Salter osteotomy is widely used to improve acetabular coverage in the treatment of developmental dysplasia of the hip. Herein we describe angulated Salter osteotomy (ASO) as the modified Salter osteotomy, which creates a two-point contact between the proximal and distal fragments and better stabilizes the fixation of the fragments. We reported our results of ASO and compared it with that of Salter osteotomy performed previously by us. We retrospectively reviewed 41 unilateral hips that underwent ASO, with no other accompanying procedures, between 2012 and 2018. We investigated the radiographic measurements included the preoperative values of the acetabular index and center-edge angle (CEA), immediate postoperative values of distance d (lateral displacement of the distal fragment), lateral rotation angle (LRA), the ratio of the obturator height (ROH), pelvic height increase percentage (PHIP) and the values of acetabular index and CEA during the last follow-up. Measurements were compared with 20 unilateral hips that underwent Salter osteotomy. The mean age at the time of surgery was 5.4 years, and the mean follow-up duration was 3.3 years. Immediately after surgery, the mean distance d, LRA, ROH and PHIP were 8 mm, 19°, 70 and 1%, respectively. The last follow-up values of acetabular index and CEA significantly improved from the preoperative values by 18° and 21°, respectively. Patients treated with ASO showed significantly larger distance d, more improvement in CEA, and lesser PHIP than those treated with Salter osteotomy. The short-term outcomes of ASO are favorable. ASO was as effective as or better than Salter osteotomy in pulling out and stabilizing the distal fragment anterolaterally. ASO prevents elongation of the ilium, which causes pelvic obliquity.
A 37-year-old female had been treated with corticosteroids for systemic lupus erythematosus clinically diagnosed at age 10. She suddenly had right hip pain without any antecedent trauma. Four months after the onset of pain, she visited her primary care physician. On magnetic resonance imaging, joint space narrowing at the weight-bearing area was already seen with bone marrow edematous lesions in both the femoral head and acetabulum. She was treated non-operatively; however, her pain continued to worsen in severity. Thirteen months after the onset of pain, she was referred to our hospital. A plain radiograph showed subluxation of the collapsed femoral head accompanied by destruction of the acetabular rim. Because of her severe intractable pain, she underwent total hip arthroplasty 1 month after her first visit. Histological examination of the resected femoral head revealed pseudogranulomatous lesions along with prominent callus formation, suggesting rapid destruction of the femoral head.
Recent innovation in mobile technologies has changed from the static architecture of client-server relationships toward dynamic, mobile, and instant networks. Accordingly, many studies have been done to support the seamless mobility networks. However it is difficult to deploy such networks due to the need of a special network infrastructure supporting mobility management. In this paper, we propose a novel mobility management scheme without depending on any essential network infrastructure. It establishes a direct tunnel between a Mobile Node (MN) and a Correspondent Node (CN) using virtual IP addressing. The assigned virtual IP addresses of MN and CN are fixed during their communication session via the tunnel. When MN is moving, the changes of its physical IP address are updated to CN by the Virtual Tunnels (VTUN) layer to keep their communication session. The performance evaluation results show that the proposed scheme significantly reduces the L3 handover latency compared with that of PMIPv6.
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