Definition
- Medialisation of the medial wall of the acetabulum with a centre-edge angle > 40° on an AP XR of the pelvis
- Result of remodelling of weak, medial acetabular bone after multiple, recurring stress fractures
- Most often resulting secondary to inflammatory cause (inflammatory destruction) or metabolic cause (qualitative deficiency in the bone)
- Migration occurs along the resultant joint-reaction force vector (McCullum et al 1980)
Aetiology
Primary
- Otto Pelvis (Arthrokatadysis)
- Bilateral 1/3rd
- Middle aged females
- Pain & Decreased ROM early
- Coxa Vara & Osteoarthritis common
- ? Causally related to osteomalacia
- Diagnosis of exclusion
Secondary
- Inflammatory arthritis
- 15% of Rh arthritis of the hip
- 33% of ankylosing spondylitis of the hip
- Metabolic
- Osteomalacia – up to 50%
- Renal osteodystrophy
- Hyperparathyroidism
- Paget’s disease
- Osteoporosis
- Connective Tissue disorder
- Marfan’s
- Erler-Danlos
- Osteogenesis imperfecta
- Traumatic
- Central fracture-dislocation
- Septic arthritis
- Neoplastic
- Existing Prosthesis
- Hemiarthroplasty
- Seen in 5% of those with Osteoarthritis
Clinical findings
- Progressive pain & stiffness in groin
- Limp
- Trendelenberg +
- Antalgic gait
Investigations
Xray
- Position of femoral head in relation to medial wall acetabulum & pelvic brim = iliopectineal line
- Grade I Mild 1-5mm
- Grade II Moderate 6-15mm
- Grade III Severe > 15mm
- Medial wall (acetabular line) & it’s relation to ilioischial line (Kohler’s line)
- Men Normal = acetabular line 2mm lateral to I-I line
- Women Normal = 1mm medial to I-I line
- Grade I 3-8mm 6-11mm
- Grade II 8-13mm 12-17mm
- Grade III > 13mm > 17mm
- CE > 40°
Blood
- FBC
- ESR
- CRP
- RhF
- ANA
- Se electrolytes
Synovial Bx
Treatment
Skeletally immature
- Triradiate epiphyseodesis
- If coxa varus present then consider adding valgus intertrochanteric osteotomy
Skeletally mature adolescent/ young adult
- Valgus intertrochanteric osteotomy
- Indications
- significant symptoms with minimal degenerative changes in patient < 40 years
- Principle
- redirect joint-reaction force superiorly
- Pointers
- Amount of correction determined by amount of preoperative adduction
- Generally 20-30° correction desirable
- Lateralisation of the femur to correct mechanical alignment
- Soft-tissue release (esp psoas) to effect lateralisation & improve hip ROM
- Arthroplasty
- Replacement
- Resection
- Interposition
- Arthrodesis
Older adult
- THR
- THR in protrusio acetabuli
- Principles
- 1. Place hip centre in anatomic location
- To restore biomechanics
- 2. Restore bone stock
- Reconstruct segmental/ cavitatory defects of medial wall with bone graft
- Use intact peripheral rim for component fixation
- 1. Place hip centre in anatomic location
- Preoperative
- Define acetabular defect with appropriate imaging ~ 3D CT
- Template preoperative LLD
- Intraoperative
- Sciatic nerve should be identified as closer to joint
- Trochanteric Osteotomy may be required for exposure
- Dislocation may be very difficult
- Removal of rim bone – first try removing portion of posterior acetabulum
- Head delivery piecemeal
- May have to do neck osteotomy in situ
- Significant soft tissue release from femur needed
- Don’t ream medially or use centering hole
- Remove cartilage & soft tissue with curette
- Enlarge rim only with reamer
- Take care not to create peripheral defect
- Use one or more techniques to prevent medial migration
- Use wire mesh in floor
- Graft floor with morsellized bone
- Cup may be
- Uncemented rim fit cup
- Cemented cup into impaction graft
- Cemented cup into protrusio ring
- Large cup with flange
- Outcome
- adequacy of correction of the deformity correlates with long-term prosthetic survival
- Medial cup placement lead to high medial stresses cf. anatomic placement
- Metal-backed component effective due to superior stress dissipation of the metal cup
- Metal protrusio ring more reliably transfers stress from the medial wall to the rim than does protrusio cup
- Reinforcement of medial wall with cement & wire mesh not effective
- 50% reconstructed hips with cup centre > 10mm from anatomic hip centre failed
- Increased loosening cup with protrusio grade 1
- Multiple studies have shown excellent results with bone graft used to (1) lateralise the cup & (2) restore bone stock (usually femoral head morcellized or fragmented with or without cement)
- Most widely used approach today is fill defect with morcellized graft then use porous coated cup
- Ranawat & Zahn
- Principles
- THR in protrusio acetabuli
Degree of Protrusi | Management |
---|---|
Protrusio < 5mm | THR without BG |
Protrusio > 5mm with intact medial wall | THR with BG |
Protrusio > 5mm with deficient medial wall | THR with BG & additional fixation (uncemented cup with screw fixation or antiprotrusio ring) |