scholarly journals Acetabular cup position and risk of dislocation in primary total hip arthroplasty

2016 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kurt G Seagrave ◽  
Anders Troelsen ◽  
Henrik Malchau ◽  
Henrik Husted ◽  
Kirill Gromov
Author(s):  
Henryk Haffer ◽  
Zhen Wang ◽  
Zhouyang Hu ◽  
Christian Hipfl ◽  
Matthias Pumberger

Abstract Introduction Spinopelvic mobility was identified as a contributing factor for total hip arthroplasty (THA) instability. The influence of spinopelvic function on acetabular cup positioning has not yet been sufficiently investigated in a prospective setting. Therefore, our study aimed (1) to assess cup inclination and anteversion in standing and sitting based on spinopelvic mobility, (2) to identify correlations between cup position and spinopelvic function, (3) and to determine the influence of the individual spinal segments, spinal sagittal balance, and spinopelvic characteristics on the mobility groups. Materials and methods A prospective study assessing 197 THA patients was conducted with stereoradiography in standing and sitting position postoperatively. Two independent investigators determined cup anteversion and inclination, C7-Sagittal vertical axis, cervical lordosis (CL), thoracic kyphosis (TK), lumbar lordosis (LL), sacral slope, pelvic tilt (PT), anteinclination (AI), and pelvic femoral angle (PFA). Spinopelvic mobility is defined based on ∆PT = PTstanding − PTsitting as ∆PT < 10° stiff, ∆PT ≥ 10–30° normal, and ∆PT > 30° hypermobile. Pearson coefficient represented correlations between the cup position and spinopelvic parameters. Results Significant differences were demonstrated for cup anteversion (stiff/hypermobile 29.3°/40.1°; p < 0.000) and inclination (stiff/hypermobile 43.5°/60.2°; p < 0.000) in sitting, but not in standing position. ∆ (standing/sitting) of the cup anteversion (stiff/neutral/hypermobile 5.8°/12.4°/19.9°; p < 0.000) and inclination (stiff/neutral/hypermobile 2.3°/11.2°/18.8°; p < 0.000) revealed significant differences between the mobility groups. The acetabular cup position in sitting, was correlated with lumbar flexibility (∆LL) and spinopelvic mobility. Significant differences were detected between the mobility types and acetabular orientation (AI sit:stiff/hypermobile 47.6°/65.4°; p < 0.000) and hip motion (∆PFA:stiff/hypermobile 65.8°/37.3°; p < 0.000). Assessment of the spinal segments highlighted the role of lumbar flexibility (∆LL:stiff/hypermobile 9.9°/36.2°; p < 0.000) in the spinopelvic complex. Conclusion The significantly different acetabular cup positions in sitting and in the ∆ between standing and sitting and the significantly altered spinopelvic characteristics in terms of stiff and hypermobile spinopelvic mobility underlined the consideration for preoperative functional radiological assessment. Identifying the patients with altered spinopelvic mechanics due to a standardized screening algorithm is necessary to provide safe acetabular cup positioning. The proximal spinal segments appeared not to be involved in the spinopelvic function.


2001 ◽  
Vol 388 ◽  
pp. 135-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuo Hirakawa ◽  
Naoto Mitsugi ◽  
Tomihisa Koshino ◽  
Tomoyuki Saito ◽  
Yasusuku Hirasawa ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 920-925 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus T. Berninger ◽  
Sven Hungerer ◽  
Jan Friederichs ◽  
Fabian M. Stuby ◽  
Christian Fulghum ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Bonin ◽  
Gilles Estour ◽  
Jean-Emmanuel Gedouin ◽  
Olivier Guyen ◽  
Frederic Christopher Daoud

Abstract Background: This study estimated the short-term clinical safety and efficacy of hemispherical with flattened pole cobalt-chromium metal-back with porous outer hydroxyapatite coating dual-mobility acetabular cup (HFPC-DM-HA) in primary total hip arthroplasty.Methods: Single-center retrospective observational cohort study of consecutive patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty with a HFPC-DM-HA 2 years prior to study start. Prospective 2-year follow-up with letter and phone questionnaires.Results: Sampling frame: 361 patients including 59 patients (16.3%) in the cohort. 6 patients (10%) lost to follow-up. Median age 77.5 years (range: 67 ; 92), 32% female, median BMI 25.2 kg.m-2 (18.4 to 56.8). Clinical indications: Primary THA in all patients, resulting from primary osteoarthritis in 80% of them. Median follow-up 3.0 years (2.7 to 4.1). Primary endpoint: 2-year implant survival rate: 97% [87, 99]. Prosthetic dislocation: 0%. Secondary endpoint: Modified HHS (pain & functional subscore) improved from baseline 39.7 [34.6, 44.7] to 75.8 [72.1, 79.6] at 1-year and to 86.7 [83.7, 89.7] at 2-year follow-up (p<0.0001).Conclusions: The authors deemed the short-term outcomes of this acetabular cup in primary total hip arthroplasty to be satisfactory.Study registration: clinicaltrials.gov NCT04209374.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Ries ◽  
Ahmad Faizan ◽  
Jingwei Zhang ◽  
Laura Scholl

Background:  Durable fixation has been demonstrated with use of large (jumbo) cementless cups in revision total hip arthroplasty (THA).    However, anterior protrusion of the cup rim may impinge on the iliopsoas tendon and cause groin pain.  The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of cup position and implant design on iliopsoas impingement.Methods:  THA was performed on six cadaver hips using oversized (jumbo) acetabular components, 60 to 66mm. A stainless steel cable was inserted into the psoas tendon sheath to identify the location of the psoas muscle.  CT scans were performed on each cadaver and imported in an imaging software. The acetabular shells, cables, and pelvi were segmented to create separate solid models of each. The shortest distance between each shell and cable was measured. To determine the influence of cup inclination and anteversion, the inclination (30°/40°/50°) and anteversion (10°/20°/30°) angles were varied in the virtual model for both a hemispheric and offset head center shell design. Results:  The shell to wire distance increased linearly with greater cup anteversion (R2>0.99) while inclination had less effect.  The distance was greater for the offset head center cup in comparison to the hemispheric cup.  Our results indicate that psoas impingement is related to both cup position and implant geometry. Conclusions:  For an oversized jumbo cup, psoas impingement is reduced by greater anteversion while cup inclination has little effect.   An offset head center cup with an anterior recess was helpful in reducing psoas impingement in comparison to a conventional hemispherical geometry. 


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ao Xiong ◽  
su liu ◽  
Guoqing Li ◽  
Jian Weng ◽  
Deli Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: We performed the retrospective cohort study to compare the acetabular cup orientation, including anteversion angle (AA) and inclination angle (IA), of dominant hand side and non-dominant hand side after primary total hip arthroplasty (THA) by right-handed orthopedic surgeons. Methods: Between January 2018 and December 2018, 290 patients who aged below 60 years and underwent primary THA were retrospective screened. Patients who had hemiarthroplasty, previous hip surgery, ankylosing spondylitis, developmental dysplasia of hip (DDH, Crowe type-Ⅲ and type-Ⅳ), severe comorbidity, missing information, inferior quality radiographs were excluded. According to the surgery side, all patients were divided into left group and right group. Postoperative plain radiographs were analyzed to compare the AA and IA between left and right side. Univariate and stepwise multivariable linear regression to control included confounding factors. Stratified analysis was performed to identify whether the operation approach can affect the result, including anterolateral (ALA) and posterolateral approach (PLA). Results: The mean AA was 17.7° (range 6.0° to 30.0°) and 21.0° (range 9.5° to 35.0°) for the left and right side respectively. The mean difference was 3.28° (95% CI: 1.92 – 4.64; P<0.001). The mean IA was 41.1° (range 24.0° to 59.0°) and 40.1° (range 20.5° to 56.0°) for the left and right side respectively (P=0.314). 113 patients' AA within the “safe zone” in the left (93.4 %), while the right was 93 patients (82.3 %) (P=0.009). 95 patients' IA within the “safe zone” in the left (78.5 %), while the right was 97 patients (85.8 %) (P=0.144). The IA of ALA group was smaller than PLA group in both sides. The mean difference was 3.98° (95% CI: 1.22 - 6.74; P=0.005). Conclusions: We concluded that AA in left side may be more accurate than right side after primary THA by right-handed surgeons. The IA was no difference between the two sides, while it was smaller in ALA than in PLA. The results are still needed to be verified in future.


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