| Literature DB >> 30534545 |
Irfan Qadir1, Saeed Ahmad1, Atiq Uz Zaman1, Chirag Muhammad Khan1, Shahzad Ahmad1, Amer Aziz1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This study was performed to assess the clinical and radiological outcomes following one-stage hip reconstruction, consisting of open reduction femoral shortening and pelvic osteotomy, for neglected developmental dislocation of the hip (DDH).Entities:
Keywords: Developmental dysplasia of hip; Hip preservation; Hip reconstruction; Pakistan
Year: 2018 PMID: 30534545 PMCID: PMC6284078 DOI: 10.5371/hp.2018.30.4.260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hip Pelvis ISSN: 2287-3260
Clinico-demographic Profile of Patients
| Characteristic | Data |
|---|---|
| Age (yr) | 11.02±3.43 |
| Sex | |
| Male | 19 (29.2) |
| Female | 46 (70.8) |
| Site | |
| Unilateral | 53 (81.5) |
| Bilateral | 12 (18.5) |
| Tönnis classification | |
| 1 | 10 (13.0) |
| 2 | 14 (18.2) |
| 3 | 22 (28.6) |
| 4 | 31 (40.3) |
| Acetabular index (°) | |
| Preoperative | 47±8.6 |
| Postoperative | 22.5±7.42 |
| Femoral shortening (cm) | 2.3 |
| Femoral derotation | |
| Yes | 9 (11.7) |
| No | 68 (88.3) |
| Pelvic osteotomy | |
| Triple | 47 (61.0) |
| Double | 18 (23.4) |
| Salter | 12 (15.6) |
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation or number (%).
Functional Outcome according to Mckay's Criteria
| Grade | Description | Postoperative |
|---|---|---|
| Excellent | Stable, painless hip, no limp, negative Trendelenburg sign, and a full range of movement | 22 (28.6) |
| Good | Stable, painless hip, slight limp, negative Trendelenburg sign, and a slight decrease in range of movement | 44 (57.1) |
| Fair | Stable, painless hip, limp, positive Trendelenburg sign, and limitation of movement | 9 (11.7) |
| Poor | Unstable or painful hip, or both; positive Trendelenburg sign | 2 (2.6) |
Values are presented as number (%).
Radiological Outcomes according to Severin's Classification
| Class | Description | Postoperative |
|---|---|---|
| Excellent (IA) | CE angle >19°, age 6 to 13 yr; CE angle >25°, age >14 yr | 38 (49.4) |
| Good (II) | Moderate deformity of the femoral head, femoral neck or acetabulum, but otherwise the same as grade I | 19 (24.7) |
| Fair (III) | Dysplastic hip, no subluxation; CE angle <20°, age >14 yr | 14 (18.2) |
| Poor (IV) | Subluxation | 6 (7.8) |
| Poor (V) | Femoral head in false acetabulum | - |
Values are presented as number (%).
CE angle : centre edge angle.
Fig. 1Case presentation of a 10 year-old female with neglected developmental dysplasia of hip (DDH). (A) Preoperative X-ray showing left side Tönnis grade 4 DDH. (B) Immediate postoperative X-ray after open reduction, femoral shortening and triple pelvic osteotomy. (C) The follow-up X-ray after 6 months. (D) The follow-up X-ray after 2 years revealing congruent hip joint without evidence of avascular necrosis in femoral head. (E) Clinical picture illustrating patient's ability to squat.
Fig. 2Case presentation of an 11 year-old female with neglected developmental dysplasia of hip (DDH). (A) Preoperative X-ray showing bilateral Tönnis grade 4 DDH. (B) Immediate postoperative X-ray after bilateral open reduction, femoral shortening and Salter osteotomy on right side and double pelvic osteotomy on left side. (C) The follow-up X-ray after 1 year. (D) The follow up X-ray after removal of femur plates showing congruent hip joint bilaterally after two year. However, there is evidence of avascular necrosis in femur head on left side.
Fig. 3Case presentation of 12 year-old female with neglected developmental dysplasia of hip (DDH). (A) Preoperative X-ray shows Tönnis grade 4 DDH on the right side. (B) Immediate postoperative X-ray after open reduction, femoral shortening and Salter osteotomy. (C) The follow-up X-ray after 1 year. (D) The follow-up X-ray after 2 years showing congruent hip joint with evidence of avascular necrosis in femur head.
Comparison of Results from Published Studies
| Study | Year | Age (yr) | Number* (hip/patient) | Technique | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Functional | Radiological | |||||
| Ning et al. | 2014 | 9.6±1.2 | 82/78 | OR+FS in all | Excellent: 6 | I: 21 |
| Salter: 10 | Good: 8 | II: 8 | ||||
| Pemberton: 8 | Fair: 43 | III: 13 | ||||
| Steel: 62 | Poor: 25 | ≥IV: 40 | ||||
| Chiari: 2 | ||||||
| Yagmurlu et al. | 2013 | 8–14 | 9/6 | OR+FS | Excellent: 1 | I: 3 |
| Salter: 4 | Good: 2 | II: 2 | ||||
| Triple 5 | Fair: 4 | III: 3 | ||||
| Poor: 2 | ≥IV: 1 | |||||
| El-Tayeby | 2009 | 8–18 | 19/16 | OR+FS in all | Excellent: 10 | I: 13 |
| Salter: 12 | Good: 5 | II: 3 | ||||
| Triple: 7 | Fair: 3 | III: 2 | ||||
| Poor: 1 | ≥IV: 1 | |||||
| Papavasiliou and Papavasiliou | 2005 | 10–17 | 16/11 | OR+FS | Harris hip score, mean (range) : 90.3 (72–101) | I: 4 |
| No pelvic osteotomy | II: 9 | |||||
| III: 3 | ||||||
| ≥IV: - | ||||||
| Dogan et al. | 2005 | 9–14 | 13/10 | OR+FS | I: 9 | |
| Salter: 1 | II: 1 | |||||
| EAGA: 10 | III: | |||||
| Dega: 1 | ≥IV: 3 | |||||
| Chiari: 1 | ||||||
| Wada et al. | 2003 | 9.3 | 17/17 | OR+FS+Pemberton in all cases | Excellent:13 | I: 8 |
| Good: 1 | II: 5 | |||||
| Fair: 3 | III: 1 | |||||
| Poor: | ≥IV: 3 | |||||
| Karakas¸ et al. | 1995 | 8–17 | 19/18 | OR+FS+Salter osteotomy in all cases | Excellent: 2 | I: 2 |
| Good: 9 | II: 8 | |||||
| Fair: 5 | III: 7 | |||||
| Poor: 3 | ≥IV: 2 | |||||
| Present study | 2018 | 8–15 | 77/65 | OR+FS | Excellent: 22 | I: 38 |
| Salter: 12 | Good: 44 | II:19 | ||||
| Double: 18 | Fair: 9 | III: 14 | ||||
| Triple: 47 | Poor: 2 | ≥IV: 6 | ||||
Ages are presented as mean±standard deviation, range, or mean only.
OR: open reduction, FS: femoral shortening, EAGA: extra-articular grafting acetabuloplasty
* The number of cases quoted does not represent all patients included in study. Only patients older than 8 years of age are shown.