Nearly all children with femoral anteversion spontaneously remodel by age 8. Femoral derotational osteotomies are performed in older children with persistent excessive femoral anteversion when children or adolescents are limited in activities of daily living or sports. Procedures for correction of the anteversion vary, and no one procedure has been shown to be superior. Since 1997 the authors have corrected idiopathic excessive femoral anteversion thorough a diaphyseal osteotomy with fixation using a rigid intramedullary pediatric femoral nail. The purpose of this study was to describe the technique and results of this new technique. A retrospective study was conducted of all femoral derotational osteotomies performed with a pediatric femoral nail in 13 consecutive patients and 21 affected limbs. All patients complained preoperatively of frequent tripping during sports and activities of daily living. The mean preoperative rotation included internal rotation of 77 degrees and external rotation of 15 degrees. Standing AP radiographs of all patients were obtained at final follow-up. All patients were evaluated clinically and radiographically at a minimum of 1 year after surgery. All patients noted improvement in the ability to participate in activities without tripping. No patient limped at final follow-up. No intraoperative or postoperative complications occurred. Healing of the osteotomy was present at a mean of 6 weeks. All osteotomies healed in anatomic alignment. Mean final hip rotation included internal rotation of 40 degrees and external rotation of 57 degrees. No patient had substantial changes of valgus or femoral neck narrowing at final follow-up. Femoral derotational osteotomy with fixation using a small-diameter rigid intramedullary nail placed through the lateral aspect of the greater trochanter is a safe, accurate, and effective method of correcting excessive femoral anteversion in symptomatic children.
We investigated the role of conventional radiographs and computed tomography scans for the routine followup of total hip arthroplasty patients. Among 92 total hip arthroplasties with a mean followup of 8.5 years, 94 acetabular lesions were detected among 63 hips using computed tomography and 42 of these hips had osteolysis diagnosed on radiograph. Using computed tomography as a gold standard, the sensitivity of anteroposterior pelvic radiographs for the detection of acetabular osteolysis was 67% and the specificity was 72%. Although smaller lesions were more frequently missed, osteolysis was diagnosed on radiograph in 20 of 22 total hip arthroplasties with lesion volumes of at least 10 mL. Because larger osteolytic lesions were generally detected on radiograph, two-dimensional and three-dimensional lesion sizes correlated. However, the limits of agreement for the volume estimates based on the radiograph area were -14.6 to 18.7 mL. Although radiographs can be useful to screen for clinically important pelvic osteolysis, computed tomography images are necessary to accurately measure lesion volumes.
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