In 1994, a register for cerebral palsy and a health-care programme were started in southern Sweden with the aim of preventing
Surgical
We investigated the incidence and risk factors
for the development of avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head in
the course of treatment of children with cerebral palsy (CP) and
dislocation of the hip. All underwent open reduction, proximal femoral
and Dega pelvic osteotomy. The inclusion criteria were: a predominantly
spastic form of CP,
Traumatic posterior
Simultaneous bilateral posterior
1. General joint laxity affecting more than three joints was found in 7 per cent of normal schoolchildren. Similar laxity was found in fourteen of a random series of forty-eight girls, and in nineteen of twenty-six boys, with non-familial congenital
1. The literature of
Aims. There is an increased risk of
Thirty-three children with traumatic
Only two cases have been reported of congenital
1. Congenital
We report the case of a 22-year-old woman who underwent plate and screw fixation for a traumatic left acetabular fracture and fixation with cancellous screws for an associated femoral neck fracture. Two months later, the internal fixation became infected and was removed. This resulted in a painful high
The incidence of congenital
A few points in this report deserve to be stressed. Indications–It is important that the orthopaedic surgeon should decide at a very early stage which of the two methods, closed or open, he must use. These do not exclude each other but are on the other hand complementary. Nowadays the dislocated hip can be reduced by open operation with a very good chance of lasting success. This should be carried out if a hip cannot easily be reduced otherwise, or if there is any doubt that closed reduction has been successful–and as early as possible, preferably before the age of three years. Technique–Ample exposure of the joint and removal of all obstacles to reduction are important. Reduction must be complete and stable but without stress, and there must be no interference with the articular bone and cartilage. After-care–Reduction, however perfect, is only the first step towards recovery. The hip must be observed carefully and the most suitable moments for mobilisation and for walking must be chosen; this calls for nice judgment. When it is clear that the roof of the acetabulum is not developing or that persistent valgus and anteversion may encourage subluxation, a secondary operation should be undertaken at once. Radiography is necessary about every three months for the first two years. Assessment of results–With a strict system of assessment, like McFarland's, we have observed 68·3 per cent favourable results in 171 hips treated by open reduction. It is obvious that the problem of congenital
The Uppföljningsprogram för cerebral pares (CPUP) Hip Score distinguishes between children with cerebral palsy (CP) at different levels of risk for displacement of the hip. The score was constructed using data from Swedish children with CP, but has not been confirmed in any other population. The aim of this study was to determine the calibration and discriminatory accuracy of this score in children with CP in Scotland. This was a total population-based study of children registered with the Cerebral Palsy Integrated Pathway Scotland. Displacement of the hip was defined as a migration percentage (MP) of > 40%. Inclusion criteria were children in Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) levels III to V. The calibration slope was estimated and Kaplan-Meier curves produced for five strata of CPUP scores to compare the observed with the predicted risk of displacement of the hip at five years. For discriminatory accuracy, the time-dependent area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was estimated. In order to analyze differences in the performance of the score between cohorts, score weights, and subsequently the AUC, were re-estimated using the variables of the original score: the child’s age at the first examination, GMFCS level, head shaft angle, and MP of the worst hip in a logistic regression with imputation of outcomes for those with incomplete follow-up.Aims
Methods
1. One hundred patients with
1. The histories of 149 patients, coming to the Hospital for Sick Children within the first three years of life with congenital
Difficulties posed in managing developmental dysplasia of the hip diagnosed late include a high-placed femoral head, contracted soft tissues and a dysplastic acetabulum. A combination of open reduction with femoral shortening of untreated congenital dislocations is a well-established practice. Femoral shortening prevents excessive pressure on the located femoral head which can cause avascular necrosis. Instability due to a coexisting dysplastic shallow acetabulum is common, and so a pelvic osteotomy is performed to achieve a stable and concentric hip reduction. We retrospectively reviewed 15 patients (18 hips) presenting with developmental dysplasia of the hip aged four years and above who were treated by a one-stage combined procedure performed by the senior author. The mean age at operation was five years and nine months (4 years to 11 years). The mean follow-up was six years ten months (2 years and 8 months to 8 years and 8 months). All patients were followed up clinically and radiologically in accordance with McKay’s criteria and the modified Severin classification. According to the McKay criteria, 12 hips were rated excellent and six were good. All but one had a full range of movement. Eight had a limb-length discrepancy of about 1 cm. All were Trendelenburg negative. The modified Severin classification demonstrated four hips of grade IA, six of grade IB, and eight of grade II. One patient had avascular necrosis and one an early subluxation requiring revision. One-stage correction of congenital
1. Breech malposition and hormonal joint laxity produce atraumatic posterior
We have reviewed 19 consecutive patients admitted to the Odense University Hospital after traumatic
We reviewed 16 patients with spina bifida and unilateral
1. Twenty-one cases of congenital
We aimed to identify variables associated with clinical and radiological outcome following fractures of the acetabulum associated with posterior
1. Two types of paralytic
1. Congenital
We describe two patients with obturator
A new concept of the etiology of congenital
1. Twenty-two
1. The "frame" or traction method of reduction of congenital
1. Forty-eight paralytic
We report a prospective study of the feasibility of employing specially trained physiotherapists to screen neonates for congenital
1. Un reduced anterior
1. Seven cases of old unreduced anterior
1. Nine cases of traumatic
We reviewed the serial radiographs of 54 hips in 47 children treated by closed reduction for congenital
We present a case of late
1. A collected series of forty-seven traumatic
Based on the constancy with which the limbus is inverted into the joint in a typical congenital
1. Six thousand consecutive newborn babies were personally examined by the author for congenital
Almost one child in twenty with trisomy 21 will develop spontaneous
1. Two cases of recurrent post-traumatic
1. The results of fifty-three operations in forty adults with a persistent congenital
The frame described has a place in the treatment of congenital
1. The results of treatment of 134 patients with congenital
We have reviewed 82 children with congenital
1. The indications for open reduction in congenital
A patient with recurrent
We describe 95 patients with previously treated congenital
The exact measurement of femoral head cover is essential for an assessment of reduction of congenital
In this prospective study, 35,550 neonates were examined shortly after birth by a team of orthopaedic surgeons. They diagnosed 775 unstable or dislocated hips in 656 babies; there were two teratological dislocations. Treatment was first with a Frejka pillow and, if this failed to give a normal hip, a Pavlik harness at three months. Early clinical examination did not identify 21 infants who were found to have subluxation or
1. A survey of genetic and other etiological factors has been carried out in 589 index patients with congenital
This investigation examined the validity of the hypothesis that the acetabulum in congenital
1. A case of osteochondritis dissecans of the hip in a young girl who at the age of one and a half years underwent open reduction of congenital
The aim of this study was to investigate the
incidence of dysplasia in the ‘normal’ contralateral hip in patients
with unilateral developmental
Two neonates, treated by the Pavlik harness for congenital
We report the screening of 67,093 infants for congenital
1. The combination of femoral shaft fracture with
From 1956 to 1965, congenital
We report a review of 33 hips (32 patients) which had required repeat open reduction for congenital
Out of a total of 91 patients with traumatic posterior
1. In unreduced congenital
Between 1956 1999, 132 601 living children were born in and Malmö, and screened for neonatal instability of the hip. All late diagnosed patients have been followed and re-examined clinically and radiologically. During the first years of screening, less than five per 1000 living newborn infants were treated. This figure increased to 35 per 1000 in 1980, but later diminished again to about six per 1000 annually after 1990. The number of referred cases decreased from 45 per 1000 in 1980 to between 10 to 15 per 1000 from 1990. During the period of high rates of referral and treatment a larger number of paediatricians were involved in the screening procedure than during the periods with low rates of referral and treatment. Altogether 21 patients (0.16 per 1000) with developmental
Over the 10-year period 1969 to 1978, 271 consecutive cases of congenital
Arthroplasty, with normal or nearly normal reposition, is possible in most old congenital
The factors involved in the mechanism leading to traumatic posterior
The efficacy of traction before an attempted closed reduction for patients with developmental
Of a consecutive series of 117 one-year-old infants with 130 established
To determine the natural history of
1. Dislocation and subluxation of the hip has been produced in young rats by application of splints reaching from the hip to the foot, bringing the hip into extension. 2. Progressive acetabular dysplasia and anatomical abnormalities of the head and neck of the femur occurred. 3. Results of the experiments suggest that post-natal extension of the hip is of importance in the pathogenesis of congenital
Computerised tomography is useful in the diagnosis of abnormalities of the hip in children, particularly in assessing the size and shape of the acetabulum, the position and congruity of the femoral head relative to the acetabulum, and the degree of femoral anteversion or retroversion. It is most useful when limited hip movement and previous operations preclude adequate clinical examination and assessment by routine radiographic techniques. It is not recommended for routine use in screening congenital
Three patients were reviewed seven, eight and fourteen years after delayed open reduction of traumatic posterior
This paper reports the results of screening 53033 infants for congenital
We report the preliminary results of a continuing prospective evaluation of a screening programme for congenital
We treated 120 children between the ages of 12 and 31 months with 137 developmental
Routine ultrasound evaluation of neonates and young infants for congenital
A prospective neonatal screening programme for congenital
We reviewed 33 patients (35 hips) after open reduction of congenital
The late results of early treatment of congenital
From 1974 to 1989, we treated 50 patients with a simple
We measured the range of rotation in both hips of 397 normal children and in the unaffected hip of 135 children with unilateral congenital
We reviewed 14 patients (16 hips) treated by open reduction and upper femoral derotation osteotomy for congenital
The long-term results of 74 cases of simple traumatic
Coxa valga may sometimes occur as a complication of varus osteotomy for congenital
1. In Northern Ireland a campaign to eradicate congenital
1. Three cases of premature epiphysial closure at the knee complicating prolonged immobilisation for congenital
Thirty-two neglected congenital
Fracture separation of the capital femoral epiphysis occurring during attempted closed reduction of a traumatic
1. The case history of a seven and a half-year-old boy who developed increased radiographic density of the femoral capital epiphysis after traumatic
Forty-four patients who had undergone 50 capsular arthroplasties for congenital
We describe a new technique for examining the infant hip using ultrasound. Both hips are imaged simultaneously via an anterior approach. The examination can be done with the hip either extended or flexed and abducted. The method has three advantages: 1) since both hips are imaged simultaneously, lines can be drawn to assist in determining the relationship between the femoral head and the pelvis; 2) proximal, anteroposterior and lateral displacement of the femoral head can all be demonstrated; 3) the method is applicable to the infant in a harness or a plaster cast to demonstrate maintenance of reduction of a dislocated hip. The usual direction of dislocation of the femoral head was anterior and lateral. Proximal migration was also observed in cases with more severe dislocation. In flexion, the dislocated head of the femur often moved posterior to the acetabulum. Of 1276 hips, in 638 infants aged from three weeks to one year, 49 showed congenital dislocation. The accuracy of our anterior method of sonography in diagnosing congenital
We studied the pathogenesis, incidence and consequences of avascular necrosis in 184 children treated for congenital
Fifteen patients who limped and had early fatigue on walking caused by ischaemic necrosis after treatment for congenital
This paper describes the technique and results of an acetabuloplasty in which the false acetabulum is turned down to augment the dysplastic true acetabulum at its most defective part. This operation was performed in 17 hips (16 children), with congenital dislocation and false acetabula. The mean age at operation was 5.1 years (4 to 8). The patients were followed clinically and radiologically for a mean of 6.3 years (5 to 10). A total of 16 hips had excellent results and there was one fair result due to avascular necrosis. The centre-edge angles and the obliquity of the acetabular roof improved in all cases, from a mean of −15.9° (−19° to 3°) and 42.6° (33° to 46°) to a mean of 29.5° (20° to 34°) and 11.9° (9° to 19°), respectively. The technique is not complex and is stable without internal fixation. It provides a near-normal acetabulum that requires minimal remodelling, and allows early mobilisation.
1. A scheme was started in 1960 with the object of ensuring that the hips of all babies born in the North-Eastern Region of Scotland were examined shortly after birth. 2. 1,671 children with suspected abnormalities have been seen during the ensuing ten years, and the findings are discussed. 3. Clinical examination is essential. Radiographic examination of the newborn is not necessary and may be misleading, but it does prove that some hips with limited abduction but no instability are in fact dislocated. 4. Treatment is not started when the diagnosis is made shortly after birth. The children are re-examined at three weeks, when spontaneous recovery has occurred in about half. The others, whether they show instability or only limitation of abduction of the hips, are treated in a simple splint until they are three months old. Any residual stiffness is an indication for further splintage. 5. The first radiographs are taken when the children are three months old, and no child is discharged until the radiographs show that the upper femoral epiphyses have appeared and are in normal position. 6. We appreciate that we are treating some children who would have recovered spontaneously, but we do not know how to distinguish them. There is no evidence that splintage harms a hip. 7. Eighty-six children (5 per cent of the total) needed operation usually because the diagnosis was missed at birth. 8. Children with familial joint laxity or genu recurvatum should be examined especially carefully for associated hip abnormality. 9. The incidence of abnormality of the hips at birth is about one in fifty live births.
1. Out of 11,868 children born in one maternity department and examined neonatally three cases (possibly four) of typical dislocation were missed at the first examination but diagnosed and treated with good results within the following few months. 2. One single neonatal examination of the hip is not sufficient. Repeated examinations during the first weeks and months are essential. 3. Treatment with a Frejka pillow is unsatisfactory. The von Rosen splint is preferable. 4. Following the campaign for neonatal diagnosis and early treatment no case of established dislocation has been encountered after the age of six months. 5. Atypical cases present special problems.