OBJECTIVES: An experimental piglet model induces avascular necrosis (AVN) and deformation of the femoral head but its secondary effects on the developing acetabulum have not been studied. The aim of this study was to assess the development of secondary acetabular deformation following femoral head ischemia. METHODS: Intracapsular circumferential ligation at the base of the femoral neck and sectioning of the ligamentum teres were performed in three week old piglets. MRI was then used for qualitative and quantitative studies of the acetabula in operated and non-operated hips in eight piglets from 48 hours to eight weeks post-surgery. Specimen photographs and histological sections of the acetabula were done at the end of the study. RESULTS: The operated-side acetabula were wider, shallower and misshapen, with flattened labral edges. At eight weeks, increased acetabular cartilage thickness characterised the operated sides compared with non-operated sides (p < 0.001, ANOVA). The mean acetabular width on the operated side was increased (p = 0.015) while acetabular depth was decreased anteriorly (p = 0.007) and posteriorly (p = 0.44). The cartilage was thicker, with delayed acetabular bone formation, and showed increased vascularisation with fibrosis laterally and focal degenerative changes involving chondrocyte hypocellularity, chondrocyte cloning, peripheral pannus formation and surface fibrillation. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that femoral head AVN in the young growing piglet also induced, and was coupled with, secondary malformation in acetabular shape affecting both articular and adjacent pelvic cartilage structure, and acetabular bone. The femoral head model inducing AVN can also be applied to studies of acetabular maldevelopment, which is less well understood in terms of developing hip malformation. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2014;3:130-8.
OBJECTIVES: An experimental piglet model induces avascular necrosis (AVN) and deformation of the femoral head but its secondary effects on the developing acetabulum have not been studied. The aim of this study was to assess the development of secondary acetabular deformation following femoral head ischemia. METHODS: Intracapsular circumferential ligation at the base of the femoral neck and sectioning of the ligamentum teres were performed in three week old piglets. MRI was then used for qualitative and quantitative studies of the acetabula in operated and non-operated hips in eight piglets from 48 hours to eight weeks post-surgery. Specimen photographs and histological sections of the acetabula were done at the end of the study. RESULTS: The operated-side acetabula were wider, shallower and misshapen, with flattened labral edges. At eight weeks, increased acetabular cartilage thickness characterised the operated sides compared with non-operated sides (p < 0.001, ANOVA). The mean acetabular width on the operated side was increased (p = 0.015) while acetabular depth was decreased anteriorly (p = 0.007) and posteriorly (p = 0.44). The cartilage was thicker, with delayed acetabular bone formation, and showed increased vascularisation with fibrosis laterally and focal degenerative changes involving chondrocyte hypocellularity, chondrocyte cloning, peripheral pannus formation and surface fibrillation. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that femoral head AVN in the young growing piglet also induced, and was coupled with, secondary malformation in acetabular shape affecting both articular and adjacent pelvic cartilage structure, and acetabular bone. The femoral head model inducing AVN can also be applied to studies of acetabular maldevelopment, which is less well understood in terms of developing hip malformation. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2014;3:130-8.
Entities:
Keywords:
Acetabulum; Avascular necrosis; Femoral head; Hip deformity; Piglet model
Assessing development of secondary acetabular deformation in
piglets following induction of femoral head ischemia, avascular
necrosis, and deformation.Secondary acetabular malformation is induced by, and coupled
with, femoral head deformation in a piglet avascular necrosis (AVN)
model.Operated side acetabula are progressively wider, shallower and
misshapen, with flattened labral edges.Acetabular cartilage is thicker, with delayed acetabular bone
formation and shows increased vascularisation with fibrosis laterally
and early focal degenerative surface changes.This study is the first to demonstrate secondary acetabular malformation
in a piglet femoral head ischemia/AVN model – and it can be a valuable
and clinically relevant experimental model for studying the development of
acetabular malformation.This study only reports initial observations, and more investigation
will be needed for definitive correlations.
Introduction
Intracapsular surgical ligation at the base of the femoral neck
and sectioning of the ligamentum teres is an excellent model for
inducing ischemia, necrosis, and deformation in the immature piglet
femoral head.[1-4] A piglet model creating
avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head by surgical intervention
at the base of the neck also causes secondary changes to develop
in the acetabulum, even though no surgical interventions on the
acetabulum are undertaken. We have assessed these acetabular changes
by multiple methods to show the close relationship between developing
deformity on both sides of the joint. MRI with gadolinium enhancement,
demonstrates age-related vascular changes in the developing epiphysis and
metaphysis of normal piglet femurs[5] and the repair/deformation response
in the necrosis model.[2-4] It also outlines
normal acetabular development and acetabular changes following femoral
head deformation. The development of the acetabulum (with involvement
of three bones: ilium, ischium, and pubis) from the pelvic cartilage
and the physeal tri-radiate cartilage is known from anatomical studies[6-15] but is assessed infrequently in
relation to the pathogenesis of hip deformity. In a recent study
with the femoral neck ligation–ligamentum teres sectioning model,
we applied three dimensional CT scanning to show the close coupling
of acetabular deformation to femoral head deformation.[16] In this study,
we use a model in three-week-old piglets and assess the secondary
development of acetabular deformity by inspection of the intact
acetabula, their histological appearance, and qualitative sequential
MR imaging.
Materials and Methods
Acetabula were assessed from eight Yorkshire piglets. Surgical
procedures on the femur were undertaken at three weeks of age and
all piglets were killed by eight weeks post-surgery (eleven weeks
of age). Normal piglet acetabular development was assessed from
the non-operated contralateral side. The piglets began walking as
soon as the anesthesia wore off. They limped for two or three days on
the operated side, but resumed full weight-bearing on the operated
lower extremity, which continued throughout the time of the experiment.
The femoral findings have been described in detail in our previous
article.[4]
Operative technique
Anesthesia was induced with an intramuscular (IM) injection of
midazolam hydrochloride (Baxter, Deerfield, Illinois) 40 mg/kg,
and ketamine hydrochloride (Ketalar; Parke-Davis, Morris Plains,
New Jersey) 20 mg/kg. Ketamine hydrochloride 20 mg/kg and xylazine
5 mg/kg (Rompun; Mobay, Shawnee, Kansas) were given 30 minutes later.
A continuous intravenous (IV) infusion of diprivan 1% (Propofol;
AstraZeneca, Wilmington, Delaware) in 5% dextrose was used at 0.002 mg/kg/minute
for maintenance. An oral airway was placed and blow-by oxygen was
given at 4 L/minute.The right hip was approached by lateral incision, with the piglet
lying on its left side. A linear 6 cm incision, parallel to the
femur, was centred over the tip of the greater trochanter. Dissection
to the trochanter and anterior joint capsule was done between muscles,
leaving them intact. Anterior capsulotomy and longitudinal traction
on the lower extremity allowed for subluxation of the femoral head
from the acetabulum. Long-curved scissors were used to cut the ligamentum
teres. Femoral head ischemia was induced using a doubled #2 silk
ligature placed circumferentially and tied tightly around the base
of the femoral neck within the hip joint capsule. The acetabulum
was not interfered with surgically. The capsule, musculotendinous
structures, subcutaneous tissues and skin were closed with absorbable
sutures. Skin dressings and post-surgical splinting were not used.
The non-operated left hip served as a control.
MR Imaging technique
MRI at 1.5 Tesla (GE Medical Systems, Milwaukee, Wisconsin) used
a pair of 3 inch receive-only surface coils. Each study was performed
under general anesthesia using a single IM injection of ketamine hydrochloride
20 mg/kg and xylazine 5 mg/kg, followed by a continuous IV infusion
of diprivan 1% in 5% dextrose at 0.002 mg/kg/min. Studies were performed
with the piglets lying in the lateral decubitus position, with the
non-operated hip down. In all animals, conventional MRI including
T1, T2 and spoiled gradient recalled echo images, were obtained
with 2.5 mm section thickness, 0.625 mm in-plane resolution, and
20 cm field of view. T1-weighted images were acquired, with repetition
time (msec)/echo time (msec) of 500/9 and one signal acquired. T2-weighted
images were acquired with 2000/60 and two signals acquired. Depending
on the age and size of the piglet, there were usually six to nine
coronal plane images per femoral head and acetabulum. Gadopentetate dimeglumine
(Magnevist; Berlex, Wayne, New Jersey) an IV contrast agent was
also used at 0.2 mmol/kg, injected in a rapid bolus into an ear
vein 10 seconds after beginning dynamic gadolinium-enhanced MRI.
Enhancement was evaluated using a spoiled gradient echo sequence
(200/2; flip angle, 60°; section thickness, 3 mm; in-plane resolution,
0.625 mm; field of view, 20 cm). Five images were acquired per section.
MRI was performed post-surgery under general anesthesia at 48 hours
and one, two, four and eight weeks. One piglet was killed at two
weeks to document early changes. One developed limping, discomfort
and delayed infection on the operated side and was killed at four
weeks, with analyses used only from 48 hours and one and two week
time periods, when clinical and MRI were unremarkable. The remaining
piglets were assessed until eight weeks post-surgery.
Statistical analysis
Measurements were made of surface cartilage thickness (articular cartilage and adjacent acetabular
cartilage) at each time period on operated and non-operated sides
at anterior, middle, and posterior coronal plane segments. For each
segment, measurements were made medially, in the middle, and laterally,
and the mean was determined to provide a single value. Differences between
the two sides (ligated versus non-operated control
hips) at each time point were evaluated using repeated-measures
analysis of variance (ANOVA), with Bonferroni-adjusted comparisons
preceded by the Greenhouse-Geisser F-test to determine significance.
Two-tailed p-values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Data
analysis was performed using SPSS software (version 19.0, SPSS Inc.,
IBM, Chicago, Illinois). Additional measurements were made on the
MR images of the operated side and non-operated side acetabula at
eight weeks post-surgery in five piglets to document acetabular
width and depth. The width of the acetabulum was measured in the same
planes on both sides from the tips of the acetabular labrum, from
anterior to posterior. The acetabular depths were then measured
from this transverse line passing radially at right angles to anterior
and posterior segments to the acetabular articular cartilage surface.
Structural photographic and histologic
studies
After the final MRI, each piglet remained anesthetised and was killed
with an intracardiac injection of Fatal-Plus (pentobarbital sodium;
Vortech Pharmaceuticals, Dearborn, Michigan). The acetabula on both
sides from four piglets were removed intact by sectioning the pubic,
iliac, and ischial bones to include the complete tri-radiate cartilage. Photographs
were taken of operated and non-operated acetabula and proximal femurs
after removal. Multiple histological sections in multiple planes
from the four operated acetabula and the four non-operated contralateral
control acetabula, were made. Acetabular specimens were fixed in
10% neutral buffered formalin for two to four weeks, followed by
decalcification in 25% formic acid until soft. Some specimens were
cut in the coronal plane, but most were cut to include the complete
cross-sectional diameter of the acetabulum from the outer labrum
to the tri-radiate cartilage posterior to the socket. Tissues were
placed in increasing concentrations of alcohol, infiltrated and
embedded in paraffin, cut at 7 µm thickness, and stained with 1%
toluidine blue or hematoxylin and eosin. The study was approved
by the institution’s Animal Care and Use Committee.
Results
All piglets recovered well from surgery and at 48 hours, all demonstrated
completely ischemic and fully located femoral heads. Photographs
of coronal plane decalcified sections of operated and non-operated
side acetabula eight weeks following proximal femoral surgery showed
considerable secondary deformation of the acetabulum on the operated side
(Fig. 1). The markedly deformed shape of the AVN femoral head compared
with the normal opposite side non-operated head could have been
expected to cause abnormal modelling of the actively growing adjacent
acetabulum (Figs 2 and 3). With specific inspection, we found the acetabula
on the operated side to be wider with flattened labral rims, shallower
and misshapen in relation to the abnormally shaped femoral head.
The three-dimensional nature of the acetabular deformities on the
operated side could be appreciated in the intact acetabular photographs. A
posterior view of the tri-radiate cartilages showed them to be present
and open on the operated side, even in the presence of marked acetabular
deformation. They were relatively wider in some regions, but not
of uniform thickness.Photographs showing acetabula from mid-coronal
plane decalcified sections. Arrows point to the lateral acetabular
region. Top: normal acetabulum from non-operated side of piglet
at 11 weeks of age. Middle: outer portion of acetabulum from operated side
at 11 weeks of age illustrates shallower arc of the articular surface,
widened and blunted outer rim of acetabulum and reactive vessel
accumulation (brown linear densities). Bottom: outer portion of
acetabulum from operated hip at 11 weeks of age illustrates diminished
arc of articular surface and asymmetric overgrowth of cartilage
instead of the normal triangular outer rim.Top: photographs show operated side
acetabulum on the left and non-operated side on the right. Note
well defined outer rim on normal side and flattened rim with wider
opening on operated side. Below, the corresponding femoral heads
are shown. The femoral head and neck with avascular necrosis (AVN)
shows flatter, wider head with shorter neck and more prominent greater trochanter.Top. Photographs show deformed acetabulum
from operated side with flattened outer rim, shallow socket and
flattened outer cartilage surface (left). Normal non-operated acetabulum
(right) shows differences from operated side. Below, femoral heads
are seen in superior views. Asymmetric shape of operated femoral
head (left) is seen.Qualitative inspection of the MRI scans from both sides showed
the associated acetabular
under-development on the operated side primarily at the anterior
and supero-lateral region affecting the shape of the articular socket
(sloping or more oblique), with diminished subchondral bone formation
(Fig. 4). By eight weeks, MRI measurements demonstrated statistically
significant acetabular cartilage thickness changes, characterising
the operated sides in comparison with normal non-operated sides
(p < 0.001); the operated side cartilage was thicker (Table I).
Differences in anterior, middle, and posterior regions in operated versus non-operated
segments were 2.78 mm (sd 1.37) vs 1.76 mm
(sd 0.36); 2.48 mm (sd 0.88) vs 1.60
mm (sd 0.33); and 2.45 mm (sd 0.91) vs 1.62
mm (sd 0.38). Significant differences were not seen at
48 hours, and one and two weeks. By four weeks, significant differences
were noted in each of the segments with p-values < 0.001. Reactions
to surgery of the tri-radiate cartilage were slow to develop and reached
statistical significance only at eight weeks post-surgery. The ligated
side remained thicker than the non-operated side as the latter narrowed
(Table I). MRI changes between 48 hours and eight weeks are highlighted
in Table II.MRI (left) from operated hip eight weeks
post-surgery shows irregularly shaped femoral head (white arrow)
and abnormal acetabulum with bony under-development anteriorly.
Tri-radiate cartilage is abnormal and widened in parts. The ilium
is shown above with iliac crest apophysis. MRI (right) from the
normal hip shows the sphericity of the femoral head (white arrow)
and adjacent acetabulum. Tri-radiate cartilage and ilium are normal.Acetabulum MRI measurements for
ligated and control hips after surgery (n = 8). Data represent the
mean (sd). (ANOVA, analysis of variance)* Statistically significant.Acetabulum MRI changes between
48 hours and eight weeks**p values calculated based on the repeated-measures
ANOVA for each of the four measurements.The acetabular width was increased on the operated side compared
with the non-operated side at eight weeks in each of the five piglets
measured. The mean width on the operated side was 33.2 mm (sd 2.3)
(30.3 to 36.5) and on the non-operated side it was 29.2 mm (sd 1.4)
(p = 0.015) (27.8 to 31.1). Acetabular depth was less on the operated side
but was more abnormal anteriorly than posteriorly. The anterior depth was a mean of 4.4 mm (sd 1.2)
(3.2 to 5.8) on the operated side compared with 6.5 mm (sd 0.7) (p
= 0.007) (6.0 to 7.8) on the non-operated side and the posterior
depth was decreased less to a mean of 6.3 mm (sd 1.3) (4.7
to 7.6) compared with the normal 6.7 mm (sd 0.6) (p = 0.44)
(6.1 to 7.7). Acetabular width and anterior depth values were statistically
significant, but posterior depth value was not.Each of the three bones comprising the acetabulum (ilium, pubis,
and ischium) forms similar to an epiphyseal secondary ossification
centre (Fig. 5). On the non-operated side (Fig. 5), the articular
surface was spherical with well-ordered bone growth of iliac, ischial,
and pubic components, while the operated side (Fig. 6) lacked sphericity,
and showed individual bone underdevelopment and a misshapen articular
surface. At eight weeks post-surgery, histological sections of the
operated-side acetabula showed asymmetric shaping of these boney
centres and of the arc of the surface cartilage (Figs 1 and 6),
thicker cartilage (especially at the outer periphery), reactive
cartilage nodules at the peripheral labral area, increased vascularisation
(cartilage canals) at the peripheral cartilage accumulations, and early
degenerative cartilage changes involving empty chondrocyte lacunae,
areas of hypocellular cartilage, chondrocyte cloning, and some surface
fibrillation (Figs 1, 6, 7 and 8). The changes were focal and superficial
and were concentrated at the lateral periphery of the acetabular cartilage surfaces.
On occasion, peripheral fibrovascular pannus expanded onto the cartilage
surface (Figs 7 and 8). Chondrocyte death (empty lacunae), hypocellular
to acellular areas, and extensive chondrocyte circular cloning with excess
glycosaminoglycan synthesis surrounding each clone (Figs 7 and 8)
are characteristic of early osteoarthritic change. Clefts were sometimes
seen passing at right angles, or obliquely from the surface of the
cartilage and then transversely within the involved hypocellular/acellular areas.
Deeper changes involved pathologic vascular invasion, leading to
fibrosis with pelvic cartilage disruption (Fig. 8).Left: Histological cross-section of
acetabulum of non-operated side at 11 weeks of age at time of death.
Note sphericity of articular cartilage surface and well-ordered
endochondral bone development of each of ischial, iliac, and pubic
bones. At right, photomicrograph of bipolar physeal region is shown between
two adjacent bones in the normal non-operated side (hematoxylin
and eosin stain).Photomicrograph of histologic cross-section
of the acetabulum from the operated side eight weeks post-surgery
shows markedly abnormal articular cartilage surface shape, under-developed
and asymmetric bones and relatively more extensive persisting cartilage
(hematoxylin and eosin stain).Histologic sections from the lateral
region of the acetabular articular cartilage showing (top figure)
multiple abnormal intracartilaginous vessels and fibrovascular invasion
(lower right); (middle figure) peripheral fibrocartilaginous reactive tissue,
with pannus fibrovascular overgrowth and circular cartilaginous
clones in otherwise hypocellular area; and (lower figure) hypocellular
cartilage surface with fibrillation and transverse cleft.Histology sections show normal sequence
from the articular surface to the bone of the ilium (left side).
On the right, abnormal articular cartilage from the operated-side
acetabula shows surface abnormalities with acellular regions, superficial transverse
tears (top); pannus, acellular cartilage with empty chondrocyte
lacunae, chondrocyte clones (middle) and superficial transverse
fissures through acellular cartilage clone region (lower).
Discussion
The piglet femoral head AVN model also induces secondary changes
in acetabular structure as the growing acetabulum relates to the
progressively misshapen femoral head. The piglet femoral head always
becomes misshapen in this model, due to the induced necrosis, continued
weight-bearing, and asymmetric repair with revascularisation.[1,3,4] The
femoral head deformities previously described,[4] to which the acetabula
in this study were relating, involved a shortened head and neck
with normal trochanteric growth (coxa vara), with the head widened
and oval to resemble a partially flattened shape. The articular
surface of the heads was intact but uneven, with localised flattening and depression most prominent laterally
and centrally; the normal spherical shape of the medial portion
of the femoral head was better preserved and often close to normal
(Fig. 2).The acetabular changes were significantly developed in all piglet
hips and in all segments of the cartilage by four weeks post-surgery,
persisting and worsening at eight weeks (Table I). The abnormalities
included shape changes (asymmetric circumferences, wider and shallower
acetabula), persistence of cartilage with delayed iliac supra-acetabular
bone formation, cartilage labral flattening with cartilaginous lipping,
and early signs of articular cartilage degeneration. This report
and our recent CT imaging study[16] are
the first to demonstrate the development and characteristics of
acetabular maldevelopment in the piglet femoral head ischemia model.
In this model, the head and neck deformities are analogous to those
in childhood Legg–Perthes disease. MRI and specimen measurements begin to quantify
the observations of acetabular changes in a valuable way. We have
expanded our work with the AVN model to further study the development
of acetabular deformation coupled with femoral head deformation,
by use of serial CT imaging, to which we apply a shape analysis
computational algorithm technique that captures the temporal shape
changes of the femurs and acetabula, along with their co-dependencies.[16] This method concentrates
on the quantitative tracking of the temporal progression of the
disease and the deformation process.With early development of the piglet hip in utero,
the tri-radiate cartilage forms and acetabular development receives
contributions from iliac, ischial, and pubic segments.[6-15] While not seen on single two-dimensional
histological sections or on plain radiographs, there is continuity
of acetabular articular and adjacent pelvic cartilage (acetabular
cartilage hemisphere) and the tri-radiate cartilages. The intervening
pelvic cartilage (between the physeal tri-radiate and the acetabular
cartilage) is essentially epiphyseal cartilage (within which the iliac, ischial, and pubic bone
centres appear) homologous with the epiphyseal cartilages at the
ends of long bones.[9] Bucholz
et al[11] referred
to the acetabular articular cartilage and the adjacent pelvic cartilage
as the acetabular hemisphere. Ponseti[8] referred to yet another region of acetabular
cartilage at its periphery as the ring apophysis in continuity with
the growth plates of ilium, ischium, and pubis and with the three
flanges of the tri-radiate cartilage. Harrison[9,15] and others[10,11] refer
to this area as a natural continuation of more internal tissue,
calling it “the articular cartilage at the acetabular rim”[15] rather than an
implied specific structure. Some studies have demonstrated these
cartilage continuities.[9,10,11]In children with Legg–Perthes, the acetabulum reacts with altered
growth to abnormalities in both the shape and position of the femoral
head[17-23] in a similar way
to that shown in the piglet AVN findings. Acetabular and femoral head
overgrowth in parallel fashion have been noted,[17] along with premature
fusion of the tri-radiate cartilage, hypertrophy of articular cartilage,
changes in acetabular dimensions, and increased acetabular uptake
in bone scans indicative of increased vascular supply.[18,19] Decreases in depth and irregularity
in the shape of acetabula with Perthes have been reported, with
secondary acetabular changes developing in proportion to femoral
head involvement.[20] Multiple
measurements on affected and non-involved acetabula of 34 patients
with Perthes had findings similar to the piglet model.[21] Irregularity of
the acetabulum was directly proportional to the extent of femoral
head involvement, with increase in size, decrease in depth, an irregular
contour on the affected side and sloping and shallowness of the superolateral
cartilaginous part of the acetabulum. The malformed femoral head
also seemed to affect the peripheral lateral superior labrum, an observation
also made in the model. CT and MRI scans have documented acetabular
changes in children with Perthes’ disease[22] and studies of 62 acetabula in Perthes disease
found the opening angle and diameter of the acetabulum increased
on the involved side.[23]Acetabular maldevelopment similar to developmental dysplasia
of the hip has been induced experimentally in skeletally immature
rat and rabbit modelling by removing or displacing the femoral head[15,24] or by immobilising the knee in extension
with a Kirschner (K-)-wire.[25] Acetabular growth
becomes narrower, shallower, and smaller primarily at lateral acetabular
cartilage, with the tri-radiate cartilage relatively unaffected.
Studies specifically damaging the tri-radiate cartilage (rabbit)
show the ilio-ischial segment to be the most extensive component
for normal growth of the acetabulum.[26,27] In
the rabbit acetabular dysplasia model referred to above,[25] the abnormalities were
reversed by selective epiphysiodesis of the ilio-ischial limb of
the tri-radiate cartilage. AVN can also be produced in the lamb
by ligating the pericapsular vessels of the neck and sectioning
the ligamentum teres.[28]While the deforming effects of asymmetric growth at long bone
epiphyses are well understood clinically, negative effects on acetabular
and tri-radiate cartilages are not as well understood in relation
to clinical disorders of the hip. Figures 4 (right side) and 5 show
the well-ordered developing ischial, iliac, and pubic bones surrounded
by the endochondral sequence physis and hypertrophic cartilage zones,
while those bones undergo asymmetric development relating to deformed
femoral heads (Figs 4 (left side) and 6) with AVN. In this model,
the growth deformity of the acetabulum occurs primarily at the more laterally
and anteriorly positioned acetabular articular and adjacent pelvic
cartilage (acetabular hemisphere) but each of the three bones is
also affected.While far from definitive, measurements of the tri-radiate cartilage
are generally the same for several weeks in operated and non-operated
sides (Table I) until the later and final measurements, when the
operated side is statistically wider than the non-operated side
(Table II). This decrease on the control side may represent the beginning of slowdown
of normal growth, while the operated side shows an abnormal pattern. This
will be investigated in future studies. The acetabular articular
cartilage undergoes focal changes superficially, while the non-operated
side remains normal. These changes are concentrated laterally and
are similar to the well-known histological patterns of early osteoarthritic
change. The deeper adjacent pelvic cartilage suffers premature vascular and
fibrovascular invasion, damaging the normal sequence of cartilage
and pelvic bone formation. This study in the immature piglet hip
shows the close coupling of abnormal acetabular development to deformity
of the femoral head induced by AVN, with the most prominent changes
in the peripheral acetabular cartilage. It allows for more detailed studies
of the pathogenesis of acetabular deformation and of possible surgical
intervention, leading to biologic corrections.
Table I
Acetabulum MRI measurements for
ligated and control hips after surgery (n = 8). Data represent the
mean (sd). (ANOVA, analysis of variance)
Cartilage (mm)
Ligated Side
Control Side
Repeated-Measures
ANOVA (p-value)
Tri-radiate
48 hours
1.41 (sd 0.26)
1.69 (sd 0.31)
0.050*
One week
1.48 (sd 0.34)
1.63 (sd 0.40)
0.279
Two weeks
1.54 (sd 0.28)
1.61 (sd 0.40)
0.661
Four weeks
1.58 (sd 0.16)
1.60 (sd 0.23)
0.909
Eight weeks
1.50 (sd 0.36)
1.16 (sd 0.15)
0.049*
Anterior
48 hours
1.65 (sd 0.24)
1.69 (sd 0.16)
0.849
One week
1.83 (sd 0.41)
1.70 (sd 0.24)
0.527
Two weeks
1.73 (sd 0.22)
1.63 (sd 0.18)
0.558
Four weeks
2.68 (sd 0.76)
1.84 (sd 0.18)
< 0.001*
Eight weeks
2.78 (sd 1.37)
1.76 (sd 0.36)
< 0.001*
Middle
48 hours
1.53 (sd 0.24)
1.48 (sd 0.14)
0.799
One week
1.59 (sd 0.40)
1.58 (sd 0.29)
0.949
Two weeks
1.61 (sd 0.38)
1.40 (sd 0.29)
0.242
Four weeks
2.80 (sd 1.11)
1.66 (sd 0.15)
< 0.001*
Eight weeks
2.48 (sd 0.88)
1.60 (sd 0.33)
< 0.001*
Posterior
48 hours
1.25 (sd 0.54)
1.36 (sd 0.18)
0.564
One week
1.48 (sd 0.38)
1.41 (sd 0.21)
0.748
Two weeks
1.69 (sd 0.55)
1.29 (sd 0.20)
0.039*
Four weeks
2.56 (sd 0.89)
1.62 (sd 0.26)
< 0.001*
Eight weeks
2.45 (sd 0.91)
1.62 (sd 0.38)
0.002*
* Statistically significant.
Table II
Acetabulum MRI changes between
48 hours and eight weeks*
Control side
Tri-radiate: p = 0.003 (significant decrease at eight weeks, (31%))
Anterior: p = 0.82 (no change)
Middle: p = 0.64 (no change)
Posterior: p = 0.25 (no change)
Ligated side
Tri-radiate p = 0.38 (no change)
Anterior p < 0.001 (significant increase at eight weeks (68%))
Middle p < 0.001 (significant increase at eight weeks, (62%))
Posterior p < 0.0001 (significant increase at eight weeks, (96%))
*p values calculated based on the repeated-measures
ANOVA for each of the four measurements.
Authors: Nina M Menezes; Susan A Connolly; Frederic Shapiro; Elizabeth A Olear; Rafael M Jimenez; David Zurakowski; Diego Jaramillo Journal: Radiology Date: 2007-01 Impact factor: 11.105
Authors: Frederic Shapiro; Susan Connolly; David Zurakowski; Nina Menezes; Elizabeth Olear; Mauricio Jimenez; Evelyn Flynn; Diego Jaramillo Journal: J Bone Joint Surg Am Date: 2009-12 Impact factor: 5.284