Management 0 - 6 months

Aim

 

To obtain and maintain a concentric reduction without complication

 

Timing

 

0 - 6 /12

- best time for treatment

- maintain reduction of head & allow normal acetabular development

 

Equivocal Hip

 

Obtain ultrasound

 

Graaf 2A and 2B

- Alpha angle 50 - 59o range

- many will resolve without treatment

- reassess at 3/12 with ultrasound and 6/12 with xray

 

Graaf 2C or more / Alpha angle < 49o

- manage as below

 

Algorithm

 

1.  Hips subluxed or dislocated but reducible

 

Splint 6/52

- ultrasound 2/52 to confirm head enlocated

- check splint every 2 weeks (pressure sores / fitting correctly / femoral nerve / safe zone)

 

Ultrasound at 6/52

- alpha angle > 60° / no further splint

- alpha angle < 60° / 3/12 treatment in total

 

Results

- very successful in Graaf 2C / D and 3

- 50% successful in Graaf 4

 

Follow up

- xray at 6/12 until 2 years

- final assessment 12 years

 

Hips dislocated & irreducible

 

Management

- trial Pavlik harness 4/52

 

Failure treatement

- closed reduction +/- open reduction after 6/12

 

Hips locatable, but unstable in safe range abduction

 

Management

- trial harness only in safe range

 

Failure treatment

- closed reduction +/- open reduction after 6/12 age

 

Treatment Options

 

A.  Pavlik harness

- most common in world

 

B. Von Rosen Splint

 

C.  MUA / Spica

 

Pavlik Harness

 

Advantage

- can reduce dislocated hip

- able to clinically check reduction with harness on

- can ultrasound with harness on to check is reduced

 

Contraindication

 

Muscle imbalance / spina bifida

Stiffness / arthrogrypotic

Age over 8/12

 

Technique

 

Chest strap - at or slighly below nipple line

Shoulder straps 

Boots attached to chest strap

Anterior straps located in anterior axillary line 

- tightened to achieve 100o-110o flexion 

- no more or risk femoral nerve palsy

Posterior straps lightly tightened

- allow adduction to within 7 cm of knees touching

- maximum abduction 30 - 50o to reduce risk AVN

 

Follow up

 

Review 1 week

- ensure enlocated with US
- ensure no femoral nerve palsy

 

Repeat US at 6/52 and 3/12

 

Results

 

Mostert et al J Paediatr Orthop 2000

- prospective study of 41 hips treated with Pavlik harness

- 97% success in 29 Graaf type III

- 50% success in 12 Graaf type IV

 

Complications

 

1.  Failure to achieve reduction

 

Require closed +/- open reduction at 6/12

 

2.  AVN

 

Very low if safe ranges respected

 

Peled et al CORR 2008

- pavlik harness used in 78 Graaf 3 or 4 hips

- no AVN in any patient

 

3.  Femoral nerve palsy

 

Probably due to very chubby thighs / excessive flexion

- suspect in persistently crying baby

 

Murnaghan et al JBJS Am 2011

- review of 30 babies with femoral nerve palsy from Pavlik harness

- 87% presented in first week

- more likely in larger babies with more severe DDH

- femoral nerve palsy strongly predictive of treatment failure

 

Von Rosen Splint

 

Indications

 

Best suited to newborn

 

Disadvantages

 

Non dynamic

- hip must be reduced / reducible

 

Cannot ultrasound with splint on

- must be removed

 

Technique

 

Padded malleable aluminium splint

- 2 shoulder uprights

- 2 legs for thighs

- 2 wings for torso

 

Different sizes depending on weight

 

Hips in 60-90° flexion & 45° abduction (safe zone)

 

Parents don't adjust

 

Results

 

Wilkinson et al JBJS Br 2000

- suggested better outcomes than Pavlik harness

- fewer required operative reduction

 

Complications 

 

Skin irritation

 

AVN 2%

 

Treatment failure