Hip Elective Flashcards
Examples of hip elective
-Osteoarthritis
-Greater trochanteric pain syndrome
-Dislocation
What is OA?
-Progressive loss of the articular cartilage
-2nd most common site of OA (knee = 1st)
Risk factors for OA
-Age
-Female (x2)
-Obesity
-Paediatric hip pathology (e.g., DDH, Perthes’, SCFE)
Presentation of OA
-Pain (chronic history of groin ache following exercise and relieved by rest)
-Stiffness (Short duration, <2 hours)
-Late: deformity, laxity (instability)
-Look and feel normally NAD
-Reduced ROM
=Reduced IR
=Reduced extension (fixed flexion deformity)
-+/- Trendelenburg or antalgic gait
Tonnis grading of radiological OA and Scoring systems
If features typical then clinical diagnosis made, plain x-rays otherwise first line
0: normal radiograph
1: mild sclerosis, mild joint space narrowing
2: moderate sclerosis and joint space narrowing, cysts in femoral head
3: obliteration of joint space, large cysts, loss of femoral head sphericity
LOSS: loss of joint space, osteophytes forming at joint margins, subchondral sclerosis, subchondral cysts
Oxford Hip Score for severity
Management of OA
-Conservative: weight loss, exercise (local muscle strengthening, general aerobic fitness), physiotherapy, walking aids
-Medical: NSAIDs (topical first line, proton pump inhibitor with oral, and avoid if aspirin), opioids (if used infrequently for short-term relief), intra-articular steroid (short-term benefit 2-10 weeks)
-Surgical: total hip replacement (definitive)
Describe greater trochanteric pain syndrome
-GTPS is a broad term used to describe
=Inflammation of the gluteal tendons insertion into the GT, and
=Inflammation of the trochanteric bursa
-A common cause of lateral ‘hip’ pain
-Commonly a sequalae of abnormal hip biomechanics
-Age 40-60* ♀»_space; ♂
Presentation of greater trochanteric pain syndrome
-Lateral thigh pain
-Worse with exercise and lying on affected side
-Look: NAD
-Exquisitely tender over GT )jumps off bed)
-Move: pain with single leg stance, ROM normal (no stiffness) but may be painful
Investigation of greater trochanteric pain syndrome
-Clinical
-However, the following may be useful:
=X/R – exclude OA
=MRI – diagnostic, but rarely required (gluteal muscles?)
=Diagnostic steroid injection into the hip (no benefit gained)
Management of greater trochanteric pain syndrome
-90% recover
-Conservative: Weight loss, PT, treat the cause (i.e., optimise their biomechanics)
-Medical: NSAIDs, steroid injection (blind or USS-guided)
-Surgical: possible, but extremely rare
Describe posterior hip dislocation
-Shortened, adducted, internal rotation
-In contrast to a #NOF when shortened and externally rotated
-Sciatic nerve injury common
Describe native hip dislocation
-High risk of avascular necrosis(AVN) of the femoral head, sciatic nerve injury and associated femoral fracture
-Reduce hip asap
Complications of total hip replacement
-Perioperative
=venous thromboembolism (4 weeks LMWH)
=intraoperative fracture
=nerve injury
=surgical site infection
-leg length discrepancy
-posterior dislocation
=may occur during extremes of hip flexion
=typically presents acutely with a ‘clunk’, pain and inability to weight bear
=on examination there is internal rotation and shortening of the affected leg
-aseptic loosening (most common reason for revision )
=prosthetic joint infection
Types of hip replacement
- Cemented hip replacement. A metal femoral component is cemented into the femoral shaft. This is accompanied by a cemented acetabular polyethylene cup
- Uncemented hip replacements are becoming increasingly popular, particularly in younger more active patients. They are more expensive than conventional cemented hip replacements
- Hip resurfacing is also sometimes used where a metal cap is attached over the femoral head. This is often used in younger patients and has the advantage that the femoral neck is preserved which may be useful if conventional arthroplasty is needed later in life
Minimising the risk of hip dislocation after surgery
-Avoiding flexing the hip > 90 degrees
-Avoid low chairs
-Do not cross your legs
-Sleep on your back for the first 6 weeks