Aims. Adverse spinal motion or balance (spine mobility) and adverse pelvic mobility, in combination, are often referred to as adverse spinopelvic mobility (SPM). A stiff lumbar spine, large posterior standing pelvic tilt, and severe sagittal spinal deformity have been identified as risk factors for increased
This retrospective study was to investigate radiographic and clinical outcomes in treatment of
The purpose of this study was to examine a cohort of patients with minor acetabular dysplasia features in order to identify the preoperative clinical characteristics and imaging findings that differentiate patients with
Given the increasing number of total hip arthroplasty
procedures being performed annually, it is imperative that orthopaedic
surgeons understand factors responsible for instability. In order
to treat this potentially complex problem, we recommend correctly
classifying the type of instability present based on component position, abductor
function, impingement, and polyethylene wear. Correct classification
allows the treating surgeon to choose the appropriate revision option
that ultimately will allow for the best potential outcome. Cite this article:
Dislocation is one of the most common and disturbing complications after total hip arthroplasty (THA). This is a challenging situation, especially in patients with a high risk of dislocation. Constrict acetabular liner is among the different types of technics for preventing instability. Describe the radiological and clinical results of patients submitted to a primary or revision THA using a constrict acetabular liner. 52 patients with high risk for dislocation were operated between 2006 and 2015 with a constrict acetabular liner. They were evaluated clinically and radiographically after 3 months, 6 months and 1 year after surgery and them annually. The Merle D'Aubigné Postel Method was used to access the clinical outcomes and anteroposterior pelvic and hip profile radiography was performed to access any evidence of loosening of the acetabular cup. 33 (63%) patients were female, the average age were 80 (52 – 94) years old. 29 (75%) cases were primary THA and 13 (25%) revision surgery. The mean follow up was 49(19 – 126) months. 31 (59%) patients died during the study, 5 deaths (9.6%) occurred in the first 3 months after surgery. There were 4 unsatisfactory results: 2 (3.8%) dislocations (secondary to high energy trauma) and 2 (3.8%) early aseptic loosening that required revision surgery. The median preoperative global score of Merle D'Aubigné Postel was 16.7% and the postoperative was 88.9%. The population that presented the least improvement in the clinical outcome (< 50% of improvement) were patients with previous surgery on the same hip (p<0.0001) and revisions surgeries due to instability (p=0.005). When comparing the mortality rate with the percent of clinical improvement after surgery, there was no statistic difference. Constricted acetabular liner is a good option for treatment in selected cases, with a low rate of complications and a good implant survival with a short follow up.
Aims. A borderline dysplastic hip can behave as either stable or unstable and this makes surgical decision making challenging. While an
Adverse spinopelvic mobility (SPM) has been shown to increase risk of dislocation of primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). In patients undergoing THA, prevalence of adverse SPM has been shown to be as high as 41%. Stiff lumbar spine, large posterior standing pelvic tilt and severe sagittal spinal deformity have been identified as risk factors for increased
Aims. This study reports the mid-term results of total hip arthroplasty (THA) performed using a monoblock acetabular component with a large-diameter head (LDH) ceramic-on-ceramic (CoC) bearing. Patients and Methods. Of the 276 hips (246 patients) included in this study, 264 (96%) were reviewed at a mean of 67 months (48 to 79) postoperatively. Procedures were performed with a mini posterior approach. Clinical and radiological outcomes were recorded at regular intervals. A noise assessment questionnaire was completed at last follow-up. Results. There were four re-operations (1%) including one early revision for insufficient primary fixation (0.4%). No hip dislocation was reported. The mean University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) activity score, 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12) Mental Component Summary (MCS) score, SF-12 Physical Component Summary (PCS) score, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) score, and Forgotten Joint Score (FJS) were 6.6 (2 to 10), 52.8 (25.5 to 65.7), 53.0 (27.2 to 66.5), 7.7 (0 to 63), and 88.5 (23 to 100), respectively. No signs of loosening or osteolysis were observed on radiological review. The incidence of squeaking was 23% (n = 51/225). Squeaking was significantly associated with larger head diameter (p < 0.001), younger age (p < 0.001), higher SF-12 PCS (p < 0.001), and UCLA scores (p < 0.001). Squeaking did not affect patient satisfaction, with 100% of the squeaking hips satisfied with the surgery. Conclusion. LDH CoC THAs have demonstrated excellent functional outcomes at medium-term follow-up, with very low revision rate and no dislocations. The high incidence of squeaking did not affect patient satisfaction or function. LDH CoC with a monoblock acetabular component has the potential to provide long term implant survivorship with unrestricted activity, while avoiding implant impingement, liner fracture at insertion, and
Aims. The aims of this study were to determine the clinical and radiographic
outcomes, implant survivorship, and complications of patients with
a history of poliomyelitis undergoing total hip arthroplasty (THA)
in affected limbs and unaffected limbs of this same population. Patients and Methods. A retrospective review identified 51 patients (27 male and 24
female, 59 hips) with a mean age of 66 years (38 to 88) and with
the history of poliomyelitis who underwent THA for degenerative
arthritis between 1970 and 2012. Immigrant status, clinical outcomes,
radiographic results, implant survival, and complications were recorded. Results. In all, 32 THAs (63%) were performed on an affected limb, while
27 (37%) were performed on an unaffected limb. The overall ten-year
survivorship free from aseptic loosening, any revision, or any reoperation
were 91% (95% CI 0.76 to 0.99), 91% (95% CI 0.64 to 0.97) and 87%
(95% CI 0.61 to 0.95), respectively. There were no revisions for
prosthetic joint infection. There were no significant differences
in any of the above parameters if THA was on the affected or unaffected
control limbs. Conclusion. Patients with a history of poliomyelitis who undergo THA on the
affected or unaffected limbs have similar results with overall survivorship
and complication rates to those reported results in patients undergoing
THA for osteoarthritis. At long-term follow-up, previous clinical
concerns about increased
Introduction. The effect of spine-pelvis position and motion on hip arthroplasty function has been increasingly appreciated in the past several years. Some authors have stressed the importance of using precision technologies for component placement while others have advocated the use of dual mobility articulations or large bearings and lateralized liners in patients with fused lumbar spines. The current study assesses the prevalence of stiff and fused spines in an elective total hip arthroplasty population. Methods. One hundred and forty-nine patients undergoing elective total hip arthroplasty were assessed preoperatively with CT (computed tomography) and functional radiographs for the purpose of CT based planning and intraoperative navigation of total hip arthroplasty (HipXpert System, Surgical Planning Associates, Inc., Boston, MA). The functional radiographs included standing and sitting lateral images (EOS Imaging, SA, Paris, France). Patients were assessed for supine, standing and sitting pelvic tilt (PT) and change in sacral slope (SS). Spine stiffness was defined by a change in sacral slope (SS) of less than or equal to 10 degrees on the standing to sitting lateral radiographs according to Luthringer et al JOA 2019. Results. Of these 149 patients, 2 (1.5%) had been previously treated by instrumented lumbar fusion. Thirty-nine additional patients (26.1%) had stiff spines as defined by a change in sacral slope of less than 10 degrees from standing to sitting. The mean supine PT measured by CT scan was 3.46 degrees of anterior PT which is similar to previously described in the literature. The mean supine PT in stiff spine patients measured 1.5 degrees of anterior tilt which was not statistically significant. The mean standing pelvic tilt measured 0.0 degrees in the all patients and −4.3 degrees in stiff spine patients. The mean sitting pelvic tilt was −18.9 degrees in the entire cohort and −11.3 degrees in the stiff spine patients. The difference in pelvic tilt between these two groups was statistically significant with p-values of 0.002 and 0.006, respectively. Discussion and Conclusion. Although the incidence of formal instrumented spine fusion was low in this cohort (1.5%), the incidence of spine stiffness was very high at 27.6%. Given that
Introduction. Patients with abnormal spinopelvic mobility are at increased risk for
Topic. Utilizing radiographic, physical exam and history findings, we developed a novel clinical score to aid in the surgical decision making process for hips with borderline/ transitional dysplastic hips. Background. Treatment of borderline acetabular dysplasia (BD) is controversial with some patients having primarily instability-based symptoms while others have impingement-based symptoms. The purpose of this study was to identify the most important patient characteristics influencing the diagnosis of instability vs. non-instability, develop a clinical score (Borderline
Femoroacetabular impingement causes groin pain
and decreased athletic performance in active adults. This bony conflict
may result in femoroacetabular subluxation if of sufficient magnitude. The ligamentum teres has recently been reported to be capable
of withstanding tensile loads similar to that of the anterior cruciate
ligament, and patents with early subluxation of the hip may become
dependent on the secondary restraint that is potentially provided
by the ligamentum teres. Rupture of the ligamentum may thus cause
symptomatic
To evaluate how abnormal proximal femoral anatomy affects different femoral version measurements in young patients with hip pain. First, femoral version was measured in 50 hips of symptomatic consecutively selected patients with hip pain (mean age 20 years (SD 6), 60% (n = 25) females) on preoperative CT scans using different measurement methods: Lee et al, Reikerås et al, Tomczak et al, and Murphy et al. Neck-shaft angle (NSA) and α angle were measured on coronal and radial CT images. Second, CT scans from three patients with femoral retroversion, normal femoral version, and anteversion were used to create 3D femur models, which were manipulated to generate models with different NSAs and different cam lesions, resulting in eight models per patient. Femoral version measurements were repeated on manipulated femora.Aims
Methods
Introduction. Historically, the most common indications for re-revision of a total hip arthroplasty (THA) have been aseptic loosening, instability, infection, and peri-prosthetic fracture. As revision implants and techniques have evolved and improved, understanding why contemporary revision THAs fail is important to direct further improvement and innovation. As such, the goals of this study were to determine the implant survivorship of contemporary revision THAs, as well as the most common indications for re-revision. Methods. We retrospectively reviewed 2568 aseptic revision THAs completed at our academic institution between 2005 and 2015 through our total joint registry. There were 34% isolated acetabular revisions, 18% isolated femoral revisions, 28% both component revisions, and 20% modular component exchanges. The mean age at index revision THA was 66 years, and 46% were males. The most common indications for the index revision THA were aseptic loosening (21% acetabular, 15% femoral, 5% both components), polyethylene wear and osteolysis (18%), instability (13%), fracture (11%), and other (17%). Mean follow-up was 6 years. Results. There were 211 re-revision THAs during the study period in this cohort. The overall survivorship free of any re-revision at 2, 5, and 10 years was 94%, 92%, and 88%, respectively. The most common reasons for re-revision were
Background. Hip dysplasia has traditionally been classified based on the lateral center edge angle (LCEA). A recent meta-analysis demonstrated no definite consensus and a significant heterogeneity in LCEA values used in various studies to define hip dysplasia and borderline dysplasia. To overcome the shortcomings of classifying hip dysplasia based on just LCEA, a comprehensive classification for adult acetabular dysplasia (CCAD) was proposed to classify symptomatic hips into three discrete prototypical patterns of
The frequency of severe femoral retroversion is unclear in patients with femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). This study aimed to investigate mean femoral version (FV), the frequency of absolute femoral retroversion, and the combination of decreased FV and acetabular retroversion (AR) in symptomatic patients with FAI subtypes. A retrospective institutional review board-approved observational study was performed with 333 symptomatic patients (384 hips) with hip pain due to FAI evaluated for hip preservation surgery. Overall, 142 patients (165 hips) had cam-type FAI, while 118 patients (137 hips) had mixed-type FAI. The allocation to each subgroup was based on reference values calculated on anteroposterior radiographs. CT/MRI-based measurement of FV (Murphy method) and AV were retrospectively compared among five FAI subgroups. Frequency of decreased FV < 10°, severely decreased FV < 5°, and absolute femoral retroversion (FV < 0°) was analyzed.Aims
Methods
When performing revision total hip arthroplasty using diaphyseal-engaging titanium tapered stems (TTS), the recommended 3 to 4 cm of stem-cortical diaphyseal contact may not be available. In challenging cases such as these with only 2 cm of contact, can sufficient axial stability be achieved and what is the benefit of a prophylactic cable? This study sought to determine, first, whether a prophylactic cable allows for sufficient axial stability when the contact length is 2 cm, and second, if differing TTS taper angles (2° vs 3.5°) impact these results. A biomechanical matched-pair cadaveric study was designed using six matched pairs of human fresh cadaveric femora prepared so that 2 cm of diaphyseal bone engaged with 2° (right femora) or 3.5° (left femora) TTS. Before impaction, three matched pairs received a single 100 lb-tensioned prophylactic beaded cable; the remaining three matched pairs received no cable adjuncts. Specimens underwent stepwise axial loading to 2600 N or until failure, defined as stem subsidence > 5 mm.Aims
Methods
This study reports mid-term outcomes after periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) exclusively in a borderline hip dysplasia (BHD) population to provide a contrast to published outcomes for arthroscopic surgery of the hip in BHD. We identified 42 hips in 40 patients treated between January 2009 and January 2016 with BHD defined as a lateral centre-edge angle (LCEA) of ≥ 18° but < 25°. A minimum five-year follow-up was available. Patient-reported outcomes (PROMs) including Tegner score, subjective hip value (SHV), modified Harris Hip Score (mHHS), and Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) were assessed. The following morphological parameters were evaluated: LCEA, acetabular index (AI), α angle, Tönnis staging, acetabular retroversion, femoral version, femoroepiphyseal acetabular roof index (FEAR), iliocapsularis to rectus femoris ratio (IC/RF), and labral and ligamentum teres (LT) pathology.Aims
Methods