Definition
- Nontraumatic or traumatic condition resulting in ishaemic, segmental, bone death of femoral head
Introduction
- Generally young-middle age males
- 20-50 years (average 38 years)
- M:F » 4:1
- Bilateral
- 50% without steroids
- 80% with steroids
Aetiology & Pathogenesis
- Unknown
- Controversial & multifactorial
- Multiple theories
- Interruption arterial supply
- Capillary occlusion
- Intraosseous capillary tamponade (intraosseous HTN)
- Injury to vessel wall
- Most Idiopathic are really is undiagnosed alcoholism
- Need very little to be a risk (> 400ml/ weeks)
Vascular & Non Vascular Theories
Vascular
- Can be classified into the 4 categories above
Non Vascular
- Cytotoxics with transplantation
- Osteocyte death
- Steroids
- Some authors claim steroids cause direct cell necrosis
- DXRT
At Risk
Alcohol
- MOA uncertain
- Altered fat metabolism with fat emboli & fat marrow cells
- Capillary occlusion + Intraosseous HTN
- Bilateral 50-80%
- Often affects other sites
Steroids
- MOA probably from altered fat metabolism
- Steroids cause osteoblastic stem cells to become fat cells
- Apidogenesis
- Existing marrow fat cells undergo hyperplasia & hypertrophy
- Capillary occlusion + Intraosseous HTN
- Cumulative
- Dose x Time
- Overall risk 3-25%
- Onset ~ 6/12 » 3 years after steroid use
- Usually bilateral (80%) & multiple sites
Caisson Disease
- N² in blood vessels & extravascular
- Compressed air workers ~ 20%
- Army divers ~ 5%
- Location
- Medullary > Juxtacortical
- Humeral Head > Femoral
Pathology & Pathogenesis
- Wedge-shaped area of necrosis
- Nontraumatic typically starts in Anterolateral head
- Crescent Sign
- Separation of subchondral plate from necrotic cancellous bone
- Cysts
- Regions of bone reabsorption
- Failure is by accumulated stress fracture
- Natural History is to progress to collapse in > 90%
- Secondary Osteoarthritis results
- Poor healing response
- Worst centrally
- Partial peripherally
- Can use the following to discuss it
- 1. Necrosis
- 2. Inflammation/ Revascularisation
- 3. Repair
- 4. Remodelling
- 5. Secondary Osteoarthritis
Classification of Pathology
- Arlet & Durroux 1973
- All 4 can occur at one time
- Cartilage not necrotic
- Poor correlation with clinical stage
Type | Description |
---|---|
1 | (Not Diagnostic) Haematopoietic marrow disappears Lipocytes separated by oedema Presence of foam cells |
2 | Necrotic marrow |
3 | Complete medullary & trabecular necrosis No evidence of vascular abnormality at this time |
4 | New bone laid on dead trabeculae – repair Complete necrosis with dense medullary fibrosis Four causes for Sclerosis in Dead Bone New bone apposition (on dead trabeculae) Micro-fracture/ Subchondral fracture Marrow saponification (calcified dead marrow) Relative osteopenia in surrounding bone (from inflammation) |
Clinical Presentation
- Pain, worse with weight bearing
- Decreased ROM
- Sectoral Sign
- Tendency for ER on passive Flexion
- IR with hip Extended > IR in Flexion
Classification
Ficat 1985 + Modified by Hungerford
Stage | Description |
---|---|
0 | MRI positive Double line positive on T2 Typically seen as the “silent contralateral hip” Preclinical Pre XR Cold scan |
1 | Clinically evident Pre XR Increased uptake on bone scan |
2 | Diffuse porosis Sclerosis either localized or linear arc Cystic areas of reabsorption |
3 | Collapse/ Flattening typically superior anterolateral head Crescent sign = subchondral fracture Preserved joint space |
4 | Osteoarthritis superimposed on a deficient head |
Steinberg
- Divided Ficat III into
- A = Collapse
- B = No Collapse
- Divided Extent of Head Involved
- Mild < 15%
- Mod 15-30%
- Severe > 30%
Japanese Investigation Committee
- Added XR location
XR Location | Outcome | |
---|---|---|
A | Medial | Good |
B | Central | Intermediate |
C | Lateral | Poor |
ARCO
Stage | Description |
---|---|
0 | Bone biopsy = AVN All other Ix normal |
1 | Normal X-ray MRI +ve |
2 | Typical X-ray changes no collapse |
3 | Collapse For stage 3 collapse on XR subdivided A = 2mm or < 15% B = 2-4mm or 15-30% C = > 4mm or > 30% |
4 | Osteoarthritis |
Kerboul Combined Necrotic Angle (JBJS-B 1974)
- Guide to outcome
- Based on AP & Lateral XR
- AP + Lateral Necrotic Wedge Angle
- > 200° = Poor outcome expected
Investigations
XRay
- AP
- Mottling
- Sclerosis
- Wedge
- Collapse
- Frogleg Lateral
- Early Anterior collapse
CT
- Limited place
- Can diagnose early collapse & flattening
- ie distinguish grade II & III
- 1/3 of Grade II upgraded to III by CT
Te Scan
- Sensitivity 80%
- Nonspecific
- Decreased uptake = infarction
- Increased uptake = alive bone repairing
- Pathognomonic “doughnut sign”
- (cold ischaemic bone in hot revascularisation zone)
- “Cross-over” point may be false negative
- Most useful to investigate if head vascular after subcapital fracture
- Te99 antimony colloid
- Taken up by bone marrow 4x more readily than sulfur colloid
- Successfully predicting AVN following subcapital fracture within 24 hours
MRI
- Sensitivity – 100% in one series
- Very useful in Grade 0
- Signal
- Normal marrow rich in fat = High signal intensity on T1
- Dead marrow = Decrease in signal intensity on T1
- T1 Single Line Sign
- Earliest
- Avascular/ Vascular bone interface
- T2 Double Line Sign
- Two lines
- 1. Avascular/ Vascular bone interface
- Outer line of low signal Intensity
- 2. Hypervascular Granulation Tissue
- Inner line of high signal intensity
- 1. Avascular/ Vascular bone interface
Functional Exploration of Bone
- Invasive 3 part investigation
- 1. Bone Marrow Pressure (> 30mmHg abnormal)
- 2. Intramedullary Venography
- 3. Core Biopsy
- High sampling error
- Perform if doing Forage
- Now replaced by MRI
Diagnosis
- is established if any of the following are found
- Pathognomonic radiographic changes
- Collapse of femoral head
- Anterolateral sequestrum
- Crescent sign
- Double line on T2 MRI
- “Cold in Hot” bone scan
- Positive finding on biopsy
Natural History
- Asymptomatic Stage 0
- 83% don’t progress after 5 years (Jergensen JBJSB 1995
- Stage I – 88%
- Stage II – 71%
- Stage III – 27%
- Stulberg Clinical Orthopaedics 1991
- Controlled forage vs nonoperative
- Success (no need for arthroplasty) 75% vs 29%
- Metanalysis of 24 studies involving 1206 hips at 3 years
- 37% did not progress radiologically
- 33% required arthroplasty
- Success related to stage
- Stage I – 84%
- Stage II – 65%
- Stage III – 47%
- Other Forage Series
- Less success
- ? Due to continued use steroids
- ? Due to >30% head involvement
- Less success
- Gold standard in Stage I & II
- Temporarily palliative in more severe lesions
- 83% don’t progress after 5 years (Jergensen JBJSB 1995
- 2. Cortical Bone Grafts
- Fibular, tibial, or iliac crest struts
- Mechanical & biologic support
- Tip of graft supports cartilage
- NWB 3-6 months until radiographic evidence of healing
- May be useful if forage fails in stage I & II ?
- Contraindicated in Grade III
- Early success 75%
- Long term success 30%
- 3. Window Technique
- Cartilage trapdoor or Cortical window
- Evacuate necrotic bone
- Pack with Cancellous Bone
- Good-Excellent results in 60-80% Grade II & III
- Meyer Trapdoor 1991
- Grade III Good-Excellent 8/9 patients at 3 years
- 4. Vascularized Bone Grafts
- Urbaniak 1987
- To enhance revascularisation so that progression of necrosis altered
- Vascularised grafts undergo more rapid & complete incorporation
- Technically difficult & need the resources
- Considerable variability
- Donor site
- Fibula
- Ilium
- GT
- Muscle pedicle artery & vein used
- Inferior gluteal
- Profunda femoris
- Circumflex
- Must keep NWB for 6/12 to 1 year
- Similar results as forage
- Most studies have short term follow up in small numbers
- Most comprehensive is Yoo – 81 hips at 5 years
- Vascularised fibula to profunda femoris
- 91% of Stage 2 & 3 had Good-Excellent results
- 89% had no radiological progression
- However the rate of conversion to THR is identical to forage at 20%
- Indication
- stage II & early stage III
- Young patient
- Large lesion
- 5. Osteotomy
- Transfer load from necrotic area to undamaged part
- Transection of bone may afford decompression
- Procedure
- Maybe flexion / extension / valgus / varus or rotational
- If superolateral
- Valgus + Flexion
- If central
- Varus + Flexion
- Disadvantage
- osteotomy makes subsequent THR difficult
- Indications
- Stage III disease
- Small lesion (Kerboul combined necrotic angle < 200°)
- No ongoing cause for AVN
- Types
- A. Varus/ Valgus Intertrochanteric Osteotomy
- Best early
- Rotate necrotic area out of WB if possible
- Use CT/ MRI & Adduct + Abduction XR to decide osteotomy type
- Aid union of subcapital fracture nonunion
- Hungerford 1994 Varus Osteotomy
- Grade III after 11years
- 74% overall
- 86% if CNA < 200°
- Scher 1993 Valgus Osteotomy
- 80% if steroids
- Better results in grade III than forage
- Poor if
- CNA > 200°
- Due to steroids
- Contraindicated
- Grade III with total head involvement
- Grade IV
- Indicataion
- Typical patient will be young & active
- Ficat III & < 30° involvement
- B. Sugioka Osteotomy 1978
- Transtrochanteric rotational osteotomy
- Anterior rotate in axis of neck
- Can rotate through 90°
- Technically demanding
- Variable reproduction
- High complication rate
- Poor results if not intertrochanteric with damage to blood supply of the head
- Abandoned by some
- Sugioka’s Indications
- Early Disease with < 2/3 collapse on lateral
- Sugioka osteotomy in 52 hips Stage III
- 56-69% at average of 5 years successful
- If > 50% involved then results poor
- Deterioration with time – only 40% of hips surviving 7-10 years
- Makes THR more difficult
- A. Varus/ Valgus Intertrochanteric Osteotomy
- 6. Electrical Stimulation
- Experimental
- Improves forage results
- ? Future adjuvant to surgery
Salvage After Collapse
1. Osteotomy
- Aim is to prevent collapse
- Move the avascular segment away WB area
- Also decompress intraosseous HT
- May be flexion / extension / varus / valgus / rotation
- Contraindicated with advanced collapse & grade IV
2. Osteochondral Allografts
- Experimental
3. Hemiarthroplasty
- Poor results
- 50% revision rate
- Loosening & Protrusio biggest problems
- Study showed almost universal acetabular cartilage disease at time of arthroplasty
4. THR
- If advanced
- Predictable
- Worse results than Osteoarthritis
- Younger age group
- High activity
- Poorer bone stock
- Ongoing systemic disease
- Defects in mineral metabolism
- Osteonecrosis in calcar & acetabulum as well
- 25 studies
- high failure rate
- 30-50% revision rates at 10 years
- In < 50 yo with AVN cemented THR (metal on poly) has 50% failure rates at 10 years (Dorr)
5. Arthrodesis
- If young active patient with traumatic AVN
- Usually contraindicated if due to Alcohol or Steroids (80% bilateral)
Guiding Principles
- Try to stop aetiology
- Stop alcohol
- Stop steroids if can
- Observe silent contralateral hip until painful
- But discuss option of Forage
- Offer all painful hips some Treatment
- Nonoperative has higher rate of progression
- Forage is Gold Standard for Stage I & II
- Stage I ~ 80% }
- Stage II ~ 60% } halts progression
- Stage III ~ 30% }
- Stage III management uncertain
- If young
- Still offer Forage as ~ 1/3 respond
- Consider trapdoor graft if early stage III & small
- Consider Osteotomy if CNA < 200°
- Probably only if very young & wedge < 15° ?
- Results not predictable especially with steroids
- THR if > 65 years
- If young
- Stage IV
- THR
- Gold Standard
- Poorer results
- Arthrodesis
- for young active patient with traumatic AVN (CI if caused by steroid or alcohol)
- THR