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Hip surgery 1990’s Total hip replacement

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Presentation on theme: "Hip surgery 1990’s Total hip replacement"— Presentation transcript:

1 Hip pain and Hip arthroscopy Matt Wilkinson Orthopaedic surgeon Sports and Arthroplasty

2 Hip surgery 1990’s Total hip replacement
2010’s Arthroscopy, Capsular Repairs/stabilisation Pelvic osteotomy Tendon releases/repairs - endoscopic Hernia repairs Neurolysis

3 UCLH, London, UK UBC, Vancouver

4 Bermuda Triangle

5 Cases Causes of hip pain Clinical examination and investigations Role of hip arthroscopy and FAI

6 “Groin Strain” Evolving pathology Muscular strain Osteitis pubis/OM
Sportsman hernia (inguinal disruption) FAI/labral tears

7 Hip pain? Intra-articular pathology/FAI Sportsman’s hernia Osteitis Pubis Adductor tendinitis Psoas tendinitis Trochanteric bursitis Referred pain – lumbar/pelvis Meralgia paraesthetica

8 R Hip pain ? THJR 67y/o female Severe R hip pain, acute onset, nil trauma Irritable hip joint, reduced flexion and IR, FADIR strongly +ve

9 Inferior pubic rami fracture

10 L hip pain 14y/o male Playing soccer Felt “pop” L groin Painful walking and hip flexing

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13 R hip pain ? Labral tear 20y/o Long distance runner Progressive buttock and R hip pain Nil specific trauma Difficulty weight bearing R leg End range of flexion and rotation of hip painful

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15 Evaluating hip pain Age
Skeletally immature – apophyseal injuries, avulsion injuries, congenital, transient synovitis Mature – musculotendinous sprain, FAI, bursitis, tendintis Old – Arthritis, fractures, trochanteric bursitis History of trauma/athletic pursuits, pain characteristics Location of pain Anterior, lateral, posterior

16 Pain location

17 Anterior hip pain C sign Hip joint OA Labral tears Iliopsoas bursitis
Stress fracture AVN Transient synovitis/septic arthritis Adductor tendinitis

18 Lateral hip pain Trochanteric pain syndrome 10-25% pop
Atraumatic onset ITB, bursitis, Gluteus minimus/medius tears Non-op, physio, HCLA, TFL release (endoscopic vs open)

19 Posterior hip pain Hip joint Piriformis syndrome Ischio-femoral impingement Hamstring – insertional pain/tendintis Back/SIJ/sacrum Pain with ER of hip will exacerbate piriformis syndrome/ischiofemoral impingement

20 Examination Gait Leg length discrepancy Trendelenberg sign Palpation
Adductor pathology, trochanteric bursitis, meralgia paraesthetica, ROM Provocative tests - impingement (FADIR),SLR, FABER

21 Examination - trendelenberg

22 FADIR

23 Imaging XR (AP, lateral) US MRI/MRA (90% sensitivity)

24 US guided LA or HCLA Adductor tendon Psoas Bursa Intra-articular Trochanteric bursa Lateral femoral cutaneous nerve

25 Hip arthroscopy First Hip scope 1931 – cadaver 80’s and 90’s hip arthroscopy began in American and UK Central compartment arthroscopy – loose bodies, biopsies Peripheral compartment arthroscopy – developed afterwards – loose bodies, osteoplasty

26 Simple debridements CAM/Pincer osteoplasties FAI Labral reconstructions/repairs Ligamentum teres pathology and reconstruction Iliopsoas lengthening Gluteus medius tears/trochanteric bursitis Femoro-ischial impingement, sciatic nerve decompression,

27 Labral repair

28 FAI Pathomechanical process Abnormal contact between fem head and acetabulum Damage to labrum and cartilage Precursor to OA

29 History of FAI OA –secondary to SCFE, assoc with pistol grip deformity, acet dysplasia Unclear why some young people develop hip OA – not explained by mechanical factors, trauma, previously understood predisposing factors 1990’s – FAI described Ganz – open dislocation

30 Two types CAM – malshaped proximal femur Pincer – excessive acet coverage

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32 CAM

33 Incidence JBJS 2010, Hack et al. MRI – 200 asymptomatic individuals age 29 14% pop – CAM deformity (3.5% bilateral) 79% men, 21% female Male incidence – 24%, female 5%

34 History Groin pain Insidious, may be history of trauma Worse with activity, prolonged sitting “C sign”

35 Examination Loss of rotation – IR and adduction
Impingement test nearly always positive FADIR

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37 Imaging Pelvis AP XR Well centered – tip of coccyx 1-2cm above symphysis to assess version Most CAM lesions – anterolateral – may be missed on AP – cross table lateral, frog leg 3D CT High resolution MR arthrogram with radial sequences

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39 Pincer - retroversion

40 Notzli 2002

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42 Surgery Open dislocations – ganz Arthroscopic labral debridement Arthroscopic bony resection Labral refixation Rim recessing

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44 What we know Review of literature – 70% success with arthroscopic hip surgery Worse results with pre-existing OA Better long term results with labral refixation vs debridement Cadaveric studies indicate arthroscopic resection accomplishes adequate osteoplasty

45 Summary Location of pain “C sign” good indicator of hip joint pathology US guided injections useful in differentiating origin of pain


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