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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 79 - 79
1 Dec 2020
Stefanou M Vasilakou A Fryda Z Giannakou S Papadimitriou G Pilichou A Antonis K Anastasopoulos I
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Purpose. Ultrasound of the neonatal and infantile hip is a useful tool in diagnosis and treatment of the developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH), especially given the fact that numerous cases of DDH do not present any findings in the clinical examination. Methods. Between January 2014 and May 2020, 10536 (5273 neonates and infants, 53% girls, 47% boys) consecutive neonatal and infantile hip joints were studied using the Graf Hip Ultrasound method. Results. 607 hips were diagnosed as abnormal. 523 (5%) hip joints were type IIA, 18 (0.17%) were type ΙΙΒ, 19 (0.18%) were type ΙΙC, 33 (0.31%) were type ΙΙΙ and 14 (0.13%) were type IV. 72% of patients were girls, 55% of patients were firstborns, 35,7% presented breech, 8,2% had a positive family history of DDH, 6% were part of a multiple pregnancy, while 27,2% had no predisposing factor for the disease. Type ΙΙΑ hips were treated with follow- up only and had all matured (turned to normal- type I hips) within a trimester. Type ΙΙΒ και ΙΙC hips were treated using an abductor harness and were normal (type I) within three months. 35.7% of type ΙΙΙ were treated with an abductor harness and 64.3% with hip spica. All type IV hips were treated with hip spica. The duration of therapy for type III and type IV hips was 3 months. Conclusion. The early use of a hip ultrasound provides us with the ability to diagnose and treat DDH efficiently, resulting in a normal hip joint within the first months of life