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Query: UNIPROT:P50502 (
Hip
)
7,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
X-ray measurements of the hip joints of children, with special reference to the acetabular index, suggest that the upper standard deviation of normal comprises the borderline to a critical zone where extreme values of normal and pathologic hips were found together. Above the double standard deviation only severe dysplasias were present. Investigations of the shaft-neck angle and the degree of anteversion including the wide standard deviation demonstrate that it is very difficult to determine where these angles become pathologic. It is more important to look for the relationship between femoral head and acetabulum. A new measurement--the
Hip
Value is based on measurements of the Idelberg- Frank angle, the Wiberg angle and MZ-distance of decentralization. By statistical methods, normal and pathological joints can be separated as follows: in adult
Hip
Values, between 6 and 15 indicate a normal joint form; values between 16 and 21 indicate a slight deformation and values of 22 and above are indications of a severe deformation, in children in the normal range the
Hip
Value reaches 14; values of 15 and up are pathological.
...
PMID:Normal values of the hip joint for the evaluation of X-rays in children and adults. 95 21
Hip
fractures on 117 patients treated surgically and followed up for an average of 10.2 months are reviewed. Among the parameters analyzed were complications, mortality, clinical follow-up by the operating surgeon, and the ability to ambulate after surgery. Postoperative surgical complications occurred in 36% and medical complications in 18% of the patients. Mortality was 25% within the first year after surgery. Sixty-one percent of the patients returned at least once to the surgeon's office for follow-up; only 38% were followed for more than six months. In the surviving patients who were good ambulators before hip fracture, 60% to 70% became good ambulators postoperatively. Only 20% to 30% of the surviving patients who were poor ambulators preoperatively ever walked again.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of hip fractures. 101 68
Seventy-two posterior psoas transfer operations performed in forty-four children with lumbar myelomeningocele were reviewed one to eight years after operation in an attempt to assess its value. Muscle charting, an objective recording of the child's walking ability, and radiographic examination of the hips were done.
Hip
stability was improved: 49 per cent were stable at the time of psoas transfer and 94 per cent at review. Functional results depend mainly on the level of neurological activity present: 57 per cent of the children had an acceptable functional result. Usually, posterior psoas transfer should be done as soon after the age of nine months as the child's condition will allow. Over the age of two years it should be restricted to children with activity in the third and fourth segments of the lumbar cord.
...
PMID:Posterior psoas transfer and hip instability in lumbar myelomeningocele. 109 Jun 28
Three cases are presented and analyzed in which a Lippman Transfixion
Hip
Prosthesis had to be replaced because of the discomfort of the patient. In each case, there was evidence of wear between the head of the prosthesis and the flange. The different wear patterns indicated problems which exist in the alignment of component parts of the prosthesis. In each case there was low grade sepsis to which the debris may have contributed. Because of phagocytosis, amount of debris accumulation was difficult to evaluate. The factors which appear to have contributed to the amount of debris accumulation were: the length of time the prosthesis had been used; the degree of alignment and amount of debris which may be formed and is phagocytized; the degree of manufacturing control. The design of this prosthesis incorporated mechanical problems which are generally undesirable because of: the eventual deformation of the end of the pivot rod or hole in the head of the prosthesis: progressive loosening of the movement due to this and inherent malalignment; the difficulty in fabrication, assembly and installation of the prosthesis because of the multiplicity of parts; the difficulty in maintaining adequate control of surface finishes.
...
PMID:Biomechanical considerations of multiple-component hip prostheses. Analysis of three failures of the Lippman transfixation hip prosthesis. 112 66
Flexion contracture, internal rotation and external rotation of the hip were reported in 40 infants at 6 weeks and 3 months and in an independent sample of 40 infants at 6 months of age. Population means and normal ranges of motion were determined for use in the evaluation of hip problems and their treatment. A mean hip flexion contracture of 19 degrees was present at 6 weeks of age, decreasing to 7 degrees by three months, but still persisting at 6 months suggesting that forceful extension of the hip in infants may be contraindicated.
Hip
flexion contracture decreased in every child from 6 weeks to three months. In all cases, external rotation was greater than internal rotation. Internal rotation greater than external rotation before the age of 6 months appears contrary to normal development. There was a significant correlation between the changes in hip flexion contracture and internal rotation from 6 weeks to 3 months. An interesting extension of this study would be a longitudinal follow-up of infants beyond 6 months of age to further define these developmental trends.
...
PMID:Normal ranges of hip motion in infants six weeks, three months and six months of age. 115 91
Compression fixation with a blade plate was used in the treatment of 11 fresh and 9 nonunited subtrochanteric fractures. Fifteen fractures united as fixed. Three settled into varus with eventual union in 2 and a fibrous nonunion with metal failure in one. One fracture became infected and the patient died of metastatic fibrosarcoma and one was lost to accurate long-term follow-up. The average Harris
Hip
Rating for 18 patients was 84, an average of 24 postoperatively. In each instance, technical errors accounted for suboptimal results. Compression fixation is designed for the subtrochanteric region for either fresh or nonunited fractures.
...
PMID:Compression fixation of subtrochanteric fractures. 127 67
A group of 118 patients with spina bifida treated between 1960 and 1988 was reviewed with a focus on the problem of hip deformity and dislocation. Deformity can be avoided by physical therapy and correct posture.
Hip
dislocation often occurs in cases of high or mid-lumbar lesions; at lower levels subluxation is more common. In choosing appropriate treatment, the most important consideration is the patient's true functional potential. If the patient is either not ambulatory or severely impaired, his or her condition will not be exacerbated by a dislocated hip.
...
PMID:Hip deformity and dislocation in spina bifida. 128 81
A vascular necrosis of the femoral head associated with steroid immunosuppression is a cause of significant morbidity in renal transplant recipients. We review the results of 30 total hip replacements in 20 renal transplant recipients with a mean follow-up of 6.3 years. The mean age at the time of surgery was 35 years. The average Hospital for Special Surgery
Hip
Score was 17 points before operation and 32 points after operation. Fourteen hips were rated excellent and 12 hips rated good. There were four failures--one hip was revised for symptomatic loosening and three prosthesis were removed for infection. Twenty-seven of the hip replacements were subjectively rated as satisfactory by the patient. There was no significant difference in post-operative hip scores between cemented and uncemented prostheses. Total hip replacement in renal transplant recipients in this study has shown good long term result with a revision rate of about 3%. Late infection was a major problem with an incidence of 13%. Prophylactic antibiotics must be used whenever there is a risk of haematogenous seeding from transient bacteremia in these immunosuppressed patients. Use of uncemented prosthesis may make future revision arthroplasty easier.
...
PMID:Results of total hip replacement in renal transplant recipients. 129 4
Hydroxyapatite (HA)-coated APR Total
Hip
Replacement was found to be superior to a press-fit only control group in a randomized trial. This study confirms the importance of biologic fixation for durability of total hip replacement as compared with press-fit fixation only.
...
PMID:Clinical results from the calcitite-coated press fit APR hip system. 131 Jun 56
The design of and early clinical results with the uncemented porous-coated LSF Anatomic and Midstem Total
Hip
Systems are described. In a Food and Drug Administration-approved program, a random selection method was used to determine which patients receive implants with a hydroxyapatite (HA) coating applied to the porous surface and which patients receive non-HA-coated implants. The early clinical results with the HA-coated systems appear superior to the non-HA-coated systems. A greater percentage of patients with HA systems have clinical scores in the excellent/good range, which is primarily a reflection of less prosthesis-related pain. Radiographically, all components appear well fixed with evidence of bone ingrowth. The HA-coated systems have a decreased incidence of radiolucencies, particularly in proximal zones.
...
PMID:Early clinical results with the hydroxyapatite-coated porous LSF Total Hip System. 131 Jun 57
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