One-hundred newborn children at high risk of hip instability were prospectively assessed clinically and by ultrasound. The decision to treat was based only on the clinical examination. At the age of three months all the children were evaluated clinically and with an anteroposterior radiograph of the pelvis. None of the standard ultrasound measurements of acetabular depth and femoral head cover correlated with the outcome at three months. Dynamic assessment of stability was the only ultrasound technique that had a significant relation with outcome.
The clinical and radiological state of the hips of a group of children with cerebral palsy treated without operation is compared with that in a group treated by operation to correct adduction and flexion deformity and to obtain balanced action in the hip muscles. In the first group, 11 per cent of hips were dislocated, 28 per cent subluxated, 46 per cent dysplastic and 15 per cent normal. In the second group no hip was dislocated, 13 per cent were subluxated, 35 per cent dysplastic and 52 per cent normal. Surgical intervention is indicated clinically for a range of abduction diminishing to less than 45 degrees and–on radiological criteria–for early dysplastic changes, especially a break in Shenton's line, irrespective of the patient's age, severity of involvement or neurological maturity. Prevention of subluxation or dislocation improves function and diminishes the liability to develop a painful hip in adolescence or early adult life.
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.
1. The indications for and technique of posterior iliopsoas transplantation are described with particular reference to paralytic dislocation and subluxation of the hip in children. 2. Experience of 150 operations in ninety-five patients and of the long-term results of forty-one operations are given. 3. Reduction of the dislocation has been maintained in every case even when there was complete paralysis of all gluteal muscles. 4. All the children are able to walk without the aid of hip splintage.
1. A brief summary is given of the literature on patients with a dislocated hip and a fractured femur on the same side. 2. One further patient is reported, treated by closed reduction of the hip and the fracture. 3. A warning is given on the frequency with which the dislocation is not diagnosed in this double injury.
We report the replacement of 42 hips in 34 adults with untreated congenital dislocation. We used Charnley low friction implants, cementing the cup at the level of the true acetabulum after deepening and enlarging it by our own technique of cotyloplasty. Results were evaluated in 38 hips after a mean of 5.5 years. All the patients showed marked improvement, with no infection and, as yet, no late revision. The technical difficulties of the operation and the complications are discussed.
The Denis Browne abduction harness was used in the management of 127 abnormal hips in 104 children at Queen Mary's Hospital for Children from 1966 to 1980, both as the initial treatment for unstable hips recognised soon after birth, and for children presenting later and whose hips first required reduction by gradual abduction in traction. The incidence of significant avascular necrosis was 3.1%, and occurred only in the primary treatment group, emphasising again the need for gentle care of infant hips. There have been no other significant complications and the appliance has functioned well.
1. A specially designed splint is described with which it is possible to maintain the reduction of a paralytic dislocation in a child with spina bifida cystica. The results of its use in a series of thirteen cases are recorded. 2. It is suggested that all such children presenting in the first year of life, in whom the power of the flexor and adductor muscle groups is preserved, should be treated initially in this way until the prognosis for the individual can be accurately assessed. 3. The theoretical implications of the findings are discussed.
1. Four cases of facial paralysis from the incorrect use of Von Rosen or Barlow type splints are described. 2. Attention is drawn to the subcutaneous and therefore vulnerable position of the facial nerve in the newborn.
Surgical
We have reviewed the serial radiographs of 63 hips in 53 children treated by closed reduction for congenital dislocation with a view to finding a radiological measurement which can predict subsequent acetabular development. All had been followed for more than seven years, and at latest review, 34 hips were dysplastic. Failure to obtain concentric reduction or its loss by migration of the femoral head within one year of reduction were the best predictors of persisting acetabular dysplasia and were best quantitated by the h/b ratio (Smith et al. 1968). The acetabular index at reduction or its decrease in the first year were not reliable predictors. Late treatment was less likely to lead to normal acetabular development, but avascular necrosis did not appear to have a significant influence. The average age at which the acetabulum stopped developing was five years, but ranged from 17 months to eight years. The failure of a dysplastic acetabulum to improve in each annual radiograph after closed reduction should lead to consideration of operation on the acetabulum.
Arthrodesis of the hip joint performed between the ages of twelve and fifteen years, is the most satisfactory treatment for cases of pathological dislocation after acute suppurative arthritis in infants.
We reviewed the cases of 38 children with 45 congenitally dislocated hips who presented for primary treatment after the age of three years. Of these, 34 hips were managed by the 'direct approach' of Somerville and Scott (1957); 14 of these required secondary operations for subluxation, often with a poor outcome. Eleven hips were treated by combined pelvic and femoral osteotomy which, in general, gave good results. At a mean follow-up of 16.7 years, 80% of the whole series had a good or excellent clinical result and 51% were good or excellent radiologically. Simultaneous correction both above and below the hip is considered to be the best treatment for the older child with congenital hip dislocation.
We have undertaken routine ultrasound screening for neonatal hip instability in Coventry since June 1989. Of the 14,050 babies scanned during the first three years, 847 (6%) had ultrasound abnormalities. A grading system, based on the percentage of femoral head coverage, is presented. The proportion of abnormal hips decreased gradually so that by nine weeks, 90% had normal ultrasound appearances. Abnormality was more common in babies with a family history of CDH and in breech presentations. All babies with clinically abnormal hips had an abnormal first ultrasound examination. Five babies not diagnosed by clinical examination and with no risk factors had abnormal ultrasound appearances and were subsequently found to have clinically abnormal hips. Routine ultrasound screening has detected cases which would otherwise have presented late.
In 1957 Somerville and Scott presented their principles of management for the older child with congenital hip dislocation. They advocated preliminary traction followed, in those hips which remained dislocated, by excision of the limbus and subsequent derotation varus osteotomy of the femur. As alternative regimes are advocated it becomes increasingly important to subject each method to detailed long-term review. One hundred and forty-seven hips in 121 patients aged between 12 months and three years and treated by the standard Somerville and Scott regime have been reviewed. The age at review ranged from 16 to 31 years. The recall rate was 91 per cent. Each patient was seen regularly in a special clinic where detailed notes, radiographs and records were available. The results have been assessed clinically and radiographically by modifications of Severin's criteria to enable comparisons to be made with other published series. Attention has been focused on the good and the bad prognostic factors and on the long-term complications. The most worrying feature has been the premature onset of degenerative arthritis even in hips which seemed to have been satisfactorily reduced.