| Literature DB >> 31351447 |
Daichi Hayashi1, Elaine S Gould2, Corey Ho2,3, Dennis L Caruana4, David E Komatsu5, Jie Yang6, Chencan Zhu7, Musa Mufti2, James Nicholson5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heterotopic ossification (HO) is a relatively common complication following hip surgery treated with open reduction and internal fixation, total arthroplasty or hemiarthroplasty. Development of HO after hip surgery is an important clinical issue as it can affect functional status. We aimed to determine whether there was association between severity of heterotopic ossification about the hip and the interval between the time of hip fracture and surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Arthroplasty; Hip; Orthopedic procedures; Postoperative complications; Radiography
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31351447 PMCID: PMC6661104 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-019-2725-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Brooker classification of heterotopic ossification in the hip. a Class 0 – no heterotopic ossification is noted about the hip; b class 1 – small islands of soft tissue ossifications are noted about the hip (arrows); c class 2- a moderate spur (arrow) arising from the right acetabulum, leaving an osseous gap of greater than 1 cm measured from the greater trochanter; d class 3 – a very large spur (arrow) arising from the greater trochanter of the right proximal femur approaching the acetabulum, leaving an osseous gap of less than 1 cm; e class 4 – arrows show large spurs arising from the acetabulum and also greater trochanter of the right proximal femur, resulting in ankylosis
Brooker classification of heterotopic ossification in the hip
| Class | Definition |
|---|---|
| 1 | Islands of bone within the soft tissues about the hip |
| 2 | Bone spurs from the pelvis or proximal end of the femur, leaving at least 1 cm between opposing bone surfaces |
| 3 | Bone spurs from the pelvis or proximal end of the femur, reducing the space between opposing bone surfaces to less than 1 cm |
| 4 | Apparent bone ankylosis of the hip |
Descriptive table for patients’ characteristics and surgery information by HO class
| Variables | Total ( | HO class 0 ( | HO class 1 ( | HO class 2 ( | HO class 3+ (N = 15) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Days to surgery | 2 ± 3 | 2 ± 1 | 2 ± 3 | 2 ± 3 | 6 ± 6 | 0.0015 | |
| Age | 81 ± 11 | 82.5 ± 16 | 83 ± 11 | 80 ± 11 | 77 ± 10 | 0.2812 | |
| Gender | Female | 113 (74.83%) | 34 (30.09%) | 32 (28.32%) | 38 (33.63%) | 9 (7.96%) | 0.0705 |
| Male | 38 (25.17%) | 4 (10.53%) | 11 (28.95%) | 17 (44.74%) | 6 (15.79%) | ||
| Surgical Approach | Anterolateral | 4 (2.65%) | 0 (0.00%) | 3 (75.00%) | 1 (25.00%) | 0 (0.00%) | 0.1882 |
| Lateral | 33 (21.85%) | 5 (15.15%) | 8 (24.24%) | 15 (45.45%) | 5 (15.15%) | ||
| Posterior | 114 (75.50%) | 33 (28.95%) | 32 (28.07%) | 39 (34.21%) | 10 (8.77%) | ||
| Side of surgery | Left | 82 (54.30%) | 20 (24.39%) | 24 (29.27%) | 28 (34.15%) | 10 (12.20%) | 0.7383 |
| Right | 69 (45.70%) | 18 (26.09%) | 19 (27.54%) | 27 (39.13%) | 5 (7.25%) | ||
*For categorical variables, p-value was based on Chi-squared test with exact p-value from Monte Carlo simulation; for continuous variables, median +/− interquartile range were reported and p-value was based on Kruskal-Wallis test
Fig. 2Distribution of subjects according to the number of days to surgery. A majority of patients (90 of 151, 59.6%) had a surgical intervention within 2 days of injury. Subjects who had extended delays of surgery all had mitigating medical reason which prevented medical clearance for undergoing surgery
Fig. 3Distribution of follow-up interval among different HO categories. The median follow-up interval for class 0 was 353.5 days (range, 89–2746); class 1 was 306 days (range, 76–2296); class 2 was 279 days (range, 94–3049); and class 3+ was 321 days (range, 95–2345). Thus, shortest median follow-up interval was observed with class 2 HO group, and the median follow-up interval was actually shorter for class 3+ group compared to class 0 group