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Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 10 | Pages 804 - 814
13 Oct 2022
Grammatopoulos G Laboudie P Fischman D Ojaghi R Finless A Beaulé PE

Aims

The primary aim of this study was to determine the ten-year outcome following surgical treatment for femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). We assessed whether the evolution of practice from open to arthroscopic techniques influenced outcomes and tested whether any patient, radiological, or surgical factors were associated with outcome.

Methods

Prospectively collected data of a consecutive single-surgeon cohort, operated for FAI between January 2005 and January 2015, were retrospectively studied. The cohort comprised 393 hips (365 patients; 71% male (n = 278)), with a mean age of 34.5 years (SD 10.0). Over the study period, techniques evolved from open surgical dislocation (n = 94) to a combined arthroscopy-Hueter technique (HA + Hueter; n = 61) to a pure arthroscopic technique (HA; n = 238). Outcome measures of interest included modes of failures, complications, reoperation, and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). Demographic, radiological, and surgical factors were tested for possible association with outcome.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 44-B, Issue 2 | Pages 386 - 397
1 May 1962
Wilkinson JA

1. Sustained medial rotation of the hind limb in the immature rabbit produces femoral anteversion and acetabular dysplasia. 2. Sustained lateral rotation produces retroversion. 3. Splinting the hind limbs in the Lorenz position corrects both anteversion and retroversion. 4. The mechanism of the Lorenz position is discussed


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1081 - 1088
1 Sep 2022
Behman AL Bradley CS Maddock CL Sharma S Kelley SP

Aims

There is no consensus regarding optimum timing and frequency of ultrasound (US) for monitoring response to Pavlik harness (PH) treatment in developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). The purpose of our study was to determine if a limited-frequency hip US assessment had an adverse effect on treatment outcomes compared to traditional comprehensive US monitoring.

Methods

This study was a single-centre noninferiority randomized controlled trial. Infants aged under six months whose hips were reduced and centred in the harness at initiation of treatment (stable dysplastic or subluxable), or initially decentred (subluxated or dislocated) but reduced and centred within four weeks of PH treatment, were randomized to our current standard US monitoring protocol (every clinic visit) or to a limited-frequency US protocol (US only at end of treatment). Groups were compared based on α angle and femoral head coverage at the end of PH treatment, acetabular indices, and International Hip Dysplasia Institute (IHDI) grade on one-year follow-up radiographs.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 47-B, Issue 4 | Pages 792 - 795
1 Nov 1965
Sijbrandij S

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 dislocation of the hip in man


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 4 | Pages 332 - 339
20 Apr 2022
Everett BP Sherrill G Nakonezny PA Wells JE

Aims

This study aims to answer the following questions in patients with hip osteoarthritis (OA) who underwent total hip arthroplasty (THA): are patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) affected by the location of the maximum severity of pain?; are PROMs affected by the presence of non-groin pain?; are PROMs affected by the severity of pain?; and are PROMs affected by the number of pain locations?

Methods

We reviewed 336 hips (305 patients) treated with THA for hip OA from December 2016 to November 2019 using pain location/severity questionnaires, modified Harris Hip Score (mHHS), Hip Outcome Score (HOS), international Hip Outcome Tool (iHOT-12) score, and radiological analysis. Descriptive statistics, analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), and Spearman partial correlation coefficients were used.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 7 | Pages 953 - 955
1 Sep 2003
Tschauner C Sylkin A Hofmann S Graf R

Tönnis triple pelvic osteotomy is an accepted technique to correct acetabular dysplasia and degenerative labral pathology. A series of 409 consecutive patients who underwent a triple pelvic osteotomy between 1987 and 1999 were followed for a mean of 7.1 years (2 to 15). Five patients (1.2%), all women, developed a double nonunion and required revision, which involved excision of the pseudarthrosis, autologous bone grafting and osteosynthesis with screws or reconstruction plates. Bony healing was achieved in all after a mean of 7.8 months


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 3 | Pages 400 - 403
1 May 1986
Dorrell J Catterall A

Eleven patients with tears of the acetabular labrum are discussed and the syndrome of the torn labrum is defined. In all cases the lesion was associated with acetabular dysplasia, and a constant early radiological sign was a cyst in the lateral aspect of the acetabulum. The diagnosis was confirmed by arthrography. It is suggested that these tears are degenerative, occurring as a consequence of abnormal stresses imposed by the uncovered lateral portion of the femoral head. Once a tear is present a localised stress point occurs on the femoral head, leading rapidly to degenerative arthritis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 5 | Pages 655 - 658
1 Jul 2004
Saw T Villar R

We have reviewed a consecutive series of six professional footballers who presented with intractable hip pain which was attributed at arthroscopy, to an anterior acetabular labral tear with adjacent chondral damage. The location and type of labral tear were identical for each patient. There was no evidence of acetabular dysplasia. A variable area of chondral damage was associated with the labral tear. All unstable tissue was resected. Five returned to professional football at the highest level. Acetabular labral pathology should be included in the differential diagnosis of footballers with hip or groin pain. Arthroscopy of the hip is an appropriate method of diagnosis and treatment and minimises the length of rehabilitation required


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 2 | Pages 275 - 278
1 Mar 1992
Barry K McManus F O'Brien T

The transiliac method of leg lengthening uses a modification of Salter's innominate osteotomy. The bone graft increases the length of the hemipelvis distal to the sacro-iliac joint. Leg-length inequality in 23 patients was treated by this method with an average gain in length of 2.8 cm (2.0 to 3.5). Apart from one residual femoral nerve palsy there were no notable complications. The facility to redirect the acetabulum allowed by the technique, may be useful in cases of potential hip instability or acetabular dysplasia


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 4 | Pages 526 - 531
1 May 2000
Haddad FS Garbuz DS Duncan CP Janzen DL Munk PL

We have previously described a simple and reproducible three-dimensional technique of CT for the measurement of the cover of the femoral head in acetabular dysplasia in adults. We now describe the application of this technique in ten patients with symptomatic dysplasia to assess the degree and direction of dysplasia and to measure the cover obtained at acetabular osteotomy. The indices obtained gave a useful indication of the degree and direction of the dysplasia and confirmed which components had been used most efficiently to achieve cover. The information is easily presented in graphical form and gives a clearer indication of the cover obtained than the indices derived from plain radiographs


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 61-B, Issue 3 | Pages 339 - 341
1 Aug 1979
Skirving A Scadden W

The hips of twenty full-term African neonates have been examined in detail to determine any anatomical factors which might explain the difference in the incidence of congenital dislocation of the hip in the African and in the Caucasian. Measurements included the degree of anteversion of the femoral neck and the acetabulum and the diameter and depth of the acetabulum. The acetabulum tended to be deeper and to vary within a much narrower range than that reported for Caucasians, lending indirect support to the theoretical role of acetabular dysplasia in the aetiology of congenital dislocation of the hip. Measurements of the anteversion of the acetabulum and femoral neck were similar to those given for Caucasians


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 4 | Pages 532 - 534
1 May 2000
Crockarell JR Trousdale RT Guyton JL

The anterior centre-edge (VCA) angle quantifies the anterior cover of the femoral head, and angles of less than 20° are considered abnormal. We have measured the VCA angles in hips without osteoarthritic changes. We took bilateral false-profile radiographs of nine female and 30 male cadavers without signs of osteoarthritis. The mean age at the time of death was 72 years (46 to 92). The mean VCA angle was 32.8° (17.7 to 53.6). The SD was 7.9°. Our findings suggest that the threshold of abnormality of the VCA angle may be slightly lower than previously thought. This information may be useful in counselling patients with asymptomatic acetabular dysplasia


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 7 | Pages 775 - 780
1 Jul 2022
Kołodziejczyk K Czubak-Wrzosek M Kwiatkowska M Czubak J

Aims

Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) describes a pathological relationship between the femoral head and acetabulum. Periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) may be used to treat this condition. The aim of this study was to evaluate the results of PAO in adolescents and adults with persistent DDH.

Methods

Patients were divided into four groups: A, adolescents who had not undergone surgery for DDH in childhood (25 hips); B, adolescents who had undergone surgery for DDH in childhood (20 hips); C, adults with DDH who had not undergone previous surgery (80 hips); and D, a control group of patients with healthy hips (70 hips). The radiological evaluation of digital anteroposterior views of hips included the Wiberg angle (centre-edge angle (CEA)), femoral head cover (FHC), medialization, distalization, and the ilioischial angle. Clinical assessment involved the Harris Hip Score (HHS) and gluteal muscle performance assessment.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 66-B, Issue 4 | Pages 479 - 484
1 Aug 1984
Davies S Walker G

Ten children who had clinically stable hips at birth were radiographed at one month because they had factors predisposing to hip dislocation. In all cases one or both hips gave rise to a suspicion of dysplasia, though clinical abnormalities were slow to appear. Four of these hips subsequently dislocated. We believe that infants with late presentation of acetabular dysplasia and clinical abnormality belong to a different aetiological group from those with neonatal instability due to ligamentous laxity. The significance of this differentiation is that some infants presenting late have only recently dislocated, and the diagnosis has not necessarily been "missed" at neonatal examination


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 7 | Pages 786 - 791
1 Jul 2022
Jenkinson MRJ Peeters W Hutt JRB Witt JD

Aims

Acetabular retroversion is a recognized cause of hip impingement and can be influenced by pelvic tilt (PT), which changes in different functional positions. Positional changes in PT have not previously been studied in patients with acetabular retroversion.

Methods

Supine and standing anteroposterior (AP) pelvic radiographs were retrospectively analyzed in 69 patients treated for symptomatic acetabular retroversion. Measurements were made for acetabular index (AI), lateral centre-edge angle (LCEA), crossover index, ischial spine sign, and posterior wall sign. The change in the angle of PT was measured both by the sacro-femoral-pubic (SFP) angle and the pubic symphysis to sacroiliac (PS-SI) index.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 4 | Pages 557 - 562
1 Jul 1990
Brougham D Broughton N Cole W Menelaus M

We studied the pathogenesis, incidence and consequences of avascular necrosis in 184 children treated for congenital dislocation of the hip. Of 210 hips, 99 (47%) had some evidence of avascular necrosis (total 81, partial 18). The incidence was not influenced by the age at reduction, the duration of traction or the use of adductor tenotomy. Patients treated by closed reduction without preliminary traction did not have a higher incidence of avascular necrosis. At long-term clinical and radiological review of 81 hips, early avascular necrosis significantly increased the chance of a poor outcome but did not predispose to acetabular dysplasia. If review includes minor forms of avascular necrosis, then this condition is common after closed reduction. Its presence is an important determinant of long-term radiological and clinical outcome


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 3 | Pages 441 - 446
1 May 1989
Cooke P Cole W Carey R

To determine the natural history of dislocation of the hip in cerebral palsy, and to evolve methods to predict dislocation, the notes and radiographs of 462 patients with cerebral palsy were reviewed. Dislocation occurred in 10% of patients by progressive migration and subluxation of the proximal femur in the presence of acetabular dysplasia. Statistical analysis identified the radiographic features that helped to predict dislocation. Measurement of acetabular index, by a method that allows for rotation of the acetabulum, was the most powerful single predictor. Measurement of this index at two and four years of age could identify patients who would dislocate unless effective treatment was undertaken, those at risk of dislocation only if scoliosis developed, and those who would not dislocate. On the basis of this method of screening for dislocation, a logical system of surgical prophylaxis is proposed


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 5 | Pages 647 - 652
1 Jul 2002
Nishimatsu H Iida H Kawanabe K Tamura J Nakamura T

We evaluated the long-term results of a modified Spitzy shelf operation for secondary osteoarthritis in 119 hips with a mean follow-up of 23.8 years. The mean age of the patients at the time of surgery was 25 years. Preoperative osteoarthritic change, the age at operation and shelf height were important factors in determining the outcome. Of the 61 hips in the pre-stage (three) and the initial stage (58) of osteoarthritis, 53 (87%) had good results, compared with only 30 (51%) of 58 hips with advanced osteoarthritis. Of the latter, 72% of those aged less than 25 years had good results compared with only 40% of patients aged over 25 years. The shelf height in the group with good results was significantly lower than in those with poor results. This operation is a safe procedure and indicated for acetabular dysplasia or subluxation of the hip with early osteoarthritic change in patients aged less than 25 years


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 5 | Pages 756 - 761
1 Sep 1995
Suda H Hattori T Iwata H

We studied the morphological changes in the proximal femur in 42 patients (42 hips) who had had varus derotation osteotomy of the upper femur for residual acetabular dysplasia and congenital subluxation of the hip and who did not show deformity of the head of the femur. In 19 patients the alignment of the whole leg was examined. The femoral neck-shaft angle (FNSA) at the final examination was unrelated to that immediately after operation or to the state of the acetabulum at that time. The postoperative FNSA was not related to the final result but the CE angle obtained at surgery influenced the outcome. The femoral length did not differ significantly between the unaffected and affected sides. Significant differences were found in the femorotibial angle (176.6 degrees v 174.5 degrees) and in the point of intersection between the mechanical axis and knee (65.0% v 57.2%)


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 5 | Pages 755 - 759
1 Sep 1993
Tasnavites A Murray D Benson M

After late reduction of the hip in children with developmental dysplasia the acetabular contour slowly improves and it is difficult to know if and when acetabular reconstruction is required. We studied the radiographs of 19 patients with unilateral dislocated or subluxated hips which had been reduced between the ages of one and two years. Preoperatively, all the affected hips showed acetabular dysplasia. After reduction they steadily improved for three years by which time none was dysplastic as measured by the acetabular index. After the age of ten years, when assessed by the more sensitive centre-edge angle, two were found to be dysplastic. It was not possible to predict these from early radiographs. We conclude that the decision to reconstruct an acetabulum should not be taken until three years after reduction, and that a few hips which appear to be developing satisfactorily at that time will, nevertheless, become dysplastic