Seventy-four patients presented before the age of six months. Of these, fifteen required operative intervention. Of the thirty-eight patients presenting over the age of six months, twenty-four required operative intervention. The incidence of late presentation of DDH was 1.11 per 1000. Ten of the late referrals had risk factors for DDH. At the seven month assessment the health visitor successfully identified and referred thirteen patients.
Dislocation is a recognised complication following the posterior approach in total hip arthroplasty. The senior surgeons involved in this study had routinely repaired the short external rotators and capsule by directly suturing ‘tendon to tendon’ and ‘capsule to capsule’ using No 1 Vicryl®. Over a two-year period this had no impact on the incidence of dislocation as compared to “no soft tissue repair” that had been done historically. In order to assess the effectiveness of ‘soft tissue to soft tissue’ repair fifteen patients were assessed using radiographic markers inserted during surgery. In 14 of the 15 patients the repair was found to have failed by the time of the post-operative x-ray which was taken on day 3 to 5. Since then we have changed the repair so that the capsule and rotators are reattached to bone with No 5 Ethibond® using drill holes in the trochanteric region. This modification was evaluated using the same method. Of 15 patients in the second type of repair only 2 showed a failure of repair on the post operative X-ray. This appears to be a more secure form of repair. The impact of this on the incidence of dislocation is being evaluated.
We performed a prospective clinical study in order to assess the effectiveness of repair of the short hip rotators, divided in the course of total hip replacement by the posterior approach, by the use of radio-opaque markers. Fifteen patients, each with a diagnosis of osteoarthritis of the hip, were selected consecutively from a single surgeon’s operating list. Uncemented Duraloc® acetabular components and custom made cemented femoral components were implanted via the posterior approach in all patients. Following implantation, the capsule and the short rotator tendons were sutured on to tendinous soft tissue around the greater trochanter using No 1 Vicryl. One radio-opaque marker clip was attached to the short rotators and capsule and a second marker was attached to the greater trochanter. Standard antero-posterior pelvic X-rays were taken at three to five days post-operatively, and at three months following surgery. Significant separation of the radio-opaque markers in fourteen of the fifteen patients was demonstrated on the day three to five X-ray, indicating failure of the repair. We conclude that this soft tissue repair is unsatisfactory. It may be of value to develop a more effective repair technique, with the overall aim of reducing total hip replacement dislocation, and as such we are currently investigating a soft tissue to bone repair.