Dislocation After Total Hip Arthroplasty

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Dislocation After Total Hip Arthroplasty. Mazloumi MD. Patient Risk F actors. Neuromuscular and cognitive disorders Patient noncompliance Previous hip surgery. Surgical Considerations. Approach S oft-tissue tension C omponent positioning Impingement Head size - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Dislocation After Total Hip Arthroplasty

Page 1: Dislocation After Total Hip  Arthroplasty
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Dislocation After Total Hip Arthroplasty

Mazloumi MD

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Patient Risk Factors

• Neuromuscular and cognitive disorders

• Patient noncompliance

• Previous hip surgery

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Surgical Considerations

• Approach• Soft-tissue tension• Component positioning• Impingement• Head size• Acetabular liner profile• Surgeon experience

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Treatment

• Closed reduction• Revision options should target the underlying

etiology. 1- Tensioning or Augmentation of soft tissues 2- Capsulorrhaphy 3- Trochanteric advancement 4- Correction of malpositioned of components 5- Improving the head – neck ratio

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Surgical Approach

• 75% to 90% of dislocations are in the posterior direction

• Dislocation rate was 5.8% after a posterior approach versus 2.3% after an anterolateral approach

(P < 0.01).

Woo RY, Morrey BF: Dislocations after total hip arthroplasty. J Bone Joint Surg Am 1982;64:1295-1306

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Surgical approches

• A recent meta-analysis involving 13,203 procedures dislocation rate :

• 3.23% Posterior approach• 2.18% Anterolateral, approach• 1.27% Transtrochanteric, approach• 0.55% Direct lateral approach.

Masonis JL, Bourne RB: Surgical approach, abductor function, and total hi arthroplasty

dislocation. Clin Orthop 2002;405:46-53.

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Surgical approach

• Larger heads (32 mm versus 22 and 28 mm)• Definitive posterior soft-tissue repair• These two influential elements (head size and soft-

tissue tension) therefore may reduce or eliminate the disadvantage of the posterior approach with respect to instability.

Goldstein WM, Gleason TF, Kopplin M, Branson JJ: Prevalence of dislocation after total hip arthroplasty through a posterolateral approach with partial capsulotomy and capsulorrhaphy. J Bone Joint Surg Am

2001;86:2-7.

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Soft-Tissue Tension

• Meticulous reconstruction of the posterior capsule and short external rotators after a

posterior approach was shown to reduce dislocation from 4.1% to 0.0% at 1-year followup in a study of 395 patients.

Pellicci PM, Bostrom M, Poss R: Posterior approach to total hip replacement using

enhanced posterior soft tissue repairClin Orthop 1998;355:224-228.

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Soft-Tissue Tension

• Soft-tissue tension also can be greatly affected by femoral offset

• Trochanteric nonunion increased the dislocation rate sixfold (17.6% versus 2.8%; P < 0.001).

• large mismatch between femoral head size and acetabular component size

(>64 mm cap <26 mm head )

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Component Positioning

• Cup abduction of 40° ± 10° is considered to be the “safe zone” of lower dislocation risk.

• Cup anteversion should be 20° ± 5° • Outside this safe range, dislocation in one

study increased fourfold (6.1% versus 1.5%; P < 0.05)

Lewinnek GE, Lewis JL, Tarr R, Compere CL, Zimmerman JR: Dislocations after total hip-replacement arthroplasties. J Bone Joint Surg Am 1978;60:217- 220.

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Component Positioning

• The pelvis of a patient in the decubitus position may be significantly adducted and anteverted relative to the table.

• Adequate acetabular anteversion may be more critical with a posterior approach because it reduces forces on weakened posterior soft tissues

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Impingment

• Impingement occurs when the prosthetic femoral neck impinges against the liner or other sessile object, such as cement, osteophyte, or heterotopic ossification .

• head-to-neck ratio is important. Components with higher ratios impinge less readily

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Impingment

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Head size

• The improved head-to-neck ratio reduces component impingement and increases ROM.

• Larger heads are seated deeper within the acetabular liner, requiring greater translation before dislocation “jump distance”

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Head size

Polyethylene wear increases with larger heads and thinner liners, and wear leads to periprosthetic osteolysis and the potential for loosening.

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Liner Profile

A, Standard.

B, Elevated rim.

C, Oblique.

D, Lateralized

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Surgeon Experience

• In their study of more than 4,000 primary found that surgeons who had performed fewer than 30 procedures had a markedly higher dislocation rate (approximately twofold)

Hedlundh U, Ahnfelt L, Hybbinette CH, Weckström J, Fredin H: Surgical experience related to dislocations after total hip arthroplasty. J Bone Joint Surg Br 1996;78:206-2

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Revision

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Dislocations within weeks or months Problems with soft-tissue tension :1- muscle weakness. 2- inadequate capsular healing and scarring. 3- component malposition.4- infection.5- patient noncompliance.

Late dislocations (beyond 1 year) may suggest :1- stretching of the soft tissues 2- polyethylene wear.

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Salvage procedures

• Constrained cup implantations• Dual-mobility hip components

• Bipolar Femoral Endoprosthesis

• Soft-tissue grafts

• Girdlestone resection

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THANKS

THANKS