As our understanding of hip function and disease improves, it is evident that the
Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) patients report exacerbation of hip pain in deep flexion. However, the exact impingement location in deep flexion is unknown. The aim was to investigate impingement-free maximal flexion, impingement location, and if cam deformity causes hip impingement in flexion in FAI patients. A retrospective study involving 24 patients (37 hips) with FAI and femoral retroversion (femoral version (FV) < 5° per Murphy method) was performed. All patients were symptomatic (mean age 28 years (SD 9)) and had anterior hip/groin pain and a positive anterior impingement test. Cam- and pincer-type subgroups were analyzed. Patients were compared to an asymptomatic control group (26 hips). All patients underwent pelvic CT scans to generate personalized CT-based 3D models and validated software for patient-specific impingement simulation (equidistant method).Aims
Methods
Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) describes abnormal bony contact of the proximal femur against the acetabulum. The term was first coined in 1999; however what is often overlooked is that descriptions of the morphology have existed in the literature for centuries. The aim of this paper is to delineate its origins and provide further clarity on FAI to shape future research. A non-systematic search on PubMed was performed using keywords such as “impingement” or “tilt deformity” to find early anatomical descriptions of FAI. Relevant references from these primary studies were then followed up.Aims
Methods
Excessive acetabular coverage is the most common cause of pincer-type
femoroacetabular impingement. To date, an association between acetabular
over-coverage and genetic variations has not been studied. In this
study we investigated the association between single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs) of paralogous Homeobox (HOX)9 genes and acetabular
coverage in Japanese individuals to identify a possible genetic
variation associated with acetabular over-coverage. We investigated 19 total SNPs in the four HOX9 paralogs, then
focused in detail on seven of those located in the 3’ untranslated
region of Objectives
Methods