Fritsch E W, Schmitt E, Mittelmeier H
Orthopaedic University Hospital Homburg/Saar, Germany.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 1996 Feb(323):215-25. doi: 10.1097/00003086-199602000-00030.
The radiographic course of 101 hips with residual dysplasia treated with roof plasty combined with intertrochanteric varus derotation osteotomy using the osteotomy wedge as a roof graft after Mittelmeier were reviewed. The average followup period was 8.8 years. The acetabular angle was improved by an average of 16 degrees (postoperative mean, 19 degrees; average at followup, 18 degrees). The center edge angle also was improved by 16 degrees and was stable at 25 degrees average at followup. The neck shaft angle, abnormal in 70% of hips preoperatively, was reduced by the varus osteotomies to a mean of 111 degrees and showed a spontaneous postoperative increase to normal values of an average of 129 degrees. There was no correlation of the postoperative of the neck shaft angle to patient age, preoperative valgus extension, correction angle, or length of followup. In nearly all cases, an almost anatomic joint shape was achieved. With a complication rate of only 1%, especially regarding the rate of necroses of the femoral head, the presented surgical technique can be recommended as highly effective, reliable, and safe for the treatment of congenital hip dislocation.