Head Reduction Osteotomy With Additional Containment Surgery Improves Sphericity and Containment and Reduces Pain in Legg-Calvé-Perthes Disease
Background Severe femoral head deformities in the frontal plane such as hips with Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease (LCPD) are not contained by the acetabulum and result in hinged abduction and impingement. These rare deformities cannot be addressed by resection, which would endanger head vascularity. Femo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical orthopaedics and related research 2015-04, Vol.473 (4), p.1274-1283 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Severe femoral head deformities in the frontal plane such as hips with Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease (LCPD) are not contained by the acetabulum and result in hinged abduction and impingement. These rare deformities cannot be addressed by resection, which would endanger head vascularity. Femoral head reduction osteotomy allows for reshaping of the femoral head with the goal of improving head sphericity, containment, and hip function.
Questions/purposes
Among hips with severe asphericity of the femoral head, does femoral head reduction osteotomy result in (1) improved head sphericity and containment; (2) pain relief and improved hip function; and (3) subsequent reoperations or complications?
Methods
Over a 10-year period, we performed femoral head reduction osteotomies in 11 patients (11 hips) with severe head asphericities resulting from LCPD (10 hips) or disturbance of epiphyseal perfusion after conservative treatment of developmental dysplasia (one hip). Five of 11 hips had concomitant acetabular containment surgery including two triple osteotomies, two periacetabular osteotomies (PAOs), and one Colonna procedure. Patients were reviewed at a mean of 5 years (range, 1–10 years), and none was lost to followup. Mean patient age at the time of head reduction osteotomy was 13 years (range, 7–23 years). We obtained the sphericity index (defined as the ratio of the minor to the major axis of the ellipse drawn to best fit the femoral head articular surface on conventional anteroposterior pelvic radiographs) to assess head sphericity. Containment was assessed evaluating the proportion of patients with an intact Shenton’s line, the extrusion index, and the lateral center-edge (LCE) angle. Merle d’Aubigné-Postel score and range of motion (flexion, internal/external rotation in 90° of flexion) were assessed to measure pain and function. Complications and reoperations were identified by chart review.
Results
At latest followup, femoral head sphericity (72%; range, 64%–81% preoperatively versus 85%; range, 73%–96% postoperatively; p = 0.004), extrusion index (47%; range, 25%–60% versus 20%; range, 3%–58%; p = 0.006), and LCE angle (1°; range, −10° to 16° versus 26°; range, 4°–40°; p = 0.0064) were improved compared with preoperatively. With the limited number of hips available, the proportion of an intact Shenton’s line (64% versus 100%; p = 0.087) and the overall Merle d’Aubigné-Postel score (14.5; range, 12–16 versus 15.7; range, 12–18; p = 0.072) remained un |
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ISSN: | 0009-921X 1528-1132 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11999-014-4048-1 |