Here’s Dr. Alsup with today’s Morning Report!

 

Hip Dislocations

 

*Dislocations and fracture-dislocations are true orthopedic emergencies

 

History:

ABC’s: This injury is a red flag for multisystem injury

  • Associated injury (95%)
    • Assoc acetabular fracture 70%
    • Knee fractures/ligamentous injury/ dislocation 30%
    • Sciatic palsy 10% of patients (peroneal nerve branch)
      • Weakness of the extensor hallucis longus
      • Other signs include weakness of dorsiflexion and numbness or tingling over the dorsum of the foot.
    • Anterior dislocation
      • Femoral vessels and nerve

 

Mechanism

Significant force

  • High speed MVC (often sans seat belt)
    • Flexed knee hits dashboard
  • Falls
  • Pedestrian struck
  • Anterior dislocations (10-15%) forceful extension, abduction, and external rotation
  • Central dislocations (2-4%) femoral head forced into shattered acetabulum

 

Physical Exam

  • Posterior dislocation
    • Hip flexed, adducted, and internally rotated
    • Knee of the affected extremity rests on the opposite thigh
    • Extremity shortened
    • Greater trochanter and buttock may be unusually prominent.
  • Anterior dislocation
    • Hip in abduction, slight flexion, and external rotation
    • Leg may appear lengthened

 

Diagnosis:

Plain Xrays

 

Treatment

Relationship between time of hip dislocation and AVN

<6 hrs 4.8%

>12 hrs 58.8%

 

*Conscious sedation generally required for reduction

 

Allis technique for reduction of posterior hip dislocation:

  1. The patient is placed in the supine position, and the pelvis is stabilized by an assistant.
  2. With the knee flexed, the operator applies steady traction in line with the deformity.
  3. The hip is slowly brought to 90 degrees of flexion while steady upward traction and gentle rotation are applied.
  4. The assistant pushes the greater trochanter forward toward the acetabulum.
  5. Once reduction has been achieved, the hip is brought to the extended position while traction is maintained.

 

Stimson’s technique for reduction of posterior hip dislocation:

  1. The patient is placed in a prone position, with the leg hanging over the edge of the bed. The hip and knee are flexed at 90 degrees.
  2. An assistant stabilizes the pelvis.
  3. The operator applies steady downward traction in line with the femur.
  4. The femoral head is gently rotated, and the assistant pushes the greater trochanter anteriorly toward the acetabulum.
  5. Once reduction has been achieved, the hip is brought to the extended position while traction is maintained.

 

Captain Morgan technique

  1. Pelvis secured to bed
  2. Use physician knee to lever affected leg forward

 

Dislocation of Hip Prosthetics

  • 230,000 undergo elective primary THA each year
  • Post-op dislocation 0.5-3% of primary THA
  • 5-27% of revised THA dislocate
  • Posterior dislocation 75-90%
  • Often can be with low force (ie getting out of chair, rolling over in bed, bending over)
  • Same reduction technique but need ortho as will often need OR/ revision
  • Time not as critical for AVN, however still can damage sciatic nerve

 

References

  • Rosen’s Emergency Medicine Chapter 56, p.672-697 e2
  • DeLee & Drez’s Orthopaedic Sports Medicine.
  • Safran, Marc; Botser, Itamar B.. Published January 1, 2015. Pages 917-932.e3. © 2015.
  • Hendey. Avila Captain Morgan Technique for reduction of Dislocated Hip. Annals of Emergency Medicine Vol 58.no6 Dec 2011.
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Jay Khadpe MD

  • Editor in Chief of "The Original Kings of County"
  • Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
  • Assistant Residency Director
  • SUNY Downstate / Kings County Hospital

Latest posts by Jay Khadpe MD (see all)


Jay Khadpe MD

  • Editor in Chief of “The Original Kings of County”
  • Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine
  • Assistant Residency Director
  • SUNY Downstate / Kings County Hospital

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