Femoral morphology in Ortolani's anatomical collection of developmental dysplasia of the hip: Anteversion is unrelated to severity of infantile dysplasia

J Child Orthop. 2023 Feb 23;17(2):97-104. doi: 10.1177/18632521231152282. eCollection 2023 Apr.

Abstract

Purpose: This study evaluated and quantified femoral anteversion and femoral head sphericity in healthy and dysplastic hips of post-mortem infant specimens from Ortolani's collection.

Methods: Healthy hips and hips with cases of dysplasia, with a large variety of severity, were preserved. Morphological measurements were taken on 14 specimens (28 hips), with a mean age of 4.68 months. The degree of dysplasia was classified as mild (A) to severe (D); 11 hips were Grade A, 6 hips were Grade B, 7 hips were Grade C, and 4 hips were Grade D. The femoral anteversion angle, the minimum femoral head diameter, and the maximum femoral head diameter were measured. The minimum and maximum femoral head diameters were used to estimate femoral head sphericity.

Results: The mean femoral anteversion angle was 30.81 degrees ± 11.07 degrees in cases and 29.69 degrees ± 12.69 degrees in controls. There were no significant differences between the normal-to-mild group and moderate-to-severe group when comparing the femoral anteversion angle (p = 0.836). The mean estimated sphericity was 1.08 mm ± 0.50 mm in cases and 0.81 mm ± 0.65 mm in controls, with no statistically significant difference between the groups (p = 0.269).

Conclusion: Ortolani's collection showed no significant differences between healthy and dysplastic hips in specimens under 1 year of age. While the femoral head appeared slightly more flattened in dysplastic hips, it was not statistically significant. The findings in the unique collection add to the knowledge of the pathoanatomy of infantile hip dysplasia.

Clinical relevance: Femoral anteversion may not play a role in the etiology and pathogenesis of DDH.

Keywords: Ortolani’s collection; femoral anteversion; hip dysplasia.