Hip

Aims

 

Prevent contractures

Prevent dislocations

Improve walking 

Provide stable and painless sitting

Allow perineal care

 

Issues

 

Hip Dislocation

Adductor contractures

Flexion contractures

In-toeing

Windswept hips

 

Hip Dislocation

 

Natural History

 

Accepted that a dislocated hip in CP is painful

- unilateral dislocated hips should be reduced unless deformity of femoral head has developed

- less certain of management of bilateral hip dislocation

- importance of vigilant screening

 

Pathology

 

Excessive femoral anteversion

- ? due to tight hip flexors

 

Excessive neck valgus

- ? due to tight adductors

 

High Risk

 

GMFCS 3 / 4 / 5

Spastic quadriplegia

Those wheelchair bound at high risk

 

Rates Hip Dislocation associated with GMFCS

 

I    0%

II   15% - adductor surgery

III  41% VDRO

IV  70% VDRO

V   90% VDRO

 

Screening

 

Non-ambulators annual X-ray essential

- treat tight adduction early / <5 years

- minimum 40° abduction with knees flexed

 

X-ray

 

Reimer's Migration Percentage

- % of epiphysis lateral to acetabulum

- > 30% high risk & requires intervention

 

Guidelines

 

Early ST release +/- bony reconstruction 

 

> 8 years require pelvic procedure (minimal remodelling)

 

Severely deformed hip - don't reduce

 

Severe pelvic obliquity / scoliosis - address first

 

Algorithm

 

1.  < 5 years old + MP > 30%

- soft tissue procedure

- adductor +/- psoas if tight

- preventative measures

- can use botox

 

2.  > 5 years old + MP > 30%

- likely to progress

- adductor release + VDRO / varising derotation oseotomy

 

3.  > 8 years old

- must address acetabulum / add pelvic operation

- CP acetabulum is deficient posteriorly / DDH deficient anteriorly

- Salter worsens posterior deficiency

- Periacetabular osteotomy / Dega

 

4.  Deformed femoral head / salvage

- Schanz osteotomy / pelvic support osteotomy

- excision deformed femoral head

- valgising osteotomy

- suture ligamentum teres to psoas tendon remnant

 

Adduction Contractures

 

Indication

 

Adduction < 30o

 

Treatment

 

Tenotomy adductor longus at groin

- open or percutaneous

 

Obturator Neurectomy 

- may lead to abducted position and affect gait in ambulators

- not recommended

- it denervates adductor brevis which is an important antigravity muscle

- wide base gait

- no improvement with regard to hip stability with neurectomy over simple adductor tenotomy

 

Flexion Contracture

 

Indication

 

FFD > 20o

- lengthening psoas over pelvic brim

- must not do tenotomy if patient walks

- psoas is the main power driver for walking in these children

- may render them unable to walk

 

Options

 

Sutherland technique

- find and preserve femoral nerve

- leave iliacus to preserve hip flexor strength

 

Intoeing

 

Aetiology

 

Increased PFA

 

Management

 

Subtrochanteric FDRO

 

Windswept Hips

 

Definition

 

Pelvic obliquity

- elevated hip adducted and internally rotated 

- lower hip is abducted and externally rotated

 

Soft tissue releases

 

Adducted Hip

- psoas / adductors / hamstrings 

 

Abducted Hip

-  ITB / abductors

 

Bony

- VRDO both sides