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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 6 | Pages 724 - 731
1 Jun 2017
Mei-Dan O Jewell D Garabekyan T Brockwell J Young DA McBryde CW O’Hara JN

Aims

The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term clinical and radiographic outcomes of the Birmingham Interlocking Pelvic Osteotomy (BIPO).

Patients and Methods

In this prospective study, we report the mid- to long-term clinical outcomes of the first 100 consecutive patients (116 hips; 88 in women, 28 in men) undergoing BIPO, reflecting the surgeon’s learning curve. Failure was defined as conversion to hip arthroplasty. The mean age at operation was 31 years (7 to 57). Three patients (three hips) were lost to follow-up.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 94-B, Issue 4 | Pages 483 - 487
1 Apr 2012
Prosser GH Shears E O’Hara JN

The painful subluxed or dislocated hip in adults with cerebral palsy presents a challenging problem. Prosthetic dislocation and heterotopic ossification are particular concerns. We present the first reported series of 19 such patients (20 hips) treated with hip resurfacing and proximal femoral osteotomy. The pre-operative Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) was level V in 13 (68%) patients, level IV in three (16%), level III in one (5%) and level II in two (11%). The mean age at operation was 37 years (13 to 57).

The mean follow-up was 8.0 years (2.7 to 11.6), and 16 of the 18 (89%) contactable patients or their carers felt that the surgery had been worthwhile. Pain was relieved in 16 of the 18 surviving hips (89%) at the last follow-up, and the GMFCS level had improved in seven (37%) patients. There were two (10%) early dislocations; three hips (15%) required revision of femoral fixation, and two hips (10%) required revision, for late traumatic fracture of the femoral neck and extra-articular impingement, respectively. Hence there were significant surgical complications in a total of seven hips (35%). No hips required revision for instability, and there were no cases of heterotopic ossification.

We recommend hip resurfacing with proximal femoral osteotomy for the treatment of the painful subluxed or dislocated hip in patients with cerebral palsy.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 541 - 541
1 Aug 2008
O’Hara JN
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The Author presents results 2–4 years following treatment of seven patients with complicated hip impingements with this new combination of operations.

Seven patients, aged 15–35yrs were treated by contemporaneous surgical dislocation and debridement of the hip with contemporaneous corrective subtrochanteric femoral osteotomy.. The dislocation and dedridement were performed in the usual way, but the seating chisel for a 95deg blade plate was introduced(to correct varus/valgus) before the trochanter was osteotomised. After debridement, the blade plate was used to transfix the trochanter in position. A separate subtrochanteric osteotomy was then performed at the upper end of the gluteus maximus insertion to provide correction of version and/or valgus/varus where indicated. The plate was removed six to twelve months later.

There were no perioperative complications. Weight-bearing was restricted until bone healing was complete [8–13wks]. Thereafter patients mobilised normally.. At review, all patients were pleased with the outcome. Pre-operative HHS was 62–70: at review it was 90– 96. There were no complications in the medium-term. All patients experienced an improvement in range of movement and exercise tolerance. Avascular necrosis has not occurred overtly and the six patients who had post-operative MRI scans showed no evidence of it.

This new combination of established operations combines the joint conserving benefits of debridement with realignment of the femur in patients with complicated impingements of the hip. The report is preliminary, but the combination of operations appears to be safe in terms of the absence of AVN and effective in its relief of symptoms.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 6 | Pages 708 - 714
1 Jun 2008
McBryde CW Shears E O’Hara JN Pynsent PB

Metal-on-metal hip resurfacing was performed for developmental dysplasia in 96 hips in 85 patients, 78 in women and 18 in men, with a mean age at the time of surgery of 43 years (14 to 65). These cases were matched for age, gender, operating surgeon and date of operation with a group of patients with primary osteoarthritis who had been treated by resurfacing, to provide a control group of 96 hips (93 patients). A clinical and radiological follow-up study was performed. The dysplasia group were followed for a mean of 4.4 years (2.0 to 8.5) and the osteoarthritis group for a mean of 4.5 years (2.2 to 9.4). Of the dysplasia cases, 17 (18%) were classified as Crowe grade III or IV.

There were five (5.2%) revisions in the dysplasia group and none in the osteoarthritic patients. Four of the failures were due to acetabular loosening and the other sustained a fracture of the neck of femur. There was a significant difference in survival between the two groups (p = 0.02). The five-year survival was 96.7% (95% confidence interval 90.0 to 100) for the dysplasia group and 100% (95% confidence interval 100 to 100) for the osteoarthritic group. There was no significant difference in the median Oxford hip score between the two groups at any time during the study.

The medium-term results of metal-on-metal hip resurfacing in all grades of developmental dysplasia are encouraging, although they are significantly worse than in a group of matched patients with osteoarthritis treated in the same manner.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1076 - 1081
1 Aug 2006
Vallamshetla VRP Mughal E O’Hara JN

Difficulties posed in managing developmental dysplasia of the hip diagnosed late include a high-placed femoral head, contracted soft tissues and a dysplastic acetabulum. A combination of open reduction with femoral shortening of untreated congenital dislocations is a well-established practice. Femoral shortening prevents excessive pressure on the located femoral head which can cause avascular necrosis. Instability due to a coexisting dysplastic shallow acetabulum is common, and so a pelvic osteotomy is performed to achieve a stable and concentric hip reduction. We retrospectively reviewed 15 patients (18 hips) presenting with developmental dysplasia of the hip aged four years and above who were treated by a one-stage combined procedure performed by the senior author. The mean age at operation was five years and nine months (4 years to 11 years). The mean follow-up was six years ten months (2 years and 8 months to 8 years and 8 months). All patients were followed up clinically and radiologically in accordance with McKay’s criteria and the modified Severin classification. According to the McKay criteria, 12 hips were rated excellent and six were good. All but one had a full range of movement. Eight had a limb-length discrepancy of about 1 cm. All were Trendelenburg negative. The modified Severin classification demonstrated four hips of grade IA, six of grade IB, and eight of grade II. One patient had avascular necrosis and one an early subluxation requiring revision.

One-stage correction of congenital dislocation of the hip in an older child is a safe and effective treatment with good results in the short to medium term.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 85-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 103 - 103
1 Feb 2003
O’Hara JN Munjal S
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In the period 1991 to 1993, twenty-five patients had Tonnis Triple Pelvis Osteotomy (TPO) performed. The presenting condition was primary or residual acetabular dysplasia. The age range was 24 to 54. Fifteen operations were on the left and two patients had bilateral operations at intervals of more than one year.

The anterior approach (Salter incision) was limited to an internal dissection, with the most limited possible abductor elevation of 2cm at the level of the iliac osteotomy. An Orthofix leg-lengthener was used intraoperatively to manoeuvre the central acetabular fragment, to accurately correct the presenting deformity as determined by CT scans. Two or three 6. 5mm screws were used to fix the osteotomy. No immobilisation was used. Mean blood loss was 580mis (range 375–1050mis).

All patients presented with pain, and only two patients had (mild) pain at review. The adult acetabular index was corrected from mean 31 deg to mean 4deg (max 1 Odeg). The CEA was corrected from mean 8 deg to 20–35 (mean 29) degrees. There was one temporary sciatic neuropraxia in the first patient. One patient has been converted to a resurfacing. Harris Hip Scores (HHS) have been measured yearly from three years post-op. Presenting HHS was mean 58 (range 44–72). At most recent follow-up it was mean 91 (range 79–1 00). Only two patients had HHS < 85. These patients had only 50% joint space at presentation. There was no reduction in HHS with longer follow-up. The operation shows durable and promising results in the medium-term, consistent with other series reported in Europe. The authors recommend that this type of operation be performed before any joint space narrowing develops, so that irretrievable deterioration occurs


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 85-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 161 - 161
1 Feb 2003
Bache CE Kumar D O’Hara JN
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The best method of femoral head containment in Legg-Calvé-Perthes’ disease (LCPD) is still controversial. Triple pelvic osteotomy allows desired rotation of acetabulum, reduces the relative stress, provides optimum femoral head cover and compensates for shortening. The iliac osteotomy was modified to interlock following acetabular rotation to provide extra stability and allow early mobilisation.

Material and methods: We reviewed 21 patients, who underwent interlocking triple pelvic osteotomy for severe Legg-Calvé-Perthes’ disease, to evaluate their clinical, radiological and functional results.

The mean patient age at presentation was 7 years and 7 months. Fourteen hips were in the fragmentation stage whereas 8 were in the early re-ossification stage. Seventeen hips were Herring group C and 5 were group B. Seventeen hips had 2 or more at risk radiological signs. The average period of follow-up was 51 months (range, 33 months to 80 months). The average gain in acetabular head index was 18% and that in centre-edge angle was 22 degrees, more than reported for any other single surgical procedure. According to the Harris hip rating system, there was an average gain of 35 points. Average gains in abduction, internal rotation and flexion were 17, 12 and 28 degrees respectively. The average gain in length of the limb was 6.4 mm.

Interlocking triple pelvic osteotomy in LCPD provides good cover of the femoral head, good symptom relief and markedly improved range of motion. Assessment of a few patients approaching maturity has shown a congruent hip joint with a spherical femoral head.