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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 44-B, Issue 3 | Pages 573 - 587
1 Aug 1962
Jones GB

1. Forty-eight paralytic dislocations of the hip have been studied and twenty-seven operations for correction of valgus deformity of the femoral neck have been done. 2. The differing features of dislocations occurring in poliomyelitis, cerebral palsy and meningomyelocoele are considered in relation to management after operation. 3. Early recognition of subluxation is essential to a successful varus osteotomy. An angle of 105 degrees rather than the 120 degrees previously recommended is advisable for children under the age of five. 4. Redislocation is most likely to occur in meningomyelocoele in which muscular imbalance is greatest, and in later cases where the acetabulum has become shallow by growth without the femoral head within it. It has not occurred as a late complication after weight bearing has been established, from a recurrence of valgus deformity


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 78-B, Issue 6 | Pages 917 - 923
1 Nov 1996
Sangavi SM Szöke G Murray DW Benson MKD

Children who present late with hip dislocation may require femoral osteotomy after reduction, to correct valgus and anteversion deformity of the femoral neck. After these procedures proximal femoral growth is unpredictable. We have studied proximal femoral growth in 40 children who had been treated by femoral osteotomy. Preoperatively, the mean femoral neck-shaft angle was 5° greater on the affected side than on the contralateral side. Postoperatively, it was 28° less. There was progressive recorrection; after five years the angle was not significantly different from that on the contralateral side. In our series 70% of the capital epiphyses became abnormally shaped, taking the appearance of a ‘jockey’s cap’. All the growth plates became angulated but this corrected with time. Correction of the neck-shaft angle probably results from the more normal mechanical environment provided by reduction. The abnormal radiographic appearance of the epiphysis and growth plate is probably due to the rotation produced by the osteotomy


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 76-B, Issue 2 | Pages 267 - 270
1 Mar 1994
Witt J McCullough C

We report the results of anterior soft-tissue release of the hip for fixed flexion deformity in 17 patients (31 hips) with juvenile chronic arthritis. The mean age at operation was 8 years 6 months. All the patients were reviewed at one and three years and 11 (21 hips) were available for review at five years. The results were good as regards early pain relief and improved mobility. At one year, the average fixed flexion deformity was reduced from 35 degrees to 9.5 degrees, and at three years it was 18 degrees. This degree of improvement was maintained in the hips followed for five years. At 5 to 12 years' follow-up (mean 6.7) seven patients (14 hips) have required no further surgery and have maintained an acceptable range of motion. We discuss the influence of surgery on radiographic changes and on femoral neck anteversion


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 6 | Pages 884 - 889
1 Nov 1991
Kallio P Lequesne G Paterson D Foster B Jones

We used ultrasonography to study 26 hips with slipped capital femoral epiphyses. In recently slipped epiphyses the ultrasound image revealed a step at the anterior physeal outline (mean 6.4 mm), diminished distance between the anterior acetabular rim and the femoral metaphysis (mean 4.3 mm) and an effusion. As metaphyseal remodelling progressed the physeal step decreased. The femoral neck appeared straighter in hips which had been symptomatic for longer than three weeks. It was possible to measure posterior epiphyseal displacement without projectional errors and the method was accurate in diagnosing minimal slip and in staging displacement. The suggested criteria are, less than 7 mm for a mild slip, 7 to 11 mm for a moderate slip and more than 11 mm for a severe slip. We recommend ultrasonography for the diagnosis, staging and follow-up management of slipped upper femoral epiphysis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 5 | Pages 761 - 764
1 Nov 1987
Phillips T

The purpose of this study was to establish if the Bateman prosthesis functions as a bipolar device moving primarily at the inner metal-on-polyethylene bearing as originally proposed, or as a unipolar hemiarthroplasty moving at the outer metal-on-cartilage surface as has recently been suggested. One hundred hips were examined at one year follow-up; 78 were examined again at two to four years. The replacement was performed for arthritis in 76 hips and for femoral neck fracture in 24. Movement was assessed both with and without weight-bearing. In 80% of the arthritis group the prosthesis functioned as a bipolar hip replacement with movement occurring primarily at the inner metal-on-polyethylene surface. By contrast, in 75% of the fracture group the prosthesis functioned largely as a unipolar device with movement occurring primarily at the outer metal-on-cartilage surface. In all cases examined serially the movement pattern was the same at two to four years as it has been at one year. Clearly, the action of the prosthesis depends on the condition of the acetabular cartilage


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 1 | Pages 4 - 12
1 Feb 1972
Mitchell GP

1. Some problems in the early diagnosis and management of congenital dislocation are discussed. 2. In a well-staffed maternity unit one dislocation completely escaped early detection in every 8,000 births over the period 1962 to 1968 inclusive. 3. The complications of early treatment on a Malmö splint are initial failure to obtain reduction, failure to maintain reduction, deformity of the upper femoral epiphysis or metaphysis, and persistent anteversion of the femoral neck. 4. Arthrography suggests that failure of early splintage and deformity of the upper femur are due to attempted reduction in the presence of an inverted limbus. 5. A trial method of treatment of frank displacement in the first year of life has been carried out by combining excision of the inverted limbus with a period in a frog position plaster to correct anteversion. This method avoided changes in the upper femur but failed to correct anteversion in four out of eighteen cases


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 50-B, Issue 2 | Pages 266 - 273
1 May 1968
Parsons DW Seddon HJ

1. The treatment of contractures at the hip secondary to poliomyelitis by Soutter's muscle slide or by Yount's fasciotomy gives excellent results. So does high femoral osteotomy, but it is not superior to the other two and should therefore be kept in reserve as a supplementary operation for the completion of correction of a deformity so gross as not to be wholly remediable by division of the soft parts. 2. Subluxation of the hip occurs only if the paralysis comes on during the first eighteen months of life and is a product not of severe paralysis but of unbalanced and often slight weakness of muscles. Correction of the invariable valgus deformity of the femoral neck by osteotomy is followed by relapse; acetabuloplasty too is unreliable. The most promising remedy seems to be some form of acetabuloplasty combined with transplantation of an iliopsoas of adequate strength into the greater trochanter. The indications for arthrodesis are few, but the results of this operation are good. 3. In the few patients with abductor weakness and little else the dipping gait may be abolished by iliopsoas transplantation


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 1 | Pages 56 - 60
1 Feb 1965
Charnley J Kettlewell J

1. The customary method of broaching and of knocking the prosthesis down into the neck of the femur produces an indeterminate interference fit. 2. The usual interference fit may suffer progressive breakdown under even small, steady loads. This results in a permanent relative movement between prosthesis and femur as the metal insert "beds " into the bone. 3. Modification of the usual practice by providing a clearance fit between prosthesis and femur and cementing of the metal into the bone provides a system which has been shown to be free of breakdown under steady loads up to about 450 pounds. 4. By cementing the prosthesis shaft into the femur permanent relative movement between the elements has been shown to be reduced from approximately four-hundredths of an inch per 100 pounds load to two ten-thousandths of an inch per 100 pounds load–that is, a reduction of 200 to 1


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1148 - 1156
1 Sep 2018
Ferguson RJ Broomfield JA Malak TT Palmer AJR Whitwell D Kendrick B Taylor A Glyn-Jones S

Aims

The aim of this study was to determine the stability of a new short femoral stem compared with a conventional femoral stem in patients undergoing cementless total hip arthroplasty (THA), in a prospective randomized controlled trial using radiostereometric analysis (RSA).

Patients and Methods

A total of 53 patients were randomized to receive cementless THA with either a short femoral stem (MiniHip, 26 patients, mean age: 52 years, nine male) or a conventional length femoral stem (MetaFix, 23 patients, mean age: 53 years, 11 male). All patients received the same cementless acetabular component. Two-year follow-up was available on 38 patients. Stability was assessed through migration and dynamically inducible micromotion. Radiographs for RSA were taken postoperatively and at three, six, 12, 18, and 24 months.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 5 | Pages 570 - 578
1 May 2018
Gollwitzer H Suren C Strüwind C Gottschling H Schröder M Gerdesmeyer L Prodinger PM Burgkart R

Aims

Asphericity of the femoral head-neck junction is common in cam-type femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) and usually quantified using the alpha angle on radiographs or MRI. The aim of this study was to determine the natural alpha angle in a large cohort of patients by continuous circumferential analysis with CT.

Methods

CT scans of 1312 femurs of 656 patients were analyzed in this cross-sectional study. There were 362 men and 294 women. Their mean age was 61.2 years (18 to 93). All scans had been performed for reasons other than hip disease. Digital circumferential analysis allowed continuous determination of the alpha angle around the entire head-neck junction. All statistical tests were conducted two-sided; a p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 2 | Pages 300 - 304
1 Mar 2002
Nötzli HP Siebenrock KA Hempfing A Ramseier LE Ganz R

We used laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) with a high energy (20 mW) laser to measure perfusion of the femoral head intraoperatively in 32 hips. The surgical procedure was joint debridement requiring dislocation or subluxation of the hip. The laser probe was placed within the anterosuperior quadrant of the femoral head. Blood flow was monitored in specific positions of the hip before and after dislocation or subluxation. With the femoral head reduced, external rotation, both in extension and flexion, caused a reduction of blood flow. During subluxation or dislocation, it was impaired when the posterosuperior femoral neck was allowed to rest on the posterior acetabular rim. A pulsatile signal returned when the hip was reduced, or was taken out of extreme positions when dislocated. After the final reduction, the signal amplitudes were first slightly lower (12%) compared with the initial value but tended to be restored to the initial levels within 30 minutes. Most of the changes in the signal can be explained by compromise of the extraosseous branches of the medial femoral circumflex artery and are reversible. Our study shows that LDF provides proof for the clinical observation that perfusion of the femoral head is maintained after dislocation if specific surgical precautions are followed


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 3 | Pages 29 - 31
1 Jun 2019


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 52-B, Issue 2 | Pages 252 - 263
1 May 1970
Grundy M

1. Sixty-three fractures of the femur occurring in forty-eight patients with Paget's disease are presented. 2. In patients with Paget's disease the femur is the bone most often fractured, although the risk of fracture is probably not much greater than that of the normal population. 3. Many femoral fractures in Paget's disease are spontaneous and are preceded by pain. Extension of a stress fracture is the most likely cause. 4. All eleven femoral neck fractures in this series failed to unite; it is suggested that neither operation nor prolonged conservative treatment is indicated. 5. Subtrochanteric fractures, if severely displaced, are best treated by intramedullary nailing. 6. Most shaft fractures may be satisfactorily treated by conservative means. Deformity of the shaft can be corrected in fractures treated by external splintage. 7. The time required for union has been neither unduly short nor unduly prolonged. 8. The long-term results in this series have been acceptable. Sarcomatous change as a complication of fracture was not observed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 46-B, Issue 2 | Pages 204 - 205
1 May 1964
Abrami G Stevens J

1 . A preliminary report is presented of a clinical trial to compare the results of early and late weight bearing in randomly selected patients of comparable age groups whose displaced femoral neck fractures were treated by internal fixation with a sliding nail-plate. 2. When 124 patients were assessed at three months and 107 at six months after operation there was no significant difference between those who started unguarded weight bearing two weeks after operation and those who avoided weight bearing for three months. 3. Early weight bearing appears to have no harmful effect on the early post-operative stability of this fracture when a sliding nail-plate is used for fixation. 4. Further information is necessary before any conclusion can be reached about the effect of early weight bearing on the ultimate fate of the fracture and of the femoral head. For this reason, and also to increase the numbers of patients in the series, the trial is continuing and the patients are being followed up for a three-year period


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 37-B, Issue 1 | Pages 8 - 47
1 Feb 1955
Lloyd-Roberts GC

1. The capsular changes in osteoarthritis of the hip and their pathogenesis are described, and it is concluded that symptoms are due mainly to this abnormality. 2. The clinical significance and pathogenesis of subchondral sclerosis, cysts, osteophytes, secondary subluxation and new bone formation on the lower border of the femoral neck are discussed. 3. These bony features which can be seen in the radiograph may, under certain circumstances, be correlated with the symptoms. 4. The influence of joint debris and capsular fibrosis upon the symptoms arising in other osteoarthritic joints is considered. 5. The mechanism by which osteoarthritis develops in hip joints with an anatomical abnormality is discussed in relation to the normal functional anatomy of the hip. 6. The evolution of osteoarthritis in dysplasia of the hip is considered with special reference to its diagnosis, prognosis and early treatment. 7. The supposition that osteoarthritis is commonly due to progressive ischaemia in the femoral head has been investigated and is rejected. 8. The cause of idiopathic osteoarthritis remains obscure but the evidence suggests that constitutional rather than local conditions in the joint account for many of these cases


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 7 | Pages 988 - 995
1 Sep 2001
Porter DE Benson MK Hosney GA

We defined the characteristics of dysplasia and coxa valga in hereditary multiple exostoses (HME) by radiological analysis of 24 hips in 12 patients. The degree and effect of the ‘osteochondroma load’ around the hip were quantified. We investigated the pathology of the labrum and the incidence of osteoarthritis and of malignant change in these patients. Coxa valga and dysplasia were common with a median neck-shaft angle of 156°, a median centre-edge angle of 23° and Sharp’s acetabular angle of 44°. There was overgrowth of the femoral neck with a significantly greater ratio of the neck/shaft diameter in HME than in the control hips (p < 0.05), as well as correlations between the proximal femoral and pelvic osteochondroma load (p < 0.05) and between the proximal femoral osteochondroma load and coxa valga (p < 0.01). Periacetabular osteochondromas are related to Sharp’s angle as an index of dysplasia (p < 0.05), but not coxa valga. No correlation was found between dysplasia and coxa valga. These data suggest that HME may cause anomalies of the hip as a reflection of a generalised inherited defect, but also support the theory that osteochondromas may themselves precipitate some of the characteristic features of HME around the hip


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 1_Supple_A | Pages 41 - 45
1 Jan 2019
Jones CW De Martino I D’Apolito R Nocon AA Sculco PK Sculco TP

Aims

Instability continues to be a troublesome complication after total hip arthroplasty (THA). Patient-related risk factors associated with a higher dislocation risk include the preoperative diagnosis, an age of 75 years or older, high body mass index (BMI), a history of alcohol abuse, and neurodegenerative diseases. The goal of this study was to assess the dislocation rate, radiographic outcomes, and complications of patients stratified as high-risk for dislocation who received a dual mobility (DM) bearing in a primary THA at a minimum follow-up of two years.

Materials and Methods

We performed a retrospective review of a consecutive series of DM THA performed between 2010 and 2014 at our institution (Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York) by a single, high-volume orthopaedic surgeon employing a single prosthesis design (Anatomic Dual Mobility (ADM) Stryker, Mahwah, New Jersey). Patient medical records and radiographs were reviewed to confirm the type of implant used, to identify any preoperative risk factors for dislocation, and any complications. Radiographic analysis was performed to assess for signs of osteolysis or remodelling of the acetabulum.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 51-B, Issue 1 | Pages 165 - 174
1 Feb 1969
Rösingh GE James J

1. An investigation was made of the tolerance of the cells in the femoral head in rabbits for ischaemia brought about by transecting the ligament of the femoral head and applying a ligature around the femoral neck. The animals were killed two, six, twelve, twenty-four and seventy-two hours after operation. 2. In the cells of the bone marrow and in the osteoblasts distinct histological signs of disintegration were present six hours after operation. Pyknosis of the osteocyte nuclei was found after twenty-four hours' ischaemia; sometimes vacuolar clarifications could be observed in these pyknotic nuclei. After three days of ischaemia the staining affinity for Feulgen and haematoxylin of a number of osteocyte nuclei had visibly decreased. 3. The Feulgen-DNA content of the osteocyte nuclei-as measured in individual nuclei by means of an integrated microdensitometer-was significantly reduced as compared with similar nuclei from the control side as early as after six hours of ischaemia. This DNA loss was progressive with the period of ischaemia. From these facts, the conclusion was reached that in the femoral head of the rabbit the period of reversible damage for osteocytes must have ended within six hours


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 6 | Pages 646 - 651
1 Jun 2019
Aggarwal VK Elbuluk A Dundon J Herrero C Hernandez C Vigdorchik JM Schwarzkopf R Iorio R Long WJ

Aims

A variety of surgical approaches are used for total hip arthroplasty (THA), all with reported advantages and disadvantages. A number of common complications can occur following THA regardless of the approach used. The purpose of this study was to compare five commonly used surgical approaches with respect to the incidence of surgery-related complications.

Patients and Methods

The electronic medical records of all patients who underwent primary elective THA at a single large-volume arthroplasty centre, between 2011 and 2016, with at least two years of follow-up, were reviewed. After exclusion, 3574 consecutive patients were included in the study. There were 1571 men (44.0%) and 2003 women (56.0%). Their mean age and body mass index (BMI) was 63.0 years (sd 11.8) and 29.1 kg/m2 (sd 6.1), respectively. Data gathered included the age of the patient, BMI, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, estimated blood loss (EBL), length of stay (LOS), operating time, the presence of intra- or postoperative complications, type of complication, and the surgical approach. The approaches used during the study were posterior, anterior, direct lateral, anterolateral, and the northern approach. The complications that were recorded included prolonged wound drainage without infection, superficial infection, deep infection, dislocation, aseptic loosening, and periprosthetic fracture. Finally, the need for re-operation was recorded. Means were compared using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Student’s t-tests where appropriate and proportions were compared using the chi-squared test.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1067 - 1072
1 Nov 1998
Hall RM Siney P Wroblewski BM Unsworth A

The direction of wear in the acetabular socket has implications for the amount of debris that is generated during movement, for the magnitude of eccentric loading and for the incidence of impingement of the neck. We observed the direction of penetration with respect to a global co-ordinate system in 84 acetabular components retrieved at reoperation. The mean direction of wear relative to the open face of the sockets was found to be 37° with a range from 0° to 87°. For those values determined using the inclination of the socket on the prerevision radiograph, the mean direction of penetration in the coronal plane had a lateral, rather than a medial, component. The mean angle was 84° (SD 17°) with respect to the horizontal. The angle of penetration was found to correlate significantly with the depth, in that the lateral component became larger as the wear progressed. There was also a significant correlation between the rate of penetration and the direction of wear. Despite the theoretical advantage of penetration in the superolateral direction, i.e., along the margin of the socket, in reducing the probability of impingement of the neck, no significant correlation was seen between the angle of penetration and the period of use in vivo. This may suggest that impingement of the femoral neck on the rim of the socket may not be the dominant factor in loosening of the socket but can still be important in a few cases