Thanks to neonatal screening, idiopathic congenital dislocation of the hip (CDH) is generally diagnosed and treated at an early age. Despite this measure, late diagnosis of CDH still occurs. The goal of this article is to analyse the results of Petit-Morel’s closed reduction (CR) technique in the treatment of CDH diagnosed between 1 and 5 years old. We reviewed 72 hips in 60 patients. The treatment method was the same for all patients, beginning by bilateral longitudinal traction to achieve ‘presentation’ of the hip. It was followed by ‘penetration’ in a hip spica cast made under general anesthesia. The third step was an almost systematic surgical treatment of the remaining acetabular dysplasia. Results were evaluated using the radiological Severin score. Average follow-up was 11.9 years. The failure of CR occurs only twice. In this two cases, open reduction showed intraarticular obstacles to reduction. The only case of avascular necrosis (AVN) occured in one of this two failures of CR. At last follow-up, 95.8% of hips were rated as normal, or midly deformed. Young age at treatment significantly influenced the prognosis in our series. Neither the gender nor the height of the dislocation did appear to have any influence on the result. The patients which did not undergo a periacetabular osteotomy were significantly younger than the other one in the series. Pelvic osteotomy is an integral part of the method, as after 18 months many hips have lost their capacity to correct the remaining dysplasia. However, we only perform this osteotomy if the hip shows no sufficient correction during the semesters following the reduction od the dislocation. Considering Severin score, it is impossible to privilege closed or open reduction, as the results of both methods are close. However, in case of failure of reduction, which occurs in both methods, a second open reduction is much more difficult to achieve than and open reduction in a hip first treated by closed reduction. The results of this second surgery on the hip are poorer, with higher rates of AVN. Moreover, long-term functional and radiological deterioration of the hip is higher after open reduction than closed reduction. Lowest rates of AVN are reported after traction followed by closed reduction compared with exteporaneous reduction or open reduction, thanks to progressive reduction of the hip. Finally, mention should be made of the cost of the treatment. Petit-Morel’s protocole is expensive, both because of the duration of stay in the hospital, and by indirect costs as parent adaptation of its work during the treatment. The cost of open reduction is lower. However, considering the prooved better results of the closed method, requiring lower rates of further surgical procedure, we think that this method is the one to be promoted for treatment of CDH in children between 1 and 5 years old.
The treatment of developmental dysplasia of the hip diagnosed after the first year of life remains controversial. A series of 36 children (47 hips), aged between one and 4.9 years underwent gradual closed reduction using the Petit-Morel method. A pelvic osteotomy was required in 43 hips (91.5%). The patients whose hips did not require pelvic osteotomy were among the youngest. The mean age at final follow-up was 16.1 years (11.3 to 32). The mean follow-up was 14.3 years (10 to 30). At the latest follow-up, 44 hips (93.6%) were graded as excellent or good according to the Severin classification. Closed reduction failed in only two hips (4.3%) which then required open reduction. Mild avascular necrosis was observed in one (2.1%). The accuracy of the reduction and associated low complication rate justify the use of the Petit-Morel technique as the treatment of choice for developmental dysplasia of the hip in patients aged between one and five years.
Rocker bottom deformity may occur during the conservative treatment of idiopathic congenital clubfoot. Between 1975 and 1996, we treated 715 patients (1120 clubfeet) conservatively. A total of 23 patients (36 feet; 3.2%) developed a rocker bottom deformity. It is these patients that we have studied. The pathoanatomy of the rocker bottom deformity is characterised by a plantar convexity appearing between three and six months of age with the hindfoot equinus position remaining constant. The convexity initially involves the medial column, radiologically identified by the talo-first metatarsal angle and secondly by the lateral column, revealed radiologically as the calcaneo-fifth metatarsal angle. The apex of the deformity is usually at the midtrasal with a dorsal calcaneocuboid subluxation. Ideal management of clubfoot deformity should avoid this complication, with adequate manipulation and splinting and early Achilles’ percutaneous tenotomy if plantar convexity occurs. Adequate soft-tissue release provides satisfactory correction for rocker bottom deformity. However, this deformity requires more extensive and complex procedures than the standard surgical treatment of clubfoot. The need for lateral radiographs to ensure that the rocker bottom deformity is recognised early, is demonstrated.
Previous investigations have postulated that the asymmetry of the breasts in female adolescents may be linked with the development of right convex thoracic scoliosis, although there is no correlation between breast asymmetry and curve type or scoliosis magnitude. This breast asymmetry is supposed to be linked with anatomic and functional asymmetry of the internal mammary artery that is the main supplier to the mammary gland. However, no measurements of anatomic and haemodynamic parameters of internal mammary artery have been made to justify or to reject the hypothesis of asymmetric blood flow volume to the breasts and costosternal junction in female adolescent scoliotics. Twenty female adolescents with right thoracic scoliosis and 16 comparable female individuals without spine deformity were included in this study. Standing roentgenograms of the whole spine were made in all scoliotics to measure scoliosis curve, vertebral rotation and concave and convex rib-vertebra-angle at three vertebrae (apical, one level above and one below the apical vertebra). The Color Doppler Ultrasonography was used to measure at the origin of internal mammary artery its lumen diameter, cross sectional area, time average mean flow and flow volume per minute in scoliotics and controls and were compared each other. The roentgenographic parameters were compared with the ultrasonographic parameters in the scoliotics to disclose any relationship. The reliability of color Doppler ultrasonography was high and the intraobserver variability low (ANOVA, P=0.92–0.94). There was no statistically significant difference in the ultrasonographic parameters of the internal mammary artery between right and left side in each individual as well as between scoliotics and controls. In scoliotics the right mammary artery time average mean velocity increases with the convex and concave rib-vertebra-angle one level above the apical vertebrae (P<
0.01), convex rib-vertebra angle one level below the apical vertebra (P<
0.05), and concave apical rib-vertebra angle (P<
0.01). The left internal mammary artery time average increases with only the convex rib-vertebra angle one level above the apical vertebra (P<
0.05). The right and left internal mammary artery flow volume increases with the convex rib-vertebra-angle one level above the apical vertebra (P<
0.05), while the right internal mammary artery flow volume increases furthermore with the apical concave rib-vertebra-angle (P<
0.01) and concave rib-vertebra angle one level above the apical vertebra (P<
0.01). The concave apical rib-vertebra-angle (P<
0.01) and concave rib-vertebra-angle one level above the apical vertebra (P<
0.01) increases with left internal mammary artery cross sectional area. We concluded that anatomic and haemodynamic flow parameters measured at the origin of internal mammary artery are significantly correlated with apical rib-vertebra-angle in female adolescents suffering from right convex idiopathic thoracic scoliosis. This study did not find any evidence for side-difference in vascularity of the anterior thorax wall thus could not justify previous theories for development of right thoracic scoliosis in female adolescents.