ACTA FAC MED NAISS 2012;29(3):125-131 |
Original article
UDC:616.728.2-007.1-07-053.3 DOI: 10.2478/v10283-012-0017-3
Value of the First Examination for Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip - Our Experiences
Predrag Grubor1, Milan Grubor2, Marinko Domuzin1, Ivan Golubović3
1Traumatology Clinic, Clinical Centre Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina
2School of Medicine Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina
3Traumagology Clinic, Clinical
Centre Niš, Serbia
sUMMARY
Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) means a distinct dislocation
(lateralisation and cranialisation) of the femoral head from the poorly
developed (hypoplastic and steeper) acetabulum. The aim of the paper was to
establish, in a retrospective and prospective study conducted in the period
between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2010, the total number and
characteristics of instances of DDH in the first clinical and ultrasound
examinations in newborns examined at the Traumatology Clinic of the Clinical
Centre in Banja Luka. Six thousand one hundred thirty-two children were examined
and 99 were treated. The percentage of girls among the treated children was
considerably higher (96%). The ultrasound examination was performed first and
was followed by the clinical examination. The ultrasound examination of all
babies was performed with an electronic 5-12-MHz probe, using the standard
Graf’s method. 7.8% of the cases, mostly primiparae, had a positive family
history of DDH. The incidence diagnosed clinically amounted to 8.87%, and the
incidence diagnosed by ultrasound to 1.61%. The first clinical examination
diagnosed a limited abduction of the right hip in 12.1% of the newborns, while
limited abduction of the left hip was present in 96.0%. Ortolani’s sign in the
right hip was positive in 3.0% and in 33.3% patients it was positive in the left
hip. 3.0% of the newborns had a positive Palmen sign in the right hip in the
first examination, and 42.4% in the left. 3% of the patients had asymmetric skin
creases on the right upper leg, while 87.9% of the patients had them on the left
upper leg. 46.5% of the patients had crepitations in their right hip, while
83.8% had crepitations in the left hip. 2% of the patients had a lax right hip,
while 3% had a lax left hip. The results obtained from the ossified acetabulum
of the right hip in the examined sample were as follows: good in 91.9%,
satisfactory in 5.1%, insufficient (deficient) in 2.0%, and bad in 1.0% of the
cases. The results from the left ossified acetabulum were as follows: good in
3.0%, satisfactory in 44.4%, insufficient (deficient) in 45.5 %, bad in 7.1% of
the cases. The bony protrusion - acetabular labrum on the right hip was angular
in 90.9%, obtuse (fused) in 1.0%, round in 7.1%, round to flat and flat in 1.0%
of the cases. The bony protrusion - acetabular labrum on the left hip was
angular in 2.0 %, obtuse (fused) in 2.0%, round in 81.8%, round to flat and flat
in 14.1% of the cases. It is important to commence with diagnosing and treating
DDH as early as possible by applying atraumatic aids and procedures while all
structures are elastic, reducible and adaptable. The clinical examination is
unreliable in terms of diagnosis of DDH, but it is mandatory as a part of the
full physical examination of a newborn baby.
Key words: developmental dysplasia of the hip, ultrasound