This lack of consensus has established no specific recommendations or radiographic criteria for identifying and treating hip dysplasia. Closed reduction, open reduction and skin traction, and hip spika are just a few of the therapeutic options available. The study focuses on infants under the age of 12 months. It will look at the effects of reducing the amount of closure on them. A retrospective study looked back at patients treated with closed reduction at a great referral medical center before one year. Over 100 participants and 168 hips were involved. Following a median follow-up of 5.97 years (plus or minus 3.01 years), the effectiveness of the closure replacement surgery was assessed using a pelvic A.P. x-ray. People thought that most hip joints were healthy because the European Hip Dysplasia Institute gave them 1 or 2. This study found that most patients with class 1 and 2 hip severeness had a positive outcome. Following the conclusion of the decrease, the acetabular index dramatically improved. As part of this standardization, the values of C.E. angels are being determined. If a patient is under one year old and has DDH, the American Diabetes Association recommends a safely closed reduction rather than an open reduction.