Back to Search Start Over

Supracondylar femoral rotation osteotomy affects frontal hip kinetics in children with bilateral cerebral palsy.

Authors :
Thielen, Mirjam
Wolf, Sebastian I
Klotz, Matthias C M
Geisbüsch, Andreas
Putz, Cornelia
Krautwurst, Britta
Dreher, Thomas
Klotz, Matthias Cm
Source :
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology. Mar2019, Vol. 61 Issue 3, p322-328. 7p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

<bold>Aim: </bold>To evaluate the influence of supracondylar femoral derotation osteotomy (FDO) on hip abduction muscle force and frontal hip moments in children with bilateral cerebral palsy.<bold>Method: </bold>For this retrospective cohort study 79 children (36 females, 43 males; mean age at surgery 11y [SD 3y]; range 4-17y) with bilateral cerebral palsy and preoperatively and 1-year postoperatively documented frontal hip moments who received supracondylar FDO in 134 limbs were included. The control group consisted of eight children (two females, six males; mean age 11y [SD 4y]; range 5-17y) who received single-event multi-level surgery without FDO.<bold>Results: </bold>Hip joint impulse (p<0.001) and the first peak of frontal hip moments (p=0.003) increased, whereas the second peak decreased (p<0.001) from preoperatively to postoperatively. Hip abductor strength improved (p=0.001) from preoperatively to postoperatively.<bold>Interpretation: </bold>Despite the compensatory mechanism, frontal hip moments are decreased preoperatively. Supracondylar FDO results in increased frontal hip moments. Changes in anteversion directly influence hip kinetics, although no direct change of the proximal bony geometry is performed.<bold>What This Paper Adds: </bold>Internal rotation gait cannot fully restore the frontal hip moment. Supracondylar femoral derotation osteotomy (FDO) influences frontal hip kinetics in children with bilateral cerebral palsy. Supracondylar FDO changes the curve progression of frontal hip moments. Supracondylar FDO restores the hip abductor moment arm. Supracondylar FDO leads to an increase in hip abductor muscle force. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00121622
Volume :
61
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134603370
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.14035