The results of treating 148 hips in 135 children (aged 7 to 16 at the onset of management) for
A prospective survey was carried out on all cases of irritable hip presenting at the Royal Liverpool Children's Hospital over a period of one year. All children had a radioisotope scan of the hips and were then followed for one year by serial radiography. Five of the 50 children seen during the one year had areas of ischaemia in the capital femoral epiphysis demonstrated on the scan. all five developed radiological signs of
Throughout 1976 orthopaedic surgeons in three regions of England forwarded details of all new patients with
In order to define the prognostic factors in
Eighty-four children suffering from
We reviewed the radiographs of 49 patients with
We have attempted to identify the most important long-term prognostic factors in
The sagging rope sign is the term used to describe the radiographic appearances which sometimes occur after
1. An account is given of a family in which five members in three generations were affected by osteochondritis involving the hips, in three cases bilaterally. 2. One patient showed aseptic osseous necrosis of the epiphyses of the ankles and fingers. 3. The differential diagnosis between
We have considered the reasons for securing containment of the femoral head in
We analysed the short-term outcome after varus osteotomy for
We studied the pattern of proximal femoral growth after severe
Twenty-four hips in twenty children affected by Group 1
Hip arthrography was performed in 19 patients in the initial stage of
The results of a long-term review of 102 hips in eighty-seven patients with
We have devised a combined pillar score (CPS) system, based on the lateral pillar (LP) and the posterior pillar (PP) classifications, together with the age at onset of
The aims of this study were to review the surgical technique for a combined femoral head reduction osteotomy (FHRO) and periacetabular osteotomy (PAO), and to report the short-term clinical and radiological results of a combined FHRO/PAO for the treatment of selected severe femoral head deformities. Between 2011 and 2016, six female patients were treated with a combined FHRO and PAO. The mean patient age was 13.6 years (12.6 to 15.7). Clinical data, including patient demographics and patient-reported outcome scores, were collected prospectively. Radiologicalally, hip morphology was assessed evaluating the Tönnis angle, the lateral centre to edge angle, the medial offset distance, the extrusion index, and the alpha angle.Aims
Patients and Methods