Hip dislocation

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Dislocation of hip
procedural sedation[1]
PrognosisVariable[4]

A hip dislocation is when the thighbone (

motor vehicle collision or from a fall from elevation.[1] Hip dislocations can also occur following a hip replacement or from a developmental abnormality known as hip dysplasia.[6]

Hip dislocations are classified by fracture association and by the positioning of the dislocated femoral head.[7][8] A posteriorly positioned head is the most common dislocation type.[5] Hip dislocations are a medical emergency, requiring prompt placement of the femoral head back into the acetabulum (reduction).[9] This reduction of the femoral head back into the hip socket is typically done under sedation and without surgery, through maneuvers including traction on the thighbone in line with the dislocation.[9] If this is unsuccessful or if there is an associated fracture in need of repair, surgery is required.[10] It often takes 2–3 months for a dislocated hip to fully heal, and it can take even longer depending on associated injuries such as fracture.[11]

Typically, people with hip dislocations present with severe pain and an inability to move the affected leg.

osteonecrosis, femoral head fractures, and posttraumatic osteoarthritis.[12][13]

Males are affected more often than females.[3] Traumatic dislocations occurs most commonly in those 16 to 40 years old.[4] Half of all hip dislocations are accompanied by a fracture.[4] The condition was first described in the medical press in the early 1800s.[14][15]

Classifications

Dislocations are categorized as simple if there is no associated fracture, and complex if there is.[5] In addition, hip dislocations are classified depending on the location of the head of the femur as follows:

Posterior dislocation

Posterior dislocations is when the femoral head lies posteriorly after dislocation.

Pipkin system (when associated with femoral head fractures).[7][8]

Anterior dislocation

Anterior dislocations is when the femoral head lies anteriorly after dislocation. Anterior dislocations are subdivided into two types being inferior (obturator) dislocation and superior (iliac or pubic) dislocation.[4][5] There is also a Thompson and Epstein classification system for anterior hip dislocations.[8]

To note, Central dislocation is an outdated term for displacement of the femoral head towards the body's center into a fractured acetabulum and is no longer used.[7] Moreover, the term "congenital" dislocation is no longer recommended, except for very rare conditions, in which there is a "teratologic" fixed dislocation location present at birth.[16]

Signs and symptoms

The affected leg is usually extremely painful, precluding weight-bearing and movement.[4][17] Nerve injuries also can accompany dislocations, necessitating careful neurovascular examination.[4][5] Deformity is also present, which is based on concomitant injuries and the type of dislocation:

Posterior dislocation

For posterior dislocation, the affected limb will be in a position of flexion, adduction, and internal rotation.[4][5][16] This is to say, the affected leg will be bent upwards at the hip, while being shifted and pointed towards the middle of the body.[11][17] Sciatic nerve injury is also present in 8%-20% of cases, conferring numbness and weakness to aspects of the lower leg.[4][5]

Anterior dislocation

For anterior dislocation, the affected limb will be in a position of abduction and external rotation.[4][5][16] The degree of flexion depends on whether it is a superior or inferior dislocation, with the former resulting in hip extension and the latter, hip flexion.[4][5][13] This is to say that with superior and inferior anterior dislocations, the affected leg will be bent at the hip backwards and upwards respectively, while being shifted and pointed away from the body. Femoral nerve palsies can also be present, conferring leg numbness and weakness, however are uncommon.[16]

Mechanism

Functional anatomy

The hip joint includes the

articulation of the spherical femoral head (of femur) and the concave acetabulum (of pelvis). It forms a ball-and-socket joint that is encased by an articular capsule, reinforced and stabilized by muscle, tendon, and ligaments.[18] Even so, the joint is quite flexible in movement, allowing three degrees of freedom.[19]

Major ligaments conferring stability to the hip joint include the iliofemoral ligament, the ischiofemoral ligament, the pubofemoral ligament, and the ligament of the head of the femur.[20] The former three ligaments form the zona orbicularis or annular ligament which encases the femoral neck, stabilizing the joint capsule.[20] The strength of a healthy hip, reinforced and stabilized by the aforementioned structures can withstand over 1000 lbs. of force.[20]

Cause

With this, to dislocate a healthy hip requires a great deal of force.[5] About 65% of cases are related to motor vehicle collisions, with falls from elevation and sports injuries causing the majority of the rest.[5] Moreover, wear and tear of the body with aging increases the older population's susceptibility to hip dislocation.[21]

Posterior dislocations happen with direct trauma to a bent (

adduction and flexion of the hip favors a simple hip dislocation.[citation needed
]

Anterior dislocations happen with trauma forcing

extended leads to the inferior and superior sub-types of anterior hip dislocation, respectively.[4][5] Hip dysplasia also makes one more susceptible to hip dislocation.[22] Hip dysplasia is a congenital condition in which the hip is deformed in a way that decreases the congruency between the head of the femur and the acetabulum of the pelvis.[22] Bony congruence is a stabilizing factor to the hip joint, so the decrease in this conferred by hip dysplasia makes one more susceptible to dislocation.[22]

Diagnosis

Reimer's migration index can be used to indicate hip dislocation. The migration index (MI) is normally less than 33%.[23]

An anterior-posterior (AP) X-ray of the pelvis and a cross-table lateral X-ray[24] of the effected hip are ordered for diagnosis.[4][5][16] The size of the head of the femur is then compared across both sides of the pelvis. The affected femoral head will appear larger if the dislocation is anterior, and smaller if posterior.[7] A CT scan may also be ordered to clarify the fracture pattern.[20]

Dislocation of the left hip, secondary to developmental hip dysplasia. Closed arrow marks the acetabulum, open arrow the femoral head.

Management

Hip dislocations are a medical emergency, requiring timely placement of the femoral head back into the acetabulum (

open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) among other operative indications.[4][5] Prognosis is worsened if reduction is delayed more than 6 hours.[4][5] If the reduction is stable, the patient can proceed to protective weight bearing which includes crutch-assisted walking (ambulation) with weight bearing as tolerated for 4–6 weeks succeeding a short period of bed rest.[4] If reduction is unstable, 4–6 weeks of skeletal traction is necessary before protective weight bearing.[4]

Nonoperative

The hip should be reduced as quickly as possible to reduce the risk of osteonecrosis of the femoral head.[4] This is done through manual traction of the thigh inline with the dislocation under general anesthesia and muscle relaxation, or conscious sedation.[4][7] Fractures of the femoral head and other loose bodies should be determined prior to reduction. Of note, femoral neck fractures, femoral head fractures, and incarcerated fracture fragments preventing joint reduction are contraindications.[25][5][26] Common closed reduction methods include the Allis method, Stimson Gravity Technique, and the Bigelow maneuvers.[4][27] Once reduction is completed, management becomes less urgent and appropriate workup including CT scanning can be completed.[7]

Operative

Open (surgical) reduction indications include an irreducible dislocation, fracture with fragments preventing congruent reduction, fracture requiring an

Smith-Petersen) approach for anterior dislocations.[4][5][28] A CT scan or Judet views should be obtained prior to transfer to the surgical suite.[7]

Rehabilitation

Individuals with hip dislocation should participate in physical therapy and receive professional prescriptive exercises based on their individual abilities, progress, and overall range of motion. The following are some typical recommended exercises used as rehabilitation for hip dislocation. It is important to understand that each individual has different capabilities that can best be assessed by a physical therapist or medical professional, and that these are simply recommendations.[29]

A set of ankle weights.
Modified side plank.

Exercises

Prognosis

Hip dislocations can take anywhere from 2–3 months to fully heal, and even longer depending on associated injuries such as fracture.[11] Moreover, the outcome ranges from a fully healthy hip to a painful, arthritic one.[4] With simple posterior dislocations, literature reports great outcomes in 70%-80% of cases.[4] With complex dislocations, the outcome is often governed by the associated fracture.[4] Anterior dislocations are noted to have worse outcomes with their higher likelihood of being associated with femoral head injuries.[4] Those without associated femoral head injuries do better.[4]

Complications of hip dislocation that impact prognosis include post-traumatic arthritis, femoral head osteonecrosis, femoral head fracture, neurovascular injury, and recurrent dislocation.[4][5] Post-traumatic arthritis is the most common long-term complication and happens in 20% of hip dislocations, having higher rates among complex dislocations.[4] Femoral head osteonecrosis happens in 5-40% of dislocations, with rates rising the longer time to reduction (>6 hours).[4] Similarly increasing in rates with time to reduction, neurovascular injury with most notable being sciatic nerve injury, occurs in 8-20% of cases.[4][5] Femoral head fractures accompany 10% of posterior dislocations and 25-75% of anterior dislocations.[5] Lastly, recurrent dislocations can also occur, however is rare (<2%).[4][5]

Epidemiology

Males are affected more often than females.[3] Most common cause is high energy trauma such as from a motor vehicle collision or a high-level fall.[1][4] Traumatic dislocations occur most commonly in those 16 to 40 years old.[4] Of note, restrained passengers are at a lower risk for a hip dislocation than those unrestrained.[5] With the hip being inherently stable, dislocations are rare, however have high rates of associated injuries.[4][5] For example, half of all hip dislocations are accompanied by a fracture.[4] Refer to "Prognosis and Complications" section for rates of other associated injuries. The condition was first described in the medical press in the early 1800s.[14][15]

Other animals

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Hip Dislocation". AAOS. June 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  2. PMID 27241377
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    ISBN 978-1605477602.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
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  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab "Hip Dislocation - Trauma - Orthobullets". www.orthobullets.com. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
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  10. ^ "Recovering from Hip Dislocation". Colorado Center of Orthopaedic Excellence. 2 March 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  11. ^ a b c Publishing, Harvard Health (17 May 2019). "Traumatic Dislocation of the Hip". Harvard Health. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  12. PMID 29083669
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  13. ^ , retrieved 17 March 2021
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  17. ^ a b "Hip Dislocation-OrthoInfo - AAOS". orthoinfo.aaos.org. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  18. ^ "Understanding your hip". www.allinahealth.org. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  19. ^ "How Does a Hip Joint Move?". Brainlab.org. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  20. ^ a b c d "Hip joint - Joints health". joints-health.co.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  21. ^ "Hip Dislocation-OrthoInfo - AAOS". Orthoinfo.aaos.org. 1 June 2014. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
  22. ^ a b c "Congenital Hip Dysplasia Symptoms & Treatments | Orthopedics". Hospital for Special Surgery. Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  23. PMID 19058693
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  24. ^ Murphy, Andrew. "Hip (horizontal beam lateral view) | Radiology Reference Article | Radiopaedia.org". Radiopaedia. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  25. ^ Reichman, Eric F. (2013). Chapter 86. Hip Joint Dislocation Reduction. The McGraw-Hill Companies. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  26. PMID 22628176
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  27. ^ Stimson LA (1883). A treatise on fractures. The Library of Congress. Philadelphia, H.C. Lea's son & co.
  28. ^ "Kocher-Langenbeck approach to the acetabulum". site name. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h Hip Dislocation Treatment & Management at eMedicine

External links