Mike Millis, M.D., Boston Children's Hospital
Mike Millis, M.D., Boston Children's Hospital Mike Millis, M.D., Boston Children's Hospital
Site(s) of Correction • Willy Sutton’s Rule: “Go where the money is!” (Usually the acetabulum)
Surgical Rules for DDH • Congruence is more important than coverage. • Congruence is more important than coverage. • Congruence is more important than coverage. (Impingement is worse than instability!) • Think dynamically. • Think in 3 dimensions. * Balanced correction is the goal!
- Page 104 and 105: Lateral Position
- Page 106 and 107: Greater Trochanter Piriformis Tendo
- Page 108 and 109: Femoral Head Acetabulum
- Page 110: Improved Access
- Page 114 and 115: Early Harvard Experience with Surgi
- Page 119 and 120: Pre-op, postop offset creation by n
- Page 122: • Acknowledgement to Professor R.
- Page 126 and 127: Cartilage Delamination due to Impin
- Page 128 and 129: Outcome depends on pre-existing dam
- Page 130 and 131: Hip Joint-Preserving Techniques Ext
- Page 133 and 134: Hip Arthroscopy • What it IS: A s
- Page 135: Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis
- Page 141 and 142: Etiologies of Hip OA in North Ameri
- Page 143 and 144: DDH: Primary Anatomic Characteristi
- Page 145 and 146: Clinical Evaluation of the Patient
- Page 147: Plain Radiography: The Gold Standar
- Page 150 and 151: Acetabular depth and version • An
- Page 152 and 153: Indications for Joint-Preserving Th
- Page 156 and 157: Acetabular Redirectional Osteotomy
- Page 158 and 159: Bernese Periacetabular • Single i
- Page 160: Arthrotomy • Useful if labral sx,
- Page 164 and 165: Positioning of the osteotomized fra
- Page 166 and 167: 14 yo F 1 yr hx limp
- Page 169 and 170: Now 49 yo; 11.5 y after PAO; no sym
- Page 171 and 172: CH PAO Numbers • >1100 hips (1991
- Page 173 and 174: 5-15 yr Boston PAO Followup: Mathen
- Page 175 and 176: “Salvage” Joint-Preserving Proc
- Page 178 and 179: Diarthrodial Joint Function Activit
- Page 180: Summary Thoughts on Osteotomy and R
Site(s) of Correction<br />
• Willy Sutton’s Rule:<br />
“Go where the money is!”<br />
(Usually the acetabulum)