Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip Flashcards
Define Developmental dysplasia of the hip
A spectrum of condition affecting the proximal femur and acetabulum, ranging from acetabular immaturity to hip subluxation and frank hip dislocation
Define true developmental dysplasia of the hip
Femoral head has a persistently abnormal anatomical relationship with the pelvic acetabulum, which leads to abnormal bony development that can ultimately result in premature arthritis and significant disability
Define transient dysplasia of the hip
acetabular immaturity in which the anatomical relationship stabilises and normalises over a period of weeks to months
What are the risk factors for developmental dysplasia of the hip
Female sex (6 fold increase in risk)
Family history
Breech presentation
Neuromuscular disorder
First-born infants
Large infants
Talipes
What is the screening programme for developmental dysplasia of the hip
All babies are screened for DDH during the NIPE: Ortolani’s and Barlow’s test at birth and 6 weeks
Breech position at 36 weeks (regardless of position at birth): US of the hip 6 weeks postpartum
What are the symptoms and signs of developmental dysplasia of the hip
Appearance
One leg appears shorter than the other
Extra deep crease on the inside of the thigh
The knee appears to face outwards
Movement
One hip joint moves differently from the other
One leg does not appear to move outwards as fully as the other e.g. during nappy changes
Crawling with one leg dragging
Unilateral toe-walking
Describe Barlow’s manoeuvre
The femoral head is adducted and gently pushed downwards
DDH: the femoral head moves posteriorly out of the acetabulum
Describe Ortolani’s manoeuvre
Gentle upward leverage is applied while abducting the hip
DDH: dislocated hip will relocate into the acetabulum with a ‘clunk’
What investigations should be done for DDH
<6 months → US hips: Subluxation on provocative testing, Abnormal relationship between femoral head and acetabulum (acetabular index)
> 6 months → X-ray hip: Abnormal relationship between femoral head and acetabulum (assessed by acetabular index, Shenton’s line, ossification of femoral head)
What is the management for developmental dysplasia of the hip (with dislocation)
Seek specialist orthopaedic opinion
First line: hip abduction orthosis with a splint e.g. Pavlik harness
Second line: more rigid hip abduction splint
Third line: Reduction surgery and spica cast replacement
What is the management for developmental dysplasia of the hip in children >6 years old
Salvage osteotomies
(little potential for remodelling at this age)
What does closed reduction with spica casting involve
injection of dye into the joint to outline the cartilage of the femoral head to assess reduction + adductor tenotomy to decrease adduction contracture and allow increased abduction and femoral head stability before spica cast application
What is the management for developmental dysplasia of the hip with dysplasia but no dislocation
<2 months with normal exam: observation with serial exams + US every month
Dysplasia worsening: Pavlik harness
What are the complications of a Pavlik harness
Suboptimal positioning of the brace, forced abduction, excessive flexion → avascular necrosis (AVN) and nerve palsy e.g. femoral nerve palsy
Pavlik harness disease: Posterolateral acetabular erosion
What are the complications of spica casting
Avascular necrosis (AVN)/proximal femoral growth disturbance
Residual acetabular dysplasia