Due to these major complications further investigations on additional patients have been stopped.
A slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE) can be fixed in-situ with K-wires or screws. For the latter is said that one disadvantage is the lack of femoral neck growth. Assumed reasons for this is despite an injury of the physis by the often too long thread the missing lubrication of the screw in the bone. The following study evaluates the amount of remaining bony growth and method-depending complications in screw fixation of SCFE.
In 20 patients we tried to remove the screws after completed growth. This was possible in 30% minimal invasively and in 30% with open surgery. In 40% parts of the screws or even the whole screw remained in situ. Time of surgery for bilateral screw pinning was 51 minutes, for removal 91 minutes in average (34–278).
Aim: In Germany an ultrasound screening examination to determine CDH is recommended for all children in the first 6 weeks of life. We evaluated this ultrasound-screening-program together with the German Association of health insurance carriers over five years to show if an early ultrasound of the hip can reduce the number and the required operative procedures of children with CDH. Methods: From 1997 to 2002, we documented monthly all children with CDH aged ten weeks up to five years from all German paediatric orthopaedic departments with a registration card and questionnaire. Children with neuromuscular diseases or teratologic dislocation of the hip, enrolled in out-patient treatment programs, as well as children born abroad were excluded. Results: Overall we registered 645 children, 534 with single operative procedure. 68% received a closed reduction of the hip, 11% open, while 21% required an oste-otomy of the acetabulum and/or femur. The percentage of the single operative procedures did not change over the years. The number of children, who underwent no ultrasound of the hip before diagnosis decreased from 20% in the first year to 10% in the last. The first ultrasound examination revealed no pathological findings in 20% of the cases. During the five years children received the first screening more and more at the age four to six weeks than during the first days of life. Nevertheless, the yearly number of cases declined by 50%. Conclusion: Despite the German ultrasound-screening-program late or undiagnosed CDH still exists in our country. A possible reason can be the quality of ultrasound examination, the form of treatment as well as a later worsening of CDH and the so-called endogenous dysplasia. The aim must be the improvement of diagnosis and treatment.