One theory for the aetiology of osteoarthrosis of the hip is the impingement of the anterior femoral neck against the acetabulum in flexion. The reduced femoral head-neck offset not visible on AP-radiography is implicated in this impingement. The anterior part of the head-neck region is well visualised on cross table lateral radiographs. A retrospective analysis of the offset using cross table lateral radiographs was therefore performed on twelve symptomatic and ten asymptomatic hips. The anterior offset (AOS) was defined as the difference in radius between the anterior femoral head and the anterior femoral neck. The offset ratio (OSR) was defined as the AOS divided by the femoral head diameter. The AOS was 11.6 ± 0.7 mm in the asymptomatic group and 7.2 ± 0.7 mm in the symptomatic group, which was statistically significantly different (p=0.0006). The OSR was 0.21 ± 0.03 in the asymptomatic group and 0.13 ± 0.05 in the symptomatic group, which was also statistically significantly different (p=0.0004). Cross-table lateral radiographs of the hip are useful for screening patients complaining of anterior femoro-acetabular impingement symptoms, as their anterior femoral head-neck offset may be smaller.
Femoroacetabular impingement can be a cause for hip pain and loss of motion in patients who previously sustained a femoral neck fracture. The condition causes degenerative anterior labral and adjacent acetabular cartilage lesions. Early treatment is essential to prevent further degeneration and osteoarthrosis of the joint. Prevention is predicated by initial precise anatomic reduction of such fractures in all planes.
After local bacterial challenge, we found a statistically significant difference in the infection rates depending on the implant design. The higher infection resistance associated with the PC-Fix design seems to be related to the reduced contact area at the bone-implant interface.
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