Diferencia entre revisiones de «Hip dislocation»
(additional info on imaging findings) |
(how to reduce posterior vs anterior dislocations) |
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| Línea 28: | Línea 28: | ||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
*Reduce | *Reduce | ||
**Posterior | |||
***Allis Maneuver: supine patient on table: deeper sedation (propofol helps with tissue relaxation); firm distal traction at flexed knee to pull head back into acetabulum; assistant stabilizes pelvis by pushing on ASISs | |||
**Anterior | |||
***Reduction: traction, internal rotation, and then external rotation once the femoral hip clears the acetabular rim | |||
[[File:Hip_Reduction.jpg]] | [[File:Hip_Reduction.jpg]] | ||
Revisión del 14:55 29 dic 2014
Background
- Orthopedic emergency; reduction should occur w/in 6hr
- High risk of AVN
- High-energy trauma is primary mechanism
- Types:
- Posterior
- 90% of hip dislocations
- Acetabular fractures may result as well
- Anterior
- 10% of hip dislocations
- Can be superior (pelvic) or inferior (obturator)
- Neurovascular compromise is unusual
- Posterior
Clinical Features
- Posterior Dislocation
- Extremity is shortened, internally rotated, adducted
- Anterior Dislocation
- Extremity is flexed, externally rotated, abducted
- Similar to hip fracture
- Often Knee-to-Dashboard
Imaging
- Hip AP and lateral views
- Posterior Dislocation: AP view femoral head posterior and superior to acetabulum
- Anterior Dislocation: AP view shows femoral head in obturator foramen (inferior to acetabulum)
- Also consider Judet views or CT to evaluate acetabulum (esp for posterior dislocation)
Management
- Reduce
- Posterior
- Allis Maneuver: supine patient on table: deeper sedation (propofol helps with tissue relaxation); firm distal traction at flexed knee to pull head back into acetabulum; assistant stabilizes pelvis by pushing on ASISs
- Anterior
- Reduction: traction, internal rotation, and then external rotation once the femoral hip clears the acetabular rim
- Posterior
Source
- Tintinalli

