We describe 95 patients with previously treated congenital dislocation of the hip who underwent
1. One hundred and forty-two cases of extra-articular arthrodesis of quiescent tuberculous hips with fibrous ankylosis have been reviewed. 2. The methods used were the ilio-femoral graft with and without osteotomy, and the ischio-femoral graft by the Brittain or Foley technique. 3. Success occurs more frequently when the grafting operation is combined with or followed by a
Upper
We compared 74 total hip arthroplasties (THAs) carried out after previous proximal
We compared 63 hips (Catterall Groups 3 and 4) contained by
Total hip replacement for developmental hip dysplasia
is challenging. The anatomical deformities on the acetabular and
femoral sides are difficult to predict. The Crowe classification
is usually used to describe these cases – however, it is not a very
helpful tool for pre-operative planning. Small acetabular components,
acetabular augments, and modular femoral components should be available
for all cases. Regardless of the Crowe classification, the surgeon must
be prepared to perform a
We studied, clinically and radiologically, the growth and remodelling of 21 hips after valgus
We treated 31 hips in 30 patients with advanced osteoarthritis of the hip secondary to acetabular dysplasia, by valgus-extension
We have considered the reasons for securing containment of the femoral head in Perthes' disease and have reviewed briefly the methods used. The present investigation describes the outcome in a controlled series of forty-eight hips treated by containment by femoral varus-rotation osteotomy in selected patients. In assessing the results we have emphasised that controls are essential, and for this purpose we have used two comparable groups, one untreated and the other treated by methods other than containment. The same factors were considered in assessment--namely age, duration, group, and the presence or absence of "at risk" signs. The results were graded similarly as good, fair and poor in all groups. We have concluded that containment by
1. Osteotomy for osteoarthritis of the hip induces a fibrin layer over the exposed bone which forms the basis of a fibrocellular protective mantle that can differentiate towards cartilage. 2. The process is accompanied by bone remodelling, which reduces sclerosis, resolves osteolytic foci and, in company with bone formation in the fibrous mantle, restores the subchondral plate. 3. Many important aspects of the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis and of its partial repair by osteotomy remain to be elucidated.
We have previously described the mid- to long-term
results of conventional simple varus intertrochanteric osteotomy
for osteonecrosis of the femoral head, showing that 19 of the 26
hips had good or excellent results. We extended the follow-up to
a mean of 18.1 years (10.5 to 26) including a total of 34 hips in
28 patients, with a mean age at surgery of 33 years (19 to 53).
There were 18 men and ten women and 25 hips (74%) had a satisfactory
result with a Harris hip score ≥ 80. In all, six hips needed total
hip replacement (THR) or hemiarthroplasty. The collapse of the femoral
head or narrowing of the joint space was found to have progressed
in nine hips (26%). Leg shortening after osteotomy was a mean of
19 mm (8 to 36). With conversion to THR or hemiarthroplasty as the
endpoint, the ten-year survival rate was 88.2% (95% confidence interval
(CI) 82.7 to 93.7) and the 20-year survival rate was 79.7% (95%
CI 72.1 to 87.3); four hips were converted at ten years and other
two hips were converted at 20 years. Shortening of the leg after osteotomy remains a concern; however,
the conventional varus half-wedge osteotomy provides favourable
long-term results in hips with less than two-thirds of the medial
part of the femoral head affected by necrotic bone and with normal
bone superolaterally.
We reviewed the long-term radiological outcome,
complications and revision operations in 19 children with quadriplegic
cerebral palsy and hip dysplasia who underwent combined peri-iliac
osteotomy and femoral varus derotation osteotomy. They had a mean
age of 7.5 years (1.6 to 10.9) and comprised 22 hip dislocations
and subluxations. We also studied the outcome for the contralateral
hip. At a mean follow-up of 11.7 years (10 to 15.1) the Melbourne
cerebral palsy (CP) hip classification was grade 2 in 16 hips, grade
3 in five, and grade 5 in one. There were five complications seen
in four hips (21%, four patients), including one dislocation, one
subluxation, one coxa vara with adduction deformity, one subtrochanteric
fracture and one infection. A recurrent soft-tissue contracture occurred
in five hips and ten required revision surgery. In pre-adolescent children with quadriplegic cerebral palsy good
long-term outcomes can be achieved after reconstruction of the hip;
regular follow-up is required.
Cite this article:
We reviewed 14 patients (16 hips) treated by open reduction and upper femoral derotation osteotomy for congenital dislocation of the hip. Nine patients with 11 treated hips had growth deformities of the proximal femur; in all of them the top screw of the fixation plate lay within the cartilaginous precursor of the greater trochanter. In the five control hips the top screw was more distal. In the nine patients (mean follow-up 10.8 years) there was an increase of 14 degrees in the neck-shaft angle (p = 0.01) and of 18 degrees in the angle between the capital femoral physis and the shaft (p = 0.01) compared to the control group. This indicates that growth disturbance of the greater trochanteric apophysis as a result of plate fixation leads to long-term deformity.
Aims. The aim of this study was to evaluate the suitability of the tapered cone stem in total hip arthroplasty (THA) in patients with excessive femoral anteversion and after
The October 2024 Children’s orthopaedics Roundup. 360. looks at: Cost-effectiveness analysis of soft bandage and immediate discharge versus rigid immobilization in children with distal radius torus fractures: the FORCE trial; Percutaneous Achilles tendon tenotomy in clubfoot with a blade or a needle: a single-centre randomized controlled noninferiority trial; Treatment of hip displacement in children with cerebral palsy: a five-year comparison of proximal
Aims. To evaluate how abnormal proximal femoral anatomy affects different femoral version measurements in young patients with hip pain. Methods. First, femoral version was measured in 50 hips of symptomatic consecutively selected patients with hip pain (mean age 20 years (SD 6), 60% (n = 25) females) on preoperative CT scans using different measurement methods: Lee et al, Reikerås et al, Tomczak et al, and Murphy et al. Neck-shaft angle (NSA) and α angle were measured on coronal and radial CT images. Second, CT scans from three patients with femoral retroversion, normal femoral version, and anteversion were used to create 3D femur models, which were manipulated to generate models with different NSAs and different cam lesions, resulting in eight models per patient. Femoral version measurements were repeated on manipulated femora. Results. Comparing the different measurement methods for femoral version resulted in a maximum mean difference of 18° (95% CI 16 to 20) between the most proximal (Lee et al) and most distal (Murphy et al) methods. Higher differences in proximal and distal femoral version measurement techniques were seen in femora with greater femoral version (r > 0.46; p < 0.001) and greater NSA (r > 0.37; p = 0.008) between all measurement methods. In the parametric 3D manipulation analysis, differences in femoral version increased 11° and 9° in patients with high and normal femoral version, respectively, with increasing NSA (110° to 150°). Conclusion. Measurement of femoral version angles differ depending on the method used to almost 20°, which is in the range of the aimed surgical correction in derotational
Aims. The impact of a diaphyseal femoral deformity on knee alignment varies according to its severity and localization. The aims of this study were to determine a method of assessing the impact of diaphyseal femoral deformities on knee alignment for the varus knee, and to evaluate the reliability and the reproducibility of this method in a large cohort of osteoarthritic patients. Methods. All patients who underwent a knee arthroplasty from 2019 to 2021 were included. Exclusion criteria were genu valgus, flexion contracture (> 5°), previous