Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Definition: Spectrum of progressive hip abnormalities developing during infancy, including dysplastic acetabulum & femoral head malpositioning
Ultrasound is modality of choice for infants 0-4 months old
Radiographs necessary after 4-5 months
Proximal femoral epiphysis & acetabulum ossify, blocking ultrasound beam & limiting evaluation
CT/MR used in limited circumstances
Immediately after operative reduction
Evaluation of long-term complications
Palpable click/clunk upon stress (Ortolani & Barlow), asymmetric skin or gluteal folds, leg length discrepancy
Much more common in girls, breech positioning, oligohydramnios, Caucasians
Treatment correlation with ultrasound
Normal: α angle ≥ 60°, coverage ≥ 50%, no instability
Immature hip (applies only to infants < 3 months of age): α angle 50-59°, coverage 45-50%, no instability
Small risk of delayed developmental hip dysplasia (DDH); follow-up recommended to confirm normal development
Mild DDH: α angle 50-59°, coverage 40-50%
Infants ≥ 3 months usually treated with Pavlik harness to flex, abduct, & externally rotate hips
Moderate DDH: α angle ≤ 50°, coverage ≤ 40%, any instability
Treated with harness; repeat q4 weeks until normal
Severe DDH: Gross acetabular dysplasia, dislocated hip
No improvement in harness by 4 weeks → surgical hip reduction & casting required
Delayed diagnosis/treatment can result in irreversible dysplasia requiring iliac osteotomy/shelving procedure
Developmental dysplasia of hip (DDH): Spectrum of progressive hip abnormalities in infancy resulting in acetabular dysplasia with femoral head malpositioning
Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles
If you are a member. Log in here