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Femurs in patients with hip dysplasia have fundamental shape differences compared with cam femoroacetabular impingement.

Michael D HarrisBrecca M M GaffneyJohn C ClohisyCecilia Pascual-Garrido
Published in: Journal of hip preservation surgery (2024)
Femoral deformities are common in developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH), but decisions about how to treat them are not standardized. Of interest are deformities that may be akin to cam femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). We used three-dimensional and two-dimensional measures to clarify the similarities and differences in proximal femur shape variation among female patients with DDH ( n  = 68) or cam FAI ( n  = 60). Three-dimensional measures included femoral head asphericity, as well as shape variation using statistical shape modeling and principal component analysis (PCA). Two-dimensional measures included the α-angle, head-neck offset (HNO) and the neck-shaft angle (NSA). Significant shape variations were captured in the first five PCA modes, with the greatest shared variation between groups being the length from the lesser trochanter to the femoral head and greater trochanter height. Variations unique to DDH were irregularities at different areas of the femoral head, but not at the lateral femoral head-neck junction where variation was strong in FAI. The FAI group also had unique variations in greater trochanter shape. DDH femoral heads were less spherical, as indicated by larger sphere-fitting errors ( P  < 0.001). Radiographically, the DDH group had significantly smaller α-angles ( P  < 0.001), larger head-neck offsets ( P  = 0.02) and larger NSAs ( P  < 0.001). Both the articular and extra-articular regions of the proximal femur have distinct shape features in DDH and cam FAI that can uniquely affect the biomechanics of each disorder. Accordingly, approaches to addressing each disorder should be unique.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • body mass index
  • emergency department
  • body composition
  • minimally invasive
  • patient safety