Outcome of revision hip arthroplasty in patients with a previous total hip replacement for developmental dysplasia of the hip.

@article{Morag2005OutcomeOR,
  title={Outcome of revision hip arthroplasty in patients with a previous total hip replacement for developmental dysplasia of the hip.},
  author={Guy Morag and Paul Zalzal and Boaz Liberman and Oleg A Safir and Michael N Flint and Allan E Gross},
  journal={The Journal of bone and joint surgery. British volume},
  year={2005},
  volume={87 8},
  pages={
          1068-72
        }
}
Our aim was to determine if the height of the cup, lateralisation or the abduction angle correlated with functional outcome or survivorship in revision total hip replacement in patients with a previous diagnosis of developmental dysplasia of the hip. A retrospective investigation of 51 patients (63 hips) who had undergone revision total hip replacement was performed. The mean duration of follow-up was 119 months. Forty-one patients (52 hips) were available for both determination of functional… 
Does high hip centre affect dislocation after total hip arthroplasty for developmental dysplasia of the hip?
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A higher hip centre with the V-COR > 23.9 mm affected dislocation after THA for DDH, and these results would be useful for reconstruction of the hip centre, particularly with cementless acetabular cups.
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Total hip replacement with subtrochanteric shortening osteotomy in combination with trochanterics advancement is sufficient for the management of Crowe type IV hips in this population of female patients in the Middle East.
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  • S. Konan, A. Soler, F. Haddad
  • Medicine
    Hip international : the journal of clinical and experimental research on hip pathology and therapy
  • 2013
TLDR
Revision of hip arthroplasty in patients below 55 years of age is associated with significant improvement in function and patient satisfaction and satisfactory progress was noted in all cases with a statisticallysignificant improvement in Harris hip score.
Outcome of total hip arthroplasty in patients with dysplasia/dislocation and planning for revision
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To reconstruct the acetabular cup at or near the anatomic level without lateral placement is better than a high center and lateral placement and a comprehensive planning is advised to face the problems of the cup, the stem, and the leg length discrepancy at revision.
Results of Total Hip Arthroplasty Differ in Subtypes of High Dislocation
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Differences in fundamental parameters after THA in the high-dislocation subtypes, including the risk of revision, which was higher in patients whose hips did not have a false acetabulum, indicate that while reporting THA results in patients with high dislocation, mixing results of the two subtypes may lead to statistical bias.
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Although cementless total hip arthroplasty is a successful salvage operation for many hip problems, it still did not completely fulfill the daily requirements and habits of patients in the authors' developing country.
Revision of the acetabular component in dysplastic hips previously reconstructed with a shelf autograft: study of the outcome with special assessment of bone-stock changes.
TLDR
The results indicate that the use of shelf autografts during THR for dysplastic hips restores bone stock, contributing to the favourable survival of the revision arthroplasty should the primary procedure fail.
Total Hip Arthroplasty in Acetabular Deficiency: Experience in Al Razi Hospital, Kuwait
TLDR
The results show that reconstruction of acetabular bone deficiency can be accomplished with few complications using either a cemented or cementless acetABular component with or without grafting according to the clinical situation.
Developmental Dysplasia and Dislocation of the Hip in Adults
  • K. Lai
  • Medicine
    Springer Singapore
  • 2018
TLDR
Although total hip is the main trend, surface replacement conserves more bone stock and has good results if the patient and prosthesis are well-selected and the surgery done with a meticulously technique.
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