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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Apr 2013
Cox P Woodacre T
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Debate currently exists regarding the economic viability for screening for developmental dysplasia of the hip in infants.

A retrospective study of infant hip dysplasia over the period of 1998–2008 (36,960 live births) was performed to determine treatment complexity and associated costs of disease detection and hospital treatment, related to the age at presentation and treatment modality.

179 infants (4.8/1000) presented with hip dysplasia. 34 infants presented late (>3 months of age) and required closed or open reduction. 145 infants presented at <3 months of age, 14 of whom failed early pavlik harness treatment. A detailed cost analysis revealed:

131 early presenters with successful management in a pavlik harness at a cost of £601/child.

34 late presenters who required surgery (36 hips, 19 closed/ 17 open reductions, 1 revision procedure) at a cost of £4352/child.

14 early presenters with failed management in a pavlik harness requiring more protracted surgery (18 hips, 4 closed/ 14 open reductions, 7 revision procedures) at a cost of £7052/ child.

Late detection causes increased treatment complexity and a seven-fold increase in the short-term costs of treatment, compared to early detection and successful management in a pavlik harness. However improved strategies are needed for the 10% of early presenting infants who fail pavlik harness treatment and require the most complex and costly interventions.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XIX | Pages 15 - 15
1 May 2012
Ball T Day C Strain D Cox P
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Aims

We investigated the local epidemiology of Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip (DDH), in order to define incidence, identify risk factors, and refine our policy on selective ultrasound screening.

Methods

Data were recorded prospectively on all live births in the Exeter area from January 1998 to December 2008. We compared those treated for DDH with all other children. Crude odds ratios (OR) were calculated to identify potential risk factors. Logistic regression was then used to control for interactions between variables.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 72 - 72
1 Feb 2012
Shepherd A Cox P
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Introduction

The standard plane imaging of Graf and the dynamic methods of Harcke are well established methods in assessing hip dysplasia but give limited information in the flexed-abducted treatment position used in the Pavlik harness. The femoral head may sit on the edge of the acetabulum in a flexed position and only reduce when the hips are abducted. This may mean that hips, which reduce when abducted in the Pavlik harness, appear subluxed when scanned in neutral abduction. Harness treatment may thereby be abandoned prematurely due to the failure to confirm reduction. This study identifies ultrasound landmarks on an anterior hip scan which could be used to confirm reduction of the hip in Pavlik Harness.

Materials and method

Hips of a newborn piglet were scanned, imaged with magnetic resonance and x-rayed both before and after anatomical dissection.

Radiographic markers delineated the position of the tri-radiate cartilage and potential ultrasound landmarks identified to help confirm hip reduction in the flexed-abducted position. Porcine imaging was then compared with that of a human newborn.