Thom E Snijders1, Koen Willemsen1, Steven M van Gaalen1, Rene M Castelein2,3,4, Harrie Weinans2,3, Arthur de Gast1. 1. 1 Clinical Orthopedic Research Centre - mN, Zeist, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 2. 2 Department of Orthopaedics, University Medical Centre Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 3. 3 Department of Rheumatology, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 4. 4 Department of Biomechanical Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: : Dislocation is 1 of the main reasons for revision of total hip arthroplasty but dislocation rates have not changed in the past decades, compromising patients' well-being. Acetabular cup orientation plays a key role in implant stability and has been widely studied. This article investigates whether there is a consensus on optimal cup orientation, which is necessary when using a navigation system. METHODS: : A systematic search of the literature in the PubMed, Embase and Cochrane databases was performed (March 2017) to identify articles that investigated the direct relationship between cup orientation and dislocation, including a thorough evaluation of postoperative cup orientation assessment methods. RESULTS: : 28 relevant articles evaluating a direct relation between dislocation and cup orientation could not come to a consensus. The key reason is a lack of uniformity in the assessment of cup orientation. Cup orientation is assessed with different imaging modalities, different methodologies, different definitions for inclination and anteversion, several reference planes and distinct patient positions. CONCLUSIONS: : All available studies lack uniformity in cup orientation assessment; therefore it is impossible to reach consensus on optimal cup orientation. Using navigation systems for placement of the cup is inevitably flawed when using different definitions in the preoperative planning, peroperative placement and postoperative evaluation. Further methodological development is required to assess cup orientation. Consequently, the postoperative assessment should be uniform, thus differentiating between anterior and posterior dislocation, use the same definitions for inclination and anteversion with the same reference plane and with the patient in the same position.
INTRODUCTION: : Dislocation is 1 of the main reasons for revision of total hip arthroplasty but dislocation rates have not changed in the past decades, compromising patients' well-being. Acetabular cup orientation plays a key role in implant stability and has been widely studied. This article investigates whether there is a consensus on optimal cup orientation, which is necessary when using a navigation system. METHODS: : A systematic search of the literature in the PubMed, Embase and Cochrane databases was performed (March 2017) to identify articles that investigated the direct relationship between cup orientation and dislocation, including a thorough evaluation of postoperative cup orientation assessment methods. RESULTS: : 28 relevant articles evaluating a direct relation between dislocation and cup orientation could not come to a consensus. The key reason is a lack of uniformity in the assessment of cup orientation. Cup orientation is assessed with different imaging modalities, different methodologies, different definitions for inclination and anteversion, several reference planes and distinct patient positions. CONCLUSIONS: : All available studies lack uniformity in cup orientation assessment; therefore it is impossible to reach consensus on optimal cup orientation. Using navigation systems for placement of the cup is inevitably flawed when using different definitions in the preoperative planning, peroperative placement and postoperative evaluation. Further methodological development is required to assess cup orientation. Consequently, the postoperative assessment should be uniform, thus differentiating between anterior and posterior dislocation, use the same definitions for inclination and anteversion with the same reference plane and with the patient in the same position.
Entities:
Keywords:
Acetabular cup; computer tomography; orientation; postoperative evaluation; radiographs; total hip arthroplasty
Authors: Joost H J van Erp; Thom E Snijders; Harrie Weinans; René M Castelein; Tom P C Schlösser; Arthur de Gast Journal: Arch Orthop Trauma Surg Date: 2021-06-08 Impact factor: 2.928
Authors: Joost H J van Erp; Tom P C Schlösser; Ariënne W Baijense; Thom E Snijders; Rob Stevenson; Willem Paul Gielis; René M Castelein; Harrie Weinans; Arthur de Gast Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2022-03-03 Impact factor: 4.379
Authors: Thom E Snijders; Tom P C Schlösser; Marijn van Straalen; René M Castelein; Rob P Stevenson; Harrie Weinans; Arthur de Gast Journal: Clin Orthop Relat Res Date: 2021-03-01 Impact factor: 4.755