Both osteochondritis dissecans and
Specimens of femoral heads were studied at necropsy in two cases of
A review of fifty cases of idiopathic
We have been following all modern trends in the treatment of
This pilot study aims to investigate the utility and feasibility of a unique upright MR scan for imaging hips affected by
Introduction.
Subtrochanteric osteotomy has been reported to interrupt the destructive phase of
Introduction: Shortening of the affected limb has frequently been observed in children with Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease (LCPD). Many factors have been thought as the cause of this residual shortening after LCPD. There has been no clear answer regarding which is more responsible for the residual shortening between
Introduction: Evaluation of the hip joint space was performed in patients with
Purpose of study: To test the hypothesis that previous hip involvement leads to earlier presentation and a better outcome for the contra-lateral hip in bilateral
LCPD can cause femoral head deformity and osteoarthritis requiring total hip replacement (THR). Currently, there is little data on how patients are functioning after a THR from patients’ perspective. The purpose of this study was to collect a large patient-reported outcome data set on adults with LCPD, including those who had a THR, using a Web-survey method and to compare their outcomes to a normative population. An English REDCap-based survey was built and made available on a LCPD study group website. The survey included childhood and adult LCPD history, SF-36 Health Survey, and the Hip Disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS). Statistical analysis included t-test and linear and proportional odds regressions. Of the 1182 participants who completed the survey, 261 participants (89 M, 172 F) had a THR. The mean age at survey was 44.6±12.4 years (range 20–79). The mean duration since THR was 7.2±8 years (median 4, range 0–43). Gender and age matched analysis showed that THR participants had significantly lower HOOS Quality-of-Life and Sports scores (p<0.0001) for all age groups in comparison to a normative cohort. In women, the HOOS Symptoms, Daily Living, and Pain scores were also significantly lower in the <55 age groups (p<0.05). Similarly, SF-36 scores were significantly lower (p<0.05) in female <45 age groups in 5 out of 8 SF-36 scales. Overall, hip dysplasia and the number of years-from-THR were the main factors associated with worse SF-36 and HOOS scores. In comparison to the non-THR participants, THR participants had higher scores in some of the HOOS and SF-36 scales. LCPD participants with THR had significantly worse HOOS and SF-36 scores in most of the scales studied than a normative cohort, especially in women. There is significant disability even after a THR, warranting continued efforts to improve treatment and outcome.
The most important outcome predictor of Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease (LCPD) is the shape of the healed femoral head. However, the deformity of the femoral head is currently evaluated by non-reproducible, categorical, and qualitative classifications. In this regard, recent advances in computer vision might provide the opportunity to automatically detect and delineate the outlines of bone in radiographic images for calculating a continuous measure of femoral head deformity. This study aimed to construct a pipeline for accurately detecting and delineating the proximal femur in radiographs of LCPD patients employing existing algorithms. To detect the proximal femur, the pretrained stateof-the-art object detection model, YOLOv5, was trained on 1580 manually annotated radiographs, validated on 338 radiographs, and tested on 338 radiographs. Additionally, 200 radiographs of shoulders and chests were added to the dataset to make the model more robust to false positives and increase generalizability. The convolutional neural network architecture, U-Net, was then employed to segment the detected proximal femur. The network was trained on 80 manually annotated radiographs using real-time data augmentation to increase the number of training images and enhance the generalizability of the segmentation model. The network was validated on 60 radiographs and tested on 60 radiographs. The object detection model achieved a mean Average Precision (mAP) of 0.998 using an Intersection over Union (IoU) threshold of 0.5, and a mAP of 0.712 over IoU thresholds of 0.5 to 0.95 on the test set. The segmentation model achieved an accuracy score of 0.912, a Dice Coefficient of 0.937, and a binary IoU score of 0.854 on the test set. The proposed fully automatic proximal femur detection and segmentation system provides a promising method for accurately detecting and delineating the proximal femoral bone contour in radiographic images, which is necessary for further image analysis.
Treatment of severe Perthes disease remains a major challenge. Various surgical options exist for containment. We describe the Birmingham interlocking triple pelvic osteotomy (BITPO) and report the results at skeletal maturity. We reviewed 22 hips in 21 consecutive patients with severe Perthes who had the BITPO. There were 16 males and 5 females. The mean age at presentation was 7 years 7 months. Seventeen hips were Herring group C and five were Herring group B. Six patients had four head-at-risk signs (HARS), 9 had three HARS, 4 had two HARS and 3 had a single HARS. The mean age at operation was 8 years 2 Months. Clinical, radiological and functional evaluations were under taken on these patients who have since reached skeletal maturity. The minimum follow up was 6 years. Average age at review was 18 years 8 months (range 16–25). Two patients have since had hip resurfacing, and two patients a double femoral osteotomy and one patient a surgical dislocation of the hip and valgus osteotomy. The average Harris Hip Score pre-operatively was 52, which improved to a mean score of 82. Eleven hips were classified as Stulberg I/II (50%), 9 hips Stulberg III/IV (41%) and 2 hips Stulberg V (9%). The average increase in Centre-Edge angle was 31 degrees and there was an average improvement of 24.6% in the head coverage. At follow up the average abduction was 31 degrees (improvement of 8.5 degrees), internal rotation 22 degrees (10.5 degree improvement) and flexion 106 degrees (11 degree improvement). We conclude that the Birmingham interlocking triple pelvic osteotomy provides excellent coverage of the femoral head in severe Perthes disease, recaptures and remoulds the deformed head and avoids retroversion of socket. Good results in severe Perthes disease are maintained beyond skeletal maturity.
Ganz’s studies made it possible to address joint deformities on both the femoral and acetabular side brought about by Perthes’ disease. Femoral head reduction osteotomy (FHRO) was developed to improve joint congruency, along with periacetabular osteotomy (PAO), which may enhance coverage and containment. The purpose of this study is to show the clinical and morphological outcomes of the technique and the use of an implemented planning approach. From September 2015 to December 2021, 13 FHROs were performed on 11 patients for Perthes’ disease in two centres. Of these, 11 hips had an associated PAO. A specific CT- and MRI-based protocol for virtual simulation of the corrections was developed. Outcomes were assessed with radiological parameters (sphericity index, extrusion index, integrity of the Shenton’s line, lateral centre-edge angle (LCEA), Tönnis angle), and clinical parameters (range of motion, visual analogue scale (VAS) for pain, Merle d'Aubigné-Postel score, modified Harris Hip Score (mHHS), and EuroQol five-dimension five-level health questionnaire (EQ-5D-5L)). Early and late complications were reported.Aims
Methods
Perthes’ disease (PD) is a childhood hip disorder that can affect the quality of life in adulthood due to femoral head deformity and osteoarthritis. There is very little data on how PD patients function as adults, especially from the patients’ perspective. The purpose of this study was to collect treatment history, demographic details, the University of California, Los Angeles activity score (UCLA), the 36-Item Short Form survey (SF-36) score, and the Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome score (HOOS) of adults who had PD using a web-based survey method and to compare their outcomes to the outcomes from an age- and sex-matched normative population. The English REDCap-based survey was made available on a PD study group website. The survey included childhood and adult PD history, UCLA, SF-36, and HOOS. Of the 1,182 participants who completed the survey, the 921 participants who did not have a total hip arthroplasty are the focus of this study. The mean age at survey was 38 years (SD 12) and the mean duration from age at PD onset to survey participation was 30.8 years (SD 12.6).Aims
Methods