OSTEONECROSIS
Osteonecrosis of the hip is a well-described entity in which a portion of the
hip wall loses its blood supply and thus the bone underneath the cartilage dies.
This oftentimes can cause increases in pressure in the hip joint and if the
lesion is large enough, the cartilage above the dead bone will collapse causing
arthritis in the hip joint. Hip osteonecrosis is felt to be associated with
approximately 10% of all hip replacements done in this country, the majority of
which are done on young patients under the age of 50. There are several things
that are associated with the occurrence of hip osteonecrosis. They include the
use of steroids, excessive alcohol consumption, deep sea diving, subtle
coagulopathies, and trauma. The symptoms are similar to that of arthritis of the
hip where the patient oftentimes has an achy-type pain which he or she will
describe as being deep within the hip joint itself. On x-rays, you oftentimes
will not see any joint destruction. Instead, you will see some changes within
the substance of the bone on initial presentation. As the osteonecrosis (AVN)
progresses, the area of necrosis may collapse and arthritis may ensue. Physical
findings are also consistent with hip arthritis in that the patient will
complain of pain with internal or external rotation of the hip joint. Their
range of motion is not limited. They will have oftentimes full range of motion.
They may or may not have a limp and the limp is associated with pain. There is
no leg length inequality. Treatment options include core decompression either
with a single coring device or a multiple pin technique. We prefer using the
multiple pin technique since it reduces the complication rate of fracture. It
also allows the procedure to be done as an outpatient and allows the patient to
begin weight bearing or walking immediately after the surgery. With Stage I
disease, the success rate with core decompression is reported as high as 90%.
Other treatment options include osteotomies which is a breaking of the bone and
redirecting the bone in a different orientation so that the area of bone
necrosis is no longer under the weight bearing aspect of the hip. There is
vascularized fibular grafts in which they take the leg bone and put it into the
hip. This has been popularized by Dr. Urbaniak. He has reported reasonable
results with this technique. There is though a 10% incidence of ankle pain
associated with this procedure. There are techniques such as vascularized
pedicle grafting done primarily overseas. This has met with marginal success. My
partner and I have done techniques such as trapdoor where you will bone graft
the area of dead bone in hopes to prevent collapse and thus save the femoral
head and save the hip joint. Another new technique based on an old idea is the
placement of a tantalum rod, which is a new type of metal, into the femoral head
in the hopes that this will provide structural support to the area of necrosis.
There is limited data on this new technique. In Italy they report reasonable
results using this technique. Something that is currently gaining tremendous
popularity which we currently are doing under FDA approval, is a resurfacing hip
replacement. This is done using a minimal incision and replacing only the area
of dead bone with a resurfaced metal onto the femoral head and putting in an
acetabular component. The advantage of this technique is that there is a lower
dislocation rate and ideally an improved range of motion. It also potentially
allows the patient to increase his activities and live a fuller life feeling
more normal. If a revision operation is necessary, then the revision is
potentially an easier one to perform. Other treatment options for hip
osteonecrosis also include hip replacement. This historically has done very
well, although not as well as hip replacement for purely osteoarthritis.
LABRAL TEAR
The labrum of the hip is the cartilage lip
that surrounds the socket. It allows the socket to be deeper and keeps the
femoral head within the socket itself. Labral tears can occur from trauma, as
well as the normal process of degeneration from hip arthritis. The classic
labral tear occurs in the superior anterior portion of the labrum and is felt
to be associated with some type of twisting or impact injury. Patients will
oftentimes complain of a deep type pain that is associated with a locking type
sensation and a clicking sensation as well. The pain is oftentimes activity
related and is minimally improved with medication. The diagnosis of a labral
tear can oftentimes be made via an MRI, but there is a false-negative rate so
a hip arthroscopy is ultimately the definitive tool used to both treat and
diagnose a labral tear. Hip arthroscopy is a relatively new idea on an old
procedure. It is where you take a scope and you distract the hip and place the
scope into the hip joint thus allowing you to visualize the entire hip joint.
This technique should be done by someone who is experienced in both hip
arthroscopy and hip anatomy. About 10% of hips require an open type procedure
and thus should be performed by someone who is well-versed with the anatomy
about the hip. We at the Rubin Institute for Advanced Orthopedics perform
approximately 100 arthroscopies per year.