasty. From 1985 to 1996, we operated twenty teenagers with late stages of DDH. Group A was eight patients (12 to 14 years old) with marginal hip luxation (acetabulum angle was more than 40°). Group B was seven patients (10 to12 years old) with iliac hip dislocation (acetabulum angle was more than 50°) and Group C was five patients (11 to 14 years old) with iliac hip dislocation (plane acetabulum). In Group A we performed our first two-stage method of surgical treatment. For the first stage we performed corrective transtrochanteric femur osteotomy (AO plate fixation) and partial
The goal of the present study was to evaluate the results of a one-stage operation performed on dislocated hips in children with infantile cerebral palsy. Our data indicate that the one-stage operation is a quite useful method to treat hip dislocation in children with infantile cerebral palsy. Based on our experience we emphasize the use of an individual operation plan in every instance. In selected cases it seems to be justified to ignore an element of the method. We used the radiological findings for evaluation by comparing the geometric parameters in the affected hips before and after surgery. During the last ten years, 21 dislocated hips in 13 patients were operated on by the one-stage surgical technique used at the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery of University Medical School of Pécs. The technique consists of the following steps: open reduction, iliopsoas tendon transfer, and femoral varus derotational osteotomy with shortening, modified Tönnis
Aim. To assess if Osteoset (CaSO4) improves graft incorporation after shelf procedure and whether spica immobilisation is necessary. Methods/results. 49 patients with acetabular dysplasia treated by shelf procedure were reviewed retrospectively. Group 1 (19 children) and group 2 (12 adults) had shelf
Background: The major objectives in total hip replacement for coxarthrosis secondary to DDH are: – Anatomical restoration of the hip rotation center – The restoration of the acetabular contention function – The reconstruction of the acetabular bone stock. Patients and Method: Between 1999 – 2003 there were operated 83 cases of coxarthrosis secondary to hip dysplasia, by total hip arthroplasty both cemented and uncemented. 27 cases were operated with uncemented cups and acetabular reconstruction 20 cases received a HA coated Stryker Secure Fit 40–42 mm cup 7 cases received Zweimuller screwed cup The mean age of the patients was 39 years (21–57 years) The mean weight was 69.5 kg (58–82 kg) Body mass index 28 (25–31) The dysplasia grade was Crowe II 11 cases, Crowe III 16 cases. Results: The mean dimension of the graft (S2), measured on the AP Rx was 43 % of the cup weight bearing surface The S2/S1 fraction exceeded 1 in one case that necessitated revision at 4,5 years due to the resorbtion of the graft All the grafts healed to the host bone in a 6 month interval. Discussions and Conclusions For defects smaller than 20% of the weight bearing surface of the cup, there was an intrinsic stability of the cup and the
Background. Extendable proximal femoral replacements(PFR) are used in children with bone tumours in proximity to the proximal femoral physis, previously treated by hip disarticulation. Long-axis growth is preserved, allowing limb salvage. Since 1986, survival outcomes after limb salvage and amputation have been known to be equal. Method. Retrospective review of all patients <16years undergoing extendable PFR at Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital (UK) between 04/1996 and 01/2006, recording complications, failures, procedures undertaken and patient outcomes. Results. 8 patients (mean age 8.9±3 years) underwent extendable PFR for Ewing's Sarcoma(5), Osteosarcoma(1), Chondrosarcoma(1) and rhabdomyosarcoma(1). 2 primary PFRs failed (infection of unknown source & local recurrence, both at 26months); 2 required revision for full extension (1 became infected at revision, requiring 2 stage revision). 3 patients had the original prosthesis in situ at last follow-up (mean 7.2;range 3–10.5years). 1 patient had no implant complications, but died (neutropaenic sepsis) 63 days after implant insertion. 2 were treated for recurrence but disease free at last review. 5 were continuously disease free. 5 patients were lengthened a mean 3.7cm; 2 were not lengthened.1 had incomplete data. 5 patients suffered subluxation/dislocation (mean 15.6months), 3 recurrently. Each underwent a mean 1.6 open & 1.4 closed procedures for the displaced joint. 3 patients had 4 open reductions and