avn of the femoral head
DESCRIPTION
AVN of the Femoral Head. Jeff Easom, D.O. Garden City Hospital. Introduction. Debilitating disease that usually leads to hip joint destruction 30 to 50 year old age group (avg. 33) Ten to twenty thousand new patients annually 5 to 12% of THA annually secondary to AVN BL in 50 to 80 of pts. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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AVN of the Femoral Head
Jeff Easom, D.O.
Garden City Hospital
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Introduction
Debilitating disease that usually leads to hip joint destruction
30 to 50 year old age group (avg. 33) Ten to twenty thousand new patients annually 5 to 12% of THA annually secondary to AVN BL in 50 to 80 of pts
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Etiology
Healthy cancellous bone replaced by dead trabecular bone.
Bone and marrow death can result from vascular interruption by various means and may extend to subchondral plate
Anterolateral femur predominantly affected
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Presumed mechanism of mechanical failure due to accumulated stress fractures of unrepaired necrotic trabeculae
“Crescent sign” - Earliest sign of mechanical failure
No collateral vasculature in areas of subchondral bone
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Clinical Conditions Assoc. with AVN
Corticosteroids(SLE, RA, renal transplant, asthma) ETOH, Sickle Cell, Gaucher, coagulation
deficiencies, myeloproliferative disorders, trauma, Caisson disease, radiation
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ETOH and corticosteroids account for approx 90% of AVN (non-traumatic)-Mont et al, JBJS, Vol 77A, No. 3, March 1995
Increased risk in individuals who drink as little as 400ml/week (JBJS, Vol 77A, No. 3, March 1995
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Pathogenesis
Multiple theories Thromboemboli, nitrogen bubbles, abnormally
shaped RBC’s, ^bone marrow pressure, radiation damage, altered lipid metabolism, vasoactive factor release as Gaucher disease
AVN is multifactorial in origin with a final common pathway
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Pathology
Subchondral infarcted bone>inneffective healing response>resorption of dead bone>replacement with fibrous and granulation tissue>thick trabeculae formation>cartilage collapse
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Clinical Features
Severe pain over anterior hip and groin (deep or throbbing pain)
Pain worsened with WB and motion (esp. forced internal rotation)
Acute or insiduous onset Night pain Positive Trendelenburg sign
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Diagnosis
AP/frog-leg lateral radiographs Bone scan/bone bx- not standard diagnostic test MRI - aids in determining extent. Earliest finding
is a single density line on T1-weighted images, double-line sign on T2-weighted images
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Diagnosis does not depend on a single finding, but based on the entire clinical picture, hx, and PE.
HIGH index of suspicion
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Staging
Ficat and Arlet - Based on standard radiographs Steinberg - Expanded Ficat and Arlet to include
extent of femoral head involvement Marcus Japanese Investigation Committee - Modified Ficat
and Arlet to include location of lesion
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Ficat and Arlet
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Steinberg
Mild - <15% of femoral head involved
Moderate – 15 to 30%
Severe - >30%
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Marcus
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ARCO(Association Research Circulation Osseous) - proposed new classification to include prior 3 classification systems. Not universally accepted or finalized yet.(JBJS,Vol 77-A, No. 3, March 1995)
Expanded Ficat and Arlet to incorporate concept of location of lesion on radiograph.
Type-A-medial, Type-B-central, and Type C-lateral
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Stage II
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Stage III
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Crescent sign – Early collapse of femoral head
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Stage IV
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MRI
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Natural History
Remains uncertain Studies have shown that > 85% rate of collapse
within 2 years when stages I and II symptomatic hips were left untreated
Overall, when the diagnosis is made, the condition will progress
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Non-Operative Treatment
Observation Protected Weight-Bearing 21 studies/819 hips - 182(22%) with satisfactory
clinical result with avg. f/u of 34 months. (Mont et al JBJS, Vol 77-A, No. 3, March 1995
Pharmacological Tx - Limited use and studies uncontrolled
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Preliminary investigation of vasoactive and lipid-lowering agents are ongoing at several centers
Electrical stimulation - Remains experimental. Mixed outcomes with published articles
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Operative Treatment
Core Decompression (with/without electrical stimulation). Stages I and II
Osteotomy(Varus, Flexion, Rotational). Stages III and IV
Non-Vascularized Bone-Grafting Vascularized Grafts Bipolar hemiarthroplasty, TARA, THA
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Core Decompression
Stage I and II - no subchondral fracture or collapse
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Mont et al, CORR, No. 324, March 1996
42 studies/2025 hips tx with core decompression(1206 hips) and non-operative management(819). Satisfactory results (63.5%/24 studies) of core decompression. 63% showed no evidence of radiograph disease prog.
22.7% success/21 studies of non-operative group
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84% femoral head survival with Stage I, 65% with Stage II, and 47% with Stage III in the core decompression group
35% hip survival rates for Stage I, 31% for Stage II, and 13% for Stage III in non-operative treatment group
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Stulberg et al, CORR, No. 268, July 1991
Prospective study over 4 year period 55 hips/36 patients 29 core decompression/26 non-operative Avg. age 38 Avg. f/u 27 months
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Result
Success based on HHS. Stage I - 70% (7/10 operative hips) and 20%(1/5) in non-operative hips. Stage II - 71% (5/7) and 0/7 of non-operative. Stage III - 73% (8/11) operative and 1/10 non-operative
Results of success based on HHS and not on radiographic criteria
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Core and Bone Grafting - Vascularized Fibular Graft
Attempts to enhance revascularization and arrest progression of necrosis
60 to 90% success rate Stage II, III, IV, V - Urbaniak
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Urbaniak et al, JBJS, Vol 77-A, No. 5, May 1995
Free vascularized fibular grafting in symptomatic AVN - prospective
103 hips/89 pts followed (median f/u 7 years Followed yearly with regard to HHS, radiographic
progression, and conversion to THA
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Results Probability of conversion to THA within 5 years
was 11%(Stage II), 23%(Stage III), 43% (Stage IV), 32% (Stage V)
HHS - Improvement from 56 to 80 (Stage II), 52 to 85 (Stage III), 41 to 76 (stage IV), and 36 to 75 (Stage V).
Radiographic progression occurred in 7/19 stage II, 21/22 stage III, 31/40 stage IV, and 16/22 stage V
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Osteotomy
Predicated on concept of realignment with relief of lesion from weightbearing zone (delivered from weight bearing or contained within acetabulum)
Varus, flexion, valgus-flexion, and rotational osteotomies
With lesions of a total of 200 degrees, osteotomy is not recommended
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All usually require an extended period of limited weight bearing of up to a year
Sugioka et al - Transtrochanteric rotational osteotomy. Technically demanding and results have not been duplicated
Various osteotomies exist with outcomes being widely varied
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Difficulty with osteotomy is the increased difficulty in obtaining a satisfactory result if a THA is necessary
93/105 THA’s after osteotomy had intraoperative difficulties(screw removal and femoral reaming)
Ideal candidate is stage III with a small lesion and no ongoing cause of AVN
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Additional Treatment Alternatives
Bipolar hemiarthroplasty - not recommended now TARA - Older design prosthesis yielded poor
results, while newer prosthetic design may yield better outcomes
Arthrodesis- Not widely advocated
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Hungerford et al, JBJS, Vol 80-A, No. 11, November 1998
33 hips/25 pts Ficat Stage III and early Stage IV-( collapse
without involvement of acetabulum) TARA (Depuy) Mean f/u – 10.5 years Mean age – 41 y.o. Femoral head resurfacing only
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Results
30 hips/91% survived at least 5 years Mean f/u 10.5 yrs – Overall, 20 hips(61%) had
good or excellent results based on HHS;13(39%) had fair or poor result and required THA
Mean interval b/w TARA and THA – 60 months
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HHS – Mean improvement from 38 points (range of 29 to 61 points) preoperatively to 91 points(range of 80 to 100.
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Conclusion
After determination of whether or not collapse has occurred, one must consider the extent of the lesion, which has been found to be important prognostically(lesions involving < 15% of femoral head fare better with all treatment method than moderate or severe lesions
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Medial (type-A) lesions have been found to have a much better prognosis than central (type-B), or lateral (type-C).
Overall, patients with multisystem disease or post transplantation state should have THA as a definitive procedure rather than preservation procedures
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Conservative tx – 20% survival rate at 3 to 5 years for Stage I and II AVN
Core decompression – 70 to 80% survival rate in Stage I and II AVN at 3 to 5 years
Vascularized fibular grafting – Clinical success approx 70 – 80% in Stage III, IV, and V AVN
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Osteotomy – 50 to 70% success rate at 5 years in Stage III AVN
THA – Higher rate of failure than for OA, but clinically better than alternatives for advanced disease
TARA – Best study represents 61% clinical success at 10.5 years