Previous studies have identified clinical and
demographic risk factors for recurrence in the treatment of idiopathic clubfoot
(congenital talipes equinovarus). Evertor muscle activity is not
usually considered amongst them. This study aimed to evaluate whether
recurrence could be predicted by demographic, clinical and gait
parameters. From a series of 103 children with clubfeet, 67 had
completed a follow-up of two years: 41 male and 26 female, 38 with idiopathic
and 29 with non-idiopathic deformities. The mean age was 3.2 years
(2.1 to 6.3). Primary correction was obtained in all 38 children
(100%) with an idiopathic deformity, and in 26 of 29 patients (90%)
with a non-idiopathic deformity. Overall, 60 children (90%) complied
with the abduction brace regime. At a mean follow-up of 31.4 months (24
to 62), recurrence was noted in six children (15.8%) in the idiopathic
and 14 children (48.3%) in the non-idiopathic group. Significant
correlation was found between poor evertor activity and recurrence
in both groups. No statistically significant relationship was found
between the rate of recurrence and the severity of the initial deformity,
the age at the time of treatment, the number of casts required or
the compliance with the brace. After correction of idiopathic and non-idiopathic clubfoot using
the Ponseti method, only poor evertor muscle activity was statistically
associated with recurrence. The identification of risk factors for
recurrent deformity allows clinicians to anticipate problems and
advocate early additional treatment to improve muscle balance around
the ankle. Cite this article:
The August 2013 Children’s orthopaedics Roundup360 looks at: a multilevel approach to equinus gait; whether screening leads to needless intervention; salvage of subcapital slipped epiphysis; growing prostheses for children’s oncology; flexible nailing revisited; ultrasound and the pink pulseless hand; and slipping forearm fractures.
The incidence of clinically significant avascular
necrosis (AVN) following medial open reduction of the dislocated
hip in children with developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) remains
unknown. We performed a systematic review of the literature to identify
all clinical studies reporting the results of medial open reduction
surgery. A total of 14 papers reporting 734 hips met the inclusion
criteria. The mean follow-up was 10.9 years (2 to 28). The rate
of clinically significant AVN (types 2 to 4) was 20% (149/734).
From these papers 221 hips in 174 children had sufficient information
to permit more detailed analysis. The rate of AVN increased with
the length of follow-up to 24% at skeletal maturity, with type 2
AVN predominating in hips after five years’ follow-up. The presence
of AVN resulted in a higher incidence of an unsatisfactory outcome
at skeletal maturity (55% Cite this article:
We present our early experience of arthroscopic
reduction of the dislocated hip in very young infants with developmental
dysplasia of the hip (DDH). Eight dislocated hips, which had failed attempts at closed reduction,
were treated by arthroscopy of the hip in five children with a mean
age of 5.8 months (4 to 7). A two-portal technique was used, with
a medial sub-adductor portal for a 2.7 mm cannulated system with
a 70° arthroscope and an anterolateral portal for the instruments. Following
evaluation of the key intra-articular structures, the hypertrophic
ligamentum teres and acetabular pulvinar were resected, and a limited
release of the capsule was performed prior to reduction of the hip.
All hips were reduced by a single arthroscopic procedure, the reduction
being confirmed on MRI scan. None of the hips had an inverted labrum.
The greatest obstacle to reduction was a constriction of the capsule.
At a mean follow-up of 13.2 months (9 to 24), all eight hips remained
stable. Three developed avascular necrosis. The mean acetabular index
decreased from 35.5° (30° to 40°) pre-operatively to 23.3° (17°
to 28°). This study demonstrates that arthroscopic reduction is feasible
using two standardised portals. Longer follow-up studies are necessary
to evaluate the functional results.
The association between idiopathic congenital talipes equinovarus (CTEV) and developmental dysplasia of the hip is uncertain. We present an observational cohort study spanning 6.5 years of selective ultrasound screening of hips in clubfoot. From 119 babies with CTEV there were nine cases of hip dysplasia, in seven individuals. This suggests that 1 in 17 babies with CTEV will have underlying hip dysplasia. This study supports selective ultrasound screening of hips in infants with CTEV.
We describe a near-fatal event, probably due to air embolism, following an air arthrogram for developmental hip dysplasia in a baby aged four months. The sequence of events and the subsequent treatment are described. There is little information about this complication in the literature. The presumed mechanism and alternative methods for confirmation of placement of the needle are discussed. We no longer use air arthrography in children.
This prospective cohort study aimed to investigate the relationship between developmental dysplasia of the hip and mode of delivery in 571 consecutive breech infants using a modified Graf’s static morphological method to grade the severity of dysplasia. In this group, 262 infants were born by planned Caesarian section, 223 by emergency section and 86 vaginally. Taking all grades of hip dysplasia into account (Graf types II, III and IV), there was no statistical difference in the incidence of dysplasia between the groups (elective section 8.4%, emergency section 8.1% and vaginal delivery 7.0%). However, when cases with Graf type II dysplasia, which may represent physiological immaturity, were excluded, the rate of type III and IV hips, which we consider to be clinically relevant, increased in the vaginally delivered group (4.7%) compared with the elective section group (1.1%), with a relative risk of approximately 1:4 (95% confidence interval 1.03 to 15.91). No difference was observed between the emergency and elective section groups, or between the emergency section and vaginally delivered groups. This study supports previous published work, with the added value that the diagnoses were all confirmed by ultrasound.
The Salter innominate osteotomy has been used successfully for many years in the treatment of developmental dysplasia of the hip. One of its main drawbacks is the need for internal fixation with pins and their subsequent removal. We describe a modification of this osteotomy that does not require pin fixation and secondary removal. We retrospectively reviewed 114 hips in 94 patients who had been operated on by a single surgeon. An oblique rather than the original horizontal osteotomy was used without internal fixation. There were 80 female and 14 male patients. The mean age at operation was 25 months (18 to 84) and the mean follow-up was 30 months (12 to 88). Most patients required additional open reduction and capsuloplasty. The mean pre-operative acetabular index was 37.9° (24° to 54°), which decreased to 19.9° (7° to 29°) in the immediate post-operative period, and improved to 14.6° (5° to 25°) at the final follow-up (student’s We believe that by changing the direction of the osteotomy line, it is possible to avoid pin fixation. The radiological outcomes are comparable to those of the original technique, but longer follow-up will be necessary.
Of the 34 723 infants born between 1 June 1992 and 31 May 2002, the hips of 2578 with clinical instability or at-risk factors for developmental dysplasia of the hip were imaged by ultrasound. Instability of the hip was present in 77 patients, of whom only 24 (31.2%) had an associated risk factor. From the ‘at-risk’ groups, the overall risk of type-III dysplasia, instability and irreducibility was 1:15 when family history, 1:27 when breech delivery and 1:33 when foot deformity were considered as risk factors. Of those hips which were ultrasonographically stable, 88 had type-III dysplasia. A national programme of selective ultrasound screening of at-risk factors for the diagnosis of hip dislocation or instability alone cannot be recommended because of its low predictive value (1:88). However, the incidence of type-III dysplasia and hip dislocation or dislocatability in the groups with clinical instability, family history, breech position and possibly postural foot deformity as risk factors could justify a programme of selective ultrasound imaging.