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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 23 - 23
1 Dec 2022
Innmann MM Verhaegen J Reichel F Schaper B Merle C Grammatopoulos G
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The presence of hip osteoarthritis is associated with abnormal spinopelvic characteristics. This study aims to determine whether the pre-operative, pathological spinopelvic characteristics “normalize” at 1-year post-THA. This is a prospective, longitudinal, case-control matched cohort study. Forty-seven patients underwent pre- and post- (at one-year) THA assessments. This group was matched (age, sex, BMI) with 47 controls/volunteers with well-functioning hips. All participants underwent clinical and radiographic assessments including lateral radiographs in standing, upright-seated and deep-flexed-seated positions. Spinopelvic characteristics included change in lumbar lordosis (ΔLL), pelvic tilt (ΔPT) and hip flexion (pelvic-femoral angle, ΔPFA) when moving from the standing to each of the seated positions. Spinopelvic hypermobility was defined as ΔPT>30° between standing and upright-seated positions. Pre-THA, patients illustrated less hip flexion (ΔPFA −54.8°±17.1° vs. −68.5°± 9.5°, p<0.001), greater pelvic tilt (ΔPT 22.0°±13.5° vs. 12.7°±8.1°, p<0.001) and greater lumbar movements (ΔLL −22.7°±15.5° vs. −15.4°±10.9°, p=0.015) transitioning from standing to upright-seated. Post-THA, these differences were no longer present (ΔPFApost −65.8°±12.5°, p=0.256; ΔPTpost 14.3°±9.5°, p=0.429; ΔLLpost −15.3°±10.6°, p=0.966). The higher prevalence of pre-operative spinopelvic hypermobility in patients compared to controls (21.3% vs. 0.0%; p=0.009), was not longer present post-THA (6.4% vs. 0.0%; p=0.194). Similar results were found moving from standing to deep-seated position post-THA. Pre-operative, spinopelvic characteristics that contribute to abnormal mechanics can normalize post-THA following improvement in hip flexion. This leads to patients having the expected hip-, pelvic- and spinal flexion as per demographically-matched controls, thus potentially eliminating abnormal mechanics that contribute to the development/exacerbation of hip-spine syndrome


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 41 - 41
1 Dec 2022
Verhaegen J Innmann MM Batista NA Dion C Pierrepont J Merle C Grammatopoulos G
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The study of spinopelvic anatomy and movement has received great interest as these characteristics influence the biomechanical behavior (and outcome) following hip arthroplasty. However, to-date there is little knowledge of what “normal” is and how this varies with age. This study aims to determine how dynamic spino-pelvic characteristics change with age, with well-functioning hips and assess how these changes are influenced by the presence of hip arthritis. This is an IRB-approved, cross-sectional, cohort study; 100 volunteers (asymptomatic hips, Oxford-Hip-sore>45) [age:53 ± 17 (24-87) years-old; 51% female; BMI: 28 ± 5] and 200 patients with end-stage hip arthritis [age:56 ± 19 (16-89) years-old; 55% female; BMI:28 ± 5] were studied. All participants underwent lateral spino-pelvic radiographs in the standing and deep-seated positions to determine maximum hip and spine flexion. Parameters measured included lumbar-lordosis (LL), pelvic incidence, pelvic-tilt (PT), pelvic-femoral angles (PFA). Lumbar flexion (ΔLL), hip flexion (ΔPFA) and pelvic movement (ΔPT) were calculated. The prevalence of spinopelvic imbalance (PI–LL>10?) was determined. There were no differences in any of the spino-pelvic characteristics or movements between sexes. With advancing age, standing LL reduced and standing PT increased (no differences between groups). With advancing age, both hip (4%/decade) and lumbar (8%/decade) flexion reduced (p<0.001) (no difference between groups). ΔLL did not correlate with ΔPFA (rho=0.1). Hip arthritis was associated with a significantly reduced hip flexion (82 ±;22? vs. 90 ± 17?; p=0.003) and pelvic movements (1 ± 16? vs. 8 ± 16?; p=0.002) at all ages and increased prevalence of spinopelvic imbalance (OR:2.6; 95%CI: 1.2-5.7). With aging, the lumbar spine loses its lumbar lordosis and flexion to a greater extent that then the hip and resultantly, the hip's relative contribution to the overall sagittal movement increases. With hip arthritis, the reduced hip flexion and the necessary compensatory increased pelvic movement is a likely contributor to the development of hip-spine syndrome and of spino-pelvic imbalance


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 52 - 52
1 Feb 2017
Kato T Sako S Ito Y Iwata A
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Introduction. Hip-Spine syndrome has various clinical aspects. For example, schoolchild with severe congenital dislocation of the hip have unfavorable standing posture and disadvantageous motions in ADL. Hip-Spine syndrome is closely related closely as the adjacent lumbar vertebrae and the hip joint. Furthermore, not only the pelvis and the lumbar spine, but also the neck position might influence on the maximum hip flexion angle. In this study, we examined the maximum hip flexion angle and pelvic movement angle by observing the lumbar spine, the pelvis and the neck in three different positions. Subjects and Methods. The participants were five healthy volunteers (three males and two females) and ranged in age from 16 to 49 years. We measured the hip flexion angle (=∠X) and the pelvic tilt angle (=∠Y), using Zebris WinData and putting the six markers on skin. The positions of the marker are Femur lateral condyle (M1), Greater trochanter (M2), Lateral margin of 10th rib (M3), Anterior superior iliac spine (M4), Superior lateral margin of Iliac (M5), and Acromion (M6). We performed maximum hip flexion three times in three positions and measured ∠X (=∠M1,2,3) and ∠Y (=∠M4,5,6) and calculated the mean and SD of each position. The first position (P1) that we investigated is the regular position specified by the Japanese Orthopedics Association and Rehabilitation Medical Association. The second position (P2) is performed in the limited position of the posterior pelvic tilt and lumbar movement, by placing the tube under the subject's lower back. The third position (P3) is the altered limited position of P2 added by placing the 500ml PET bottle filled water under the back of the subject's neck. Analysis. A two way factorial analysis of variance was used for statistical analysis to examine the difference among three different positions (P1, P2 and P3) in ∠X and ∠Y. A significance level was set at P < 0.05. We also calculated Spearman rank correlation coefficients to determine the correlation between ∠X and ∠Y. Results. There was a statistically significant difference among three different positions (P1, P2 and P3) in both ∠X and ∠Y (p < 0.01). Slight strong correlations were found between ∠X and ∠Y in three different positions. (r =0.5178571). The smallest values of ∠X and ∠Y were obtained in P1. The values of ∠X and ∠Y in P3 were all smaller than those in P2. Conclusions. The limited movement of pelvic and lumbar spine, and neck different positions give the limit to a maximum hip joint flexion angle


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 1 | Pages 19 - 27
1 Jan 2024
Tang H Guo S Ma Z Wang S Zhou Y

Aims

The aim of this study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of a patient-specific algorithm which we developed for predicting changes in sagittal pelvic tilt after total hip arthroplasty (THA).

Methods

This retrospective study included 143 patients who underwent 171 THAs between April 2019 and October 2020 and had full-body lateral radiographs preoperatively and at one year postoperatively. We measured the pelvic incidence (PI), the sagittal vertical axis (SVA), pelvic tilt, sacral slope (SS), lumbar lordosis (LL), and thoracic kyphosis to classify patients into types A, B1, B2, B3, and C. The change of pelvic tilt was predicted according to the normal range of SVA (0 mm to 50 mm) for types A, B1, B2, and B3, and based on the absolute value of one-third of the PI-LL mismatch for type C patients. The reliability of the classification of the patients and the prediction of the change of pelvic tilt were assessed using kappa values and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs), respectively. Validity was assessed using the overall mean error and mean absolute error (MAE) for the prediction of the change of pelvic tilt.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 4 | Pages 231 - 244
1 Apr 2023
Lukas KJ Verhaegen JCF Livock H Kowalski E Phan P Grammatopoulos G

Aims

Spinopelvic characteristics influence the hip’s biomechanical behaviour. However, to date there is little knowledge defining what ‘normal’ spinopelvic characteristics are. This study aims to determine how static spinopelvic characteristics change with age and ethnicity among asymptomatic, healthy individuals.

Methods

This systematic review followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses guidelines to identify English studies, including ≥ 18-year-old participants, without evidence of hip or spine pathology or a history of previous surgery or interventional treatment, documenting lumbar lordosis (LL), sacral slope (SS), pelvic tilt (PT), and pelvic incidence (PI). From a total of 2,543 articles retrieved after the initial database search, 61 articles were eventually selected for data extraction.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 1 | Pages 77 - 84
24 Jan 2022
Onishi E Ota S Fujita S Tsukamoto Y Yamashita S Hashimura T Matsunaga K Yasuda T

Aims

This study aimed to evaluate sagittal spinopelvic alignment (SSPA) in the early stage of rapidly destructive coxopathy (RDC) compared with hip osteoarthritis (HOA), and to identify risk factors of SSPA for destruction of the femoral head within 12 months after the disease onset.

Methods

This study enrolled 34 RDC patients with joint space narrowing > 2 mm within 12 months after the onset of hip pain and 25 HOA patients showing femoral head destruction. Sharp angle was measured for acetabular coverage evaluation. Femoral head collapse ratio was calculated for assessment of the extent of femoral head collapse by RDC. The following parameters of SSPA were evaluated using the whole spinopelvic radiograph: pelvic tilt (PT), sacral slope (SS), pelvic incidence (PI), sagittal vertical axis (SVA), thoracic kyphosis angle (TK), lumbar lordosis angle (LL), and PI-LL.