| Literature DB >> 26973840 |
Benjamin D Kuhns1, Alexander E Weber2, David M Levy1, Asheesh Bedi2, Richard C Mather3, Michael J Salata4, Shane J Nho1.
Abstract
Hip arthroscopy has become an increasingly utilized surgical technique for the treatment of the young, active patients with hip pain. The clinical outcomes of hip arthroscopy in this patient population have been largely successful; however, there is increasing interest in the contribution of hip capsule in postoperative clinical and functional outcomes. The structure and function of the normal hip capsule will be reviewed. Capsular contributions to hip stability will be discussed in the setting of hip arthroscopy with an emphasis on diagnosis-based considerations. Lastly, clinical outcomes following hip arthroscopy will be discussed as they relate to capsular management.Entities:
Keywords: capsular repair; capsulotomy technique; hip arthroscopy; hip capsule; hip instability; hip joint
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973840 PMCID: PMC4778552 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2016.00013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Figure 1Anatomy of joint capsule. Superficial gross anatomy of the hip capsule. The anterior capsule (A) is seen with the pubofemoral ligament visualized medially. The ILFL is best appreciated in the anterolateral position (B), and the ischiofemoral ligament can be seen posteriorly (C). AIIS, anteroinferior iliac spine; PFL, pubofemoral ligament; GT, greater trochanter; LT, lesser trochanter; ILFL, iliofemoral ligament; ISFL, ischiofemoral ligament.
Figure 2Images of the dynamic stabilizers of the hip capsule. (A) With the hip capsule positioned laterally, the rectus femoris is resected to reveal a fat pad between the iliocapsularis and gluteus minimus. (B) The fat pad is resected to demonstrate the “safe zone” for capsulotomy between the iliocapsularis and gluteus minimus overlying the anterior superior capsule. (C) With the hip in the anterior position, the gluteus minimus is partially resected to show the proximal attachment of the rectus femoris to the AIIS (*) and the attachment of its reflected head to the anterior superior capsule (#). IC, iliocapsularis; RF, rectus femoris; FP, fat pad deep to the rectus femoris; GM, gluteus minimus.
Subtypes of hip instability.
| Types of hip instability | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| Traumatic | Two types: (1) high impact event with frank joint dislocation; (2) hip subluxation resulting from microtrauma of repetitive supraphysiologic motion |
| Atraumatic | Associated with the borderline dysplasia and ligamentous laxity |
| FAI related | Posterior subluxation in the setting of FAI |
| Iatrogenic | Presents as gross dislocation (rare) and could be a mechanism for postoperative pain. Associated with non-repaired capsulotomy |
Figure 3Anteroposterior (A) and cross table (B) radiographs demonstrating a posterior hip dislocation. Anteroposterior (C) and Dunn (D) views demonstrating a borderline dysplastic patient (LCEA 21.6) with a cam deformity (AA 63).
Figure 4(A–F) Transverse and T-type capsulotomy. (A) The anterolateral portal is seen penetrating the capsule with the scope viewing through the mid-anterior portal. (B) The interportal capsulotomy as seen through the mid-anterior portal. The capsulotomy must begin at least 5 mm from the labrum to ensure adequate tissue for repair. (C) Complete interportal capsulotomy to a final length of 2–4 cm depending on the central compartment pathology. (D) To view the peripheral compartment, a T-capsulotomy is performed along the ILFL perpendicular to the interportal capsulotomy between the gluteus minimus and iliocapsularis. (E) The ILFL leaflets (#) and the reflected head of the rectus femoris (*) can be visualized in proximity to the T- capsulotomy. (F) The T-capsulotomy extends down the femoral neck to expose the CAM deformity. FH, femoral head; L, labrum.
Figure 5(A–F) Capsular repair. (A) Capsule repair is initiated by using a tissue penetrating device to pass suture through the lateral leaflet of the ILFL. (B) Suture is then passed through the medial leaflet of the ILFL (B), and a knot is tied after each successive stitch has been passed (C). The interportal capsulotomy is repaired by passing suture through the acetabular side of the ILFL (D) and femoral side of the ILFL (E). The repaired capsule visualized through the mid-anterior portal.
Outcomes of hip arthroscopy for FAI.
| Reference | Design | Patients (hips) | Follow-up (months) | Functional outcome scores |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ilizaliturri et al. ( | Retrospective case series | 13 (14) | 30 | 9.6 point increase in WOMAC |
| Philippon ( | Retrospective case series | 112 | 28 | 24 point HHS increase, median satisfaction 9/10 |
| Byrd and Jones ( | Retrospective case series | 200 (207) | 16 | 20 point HHS increase, 1.5% complication rate |
| Larson and Giveans ( | Retrospective cohort–control | 76 | 21 | Higher 1-year HHS scores in labral refixation (94.3) compared to debridement (88.9) groups ( |
| Schilders et al. ( | Retrospective cohort–control | 96 (101) | 29 | Higher improvement in 2-year HHS scores in labral refixation (33) compared to labral debridement (26) ( |
| Malviya et al. ( | Retrospective case series | 612 | 38 | Quality of Life increase from 0.946 to 0.974 ( |
| Skendzel et al. ( | Retrospective cohort–control | 323 | 73 | Average HHS, HOS-ADL, ad HOS-SS scores increased significantly from preoperative values. Patients with joint space >2 mm had higher increases in HOS-ADL (15 vs. −6; |
| Frank et al. ( | Retrospective cohort–control | 64 | 30 | Average HHS, HOS-ADL, ad HOS-SS scores increased for significantly from preoperative values ( |
| Domb et al. ( | Retrospective cohort–control | 403 | 24 | Average HHS, HOS-ADL, ad HOS-SS scores increased for significantly from preoperative values ( |