Neurological problems such as cerebral palsy, myelomeningocele and others may lead to unstable hips in children and juvenile patients. Major problems may arise due to the inability to treat the underlying condition. Patients may suffer from spasticity, reduced muscular tone, bone loss or bony deformity. Despite these problems several tactics are used to gain long-term reduction of unstable hips. Femoral osteotomies are done alone or in combination with pelvic osteotomies, and/or muscular procedures. The indication of the femoral osteotomy alone is the unstable hip with a normal pelvic anatomy shown in the three-dimensional computed tomography (CT). Long-term follow up (11 to 18 years) of patients with intertrochanteric femoral osteotomy alone resulted in hip centration if patients were younger than four years of age at the time of surgery. In older patients hip centration always improved but femoral osteotomies alone did not result in sufficient coverage of subluxated or dislocated hips. Therefore in these patients with pelvic deformity we perform an intertrochanteric varusderotation and shortening osteotomy to correct the femur deformity in combination with a Pemberton type peri-acetabular pelvic osteotomy, an open reduction of the hip joint and a capsuloraphy.
Introduction. In Mid-Europe developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) is diagnosed using the sonographic hip screening described by Graf. To learn the necessary standards three courses are mandatory. However, little is known about learning curves and measurement errors of doctors at different levels of training and experience. Material and Methods. Between 1997 and 2002 participants of the basic, advanced and final hip ultrasonogra-phy course were evaluated by a questionnaire and 34 normal and pathological sonograms. They were asked to measure the alpha and beta angle. “Normal” angles of each hip were created through the mean values of two experienced course organizers. Results. 186 doctors (40% orthopedic surgeons, 60% pediatricians) were evaluated. The group included 20% interns, 60% residents and 20% consultants. An average time of 6.3 months lay between the basic and the advanced, and of 16.7 months between the advanced and the final course. The evaluation of the sonograms according to Graf showed major inter-observer differences of up to 30°. Participants had more difficulties in evaluating a correct beta angle than an alpha angle. Sonographic pictures of minor quality and pathological hips produced more difficulties than pictures of Graf type I and II hips. In the basic course all measurements showed an average difference of 3,6°, in the advanced course of 3,1° and in the final course of 4,2°. The number of examinations between courses did not correlate with good measurements. Conclusion. Even participants of all three courses seem to develop major systemic errors if ultrasonography is regularly applied without supervision. Therefore, regular training and supervision should be mandatory in order to guarantee good quality.
Introduction: The variety of operative procedures for neglected Monteggia lesions reflect the difficulty to securely keep the radial head relocated. The amount and direction of angulation in case of an ulnar oste-otomy can only be defined intraoperatively by empirically searching for the appropriate position since the primary ulnar deformity has already partially or completely remodelled with growth in most cases. Material and Methods: Retrospective study. From Janu-ary 1998 to May 2001 14 patients with late missed Mon-teggia lesions (Bado type I) underwent an osteotomy and external fixation (Hoffmann II compact, Howmed-ica) of the ulna combined with an open reduction of the radial head but without reconstruction of the anular ligament. The average age of 7 girls and 7 boys at the time of reconstruction was 9 years (5 to 15 years), the mean interval between the primary trauma and the reconstructive procedure 21 months (2 weeks to 7 years). Removal of the external fixator:12 weeks (7 – 16 weeks). Results: In 12 patients the radial head remained located, in 2 patients it re-dislocated postoperatively. After early postoperative closed reduction in one patient and open relocation of the radial head in the other patient with modification of the external fixation, the radial head remained located. Preoperatively 7 of the 14 patients showed a decreased range of motion which improved postoperatively in most cases. Thirteen of the 14 patients had a clinical and radiological follow-up 14 months (3 – 44 months) after the reconstructive procedure. There were no complications. Conclusions: Ulnar osteotomy, external fixation and open reduction of the radial head without ligament reconstruction or transarticular wire fixation proved to be a technically simple and safe procedure. It allows early functional after treatment without plaster. In case of posttraumatic overlength of the radius, it can be combined with acute or gradual lengthening of the ulna. Radio-humeral joint reconstruction in case of incongruency of the radial head and the capitullum, as well as reconstruction in adults with longstanding dislocation of the radial head are prone to failure.
Introduction: Hemiplegic cerebral palsy (CP) children are often treated with ankle-foot orthoses (AFO′s) in order to resist abnormal motion patterns and to restore normal function. It has been shown that AFOs are successful in improving pre-positioning of the foot for initial heel strike in CP patients. The myoelectric signal (EMG) during gait provides valuable information with respect to timing of muscular activity. The aim of this study was to evaluate changes in timing of muscle activation in children with hemipelegic CP during gait with and without wearing AFOs. Patients/Materials and Methods: Eight Children (5 boys, 3 girls; mean age 9.5±1.4 years) with mild to moderate hemiplegic CP and no prior surgeries or fixed contractures were studied. The children were tested barefoot and wearing a hinged AFO and shoes. Only children with an initial toe-strike barefoot and a physiological heel-strike with the AFO were included. All children performed a 3-dimensional gait analysis. At least six trials with clear forceplate data have to be collected for each of the two testing condition. Frontal and sagittal video recording took place. A sSurface EMG of vastus medialis/lateralis, rectus femoris, biceps fem-oris, semimembranosus/semitendinosus, gastrocnemius lateralis (only barefoot), and tibialis anterior was collected. Results: Mean ankle plantarflexion at initial foot contact was 16.1° when walking barefoot and 3.4° with the AFO. EMG data showed reduced tibialis anterior muscle activity with the AFO in all patients, especially in early to mid swing phase. Muscle activation pattern was corrected towards normal for knee extensors and hamstrings. Discussion: Our results show that tibialis anterior muscle activity is reduced by a hinged AFO with plantarflexion block in hemiplegic CP children. These results indicate that the pathological muscle activation pattern present in CP patients are not only due to spastic activation but also to a compensation for the abnormal gait pattern.