During 1966-1975, 920 infants with a congenital dislocation of the hip diagnosed neonatally were born in Uusimaa county in southern Finland. The first examination of the hips was made by a pediatrician, but the diagnosis was generally confirmed by a pediatric surgeon before treatment was started. The mean age of beginning treatment was 7 days. An abduction pillow was the only treatment in 852 cases, six of whom later developed complications, notably two with avascular necrosis. The duration of the pillow treatment shortened noticeably during the time under review but this caused no increase in the number of failures. In 64 cases the routine pillow treatment could not be carried through, mostly because the hip dislocated on the pillow. The most apparent reason for this was inappropriate control of the pillow by the parents. In this group bilateral dislocations and associated calcaneovalgus feet were found more often than in the rest of the neonatal group. Non-operative treatment was successful in 96 per cent of the 920 cases.
Fifty-one infants with limited abduction of the hip and acetabular dysplasia were, between 1969 and 1975, treated with abduction-adduction exercises, administered by the parents; no abduction devices were used. In 1983 a follow-up examination was carried out on 41 of these patients. Although at birth these children had characteristics similar to patients with congenital dislocation of the hip, none of their hips dislocated. At birth acetabular measurements showed that half the children had severe dysplasia and the other half slight dysplasia; the difference between the affected and the healthy hips was significant. At follow-up the gait was normal in all the patients. Movements at the hips were symmetrical and within normal limits in aU but one patient. The acetabular angle, the centre-edge angle, the shaft-neck angle, the hip ratio, and the size of
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