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Does femoral offset recover and affect the functional outcome of patients with displaced femoral neck fracture following hemiarthroplasty?

Authors
Ji, HM | Won, SH | Han, J | Won, YY
Citation
Injury, 48(6). : 1170-1174, 2017
Journal Title
Injury
ISSN
0020-13831879-0267
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Restoring preoperative horizontal femoral offset (FO) promised good functional outcome in patients receiving total hip arthroplasty. However, relatively little was known regarding the clinical relevance of restoring the offset in patients with bipolar hemiarthroplasty to treat displaced femoral neck fracture. Therefore, the objective of this study was to evaluate postoperative FO accurately and verify its relation with functional outcome.
METHODS: One hundred elderly patients who received bipolar hemiarthroplasty to treat displaced femoral neck fracture were identified. Preoperative CT scanning of contralateral hip joint and reconstruction of images led to rotation-free FO. By referencing postoperative implant specification and comparing to measured values in Picture Archive and Communication System, rotation-free postoperative FO and the amount of change were acquired. Postoperative Harris Hip Score (HHS) and Modified Barthel Index (MBI) were evaluated to measure functional outcome at 12-month after the surgery. Patients with significant FO change were identified. Multiple regression analysis was conducted to determine if the FO change might independently affect the outcome regardless of confounding factors.
RESULTS: The mean preoperative offset was 37.4+/-2.5 increased by 12.7+/-9.6% after the surgery. Only 25.0% of postoperative offset after hemiarthroplasty was changed within +/-5% of preoperative offset. A total of 45.0% of postoperative offset changed within +/-10% while 77.0% of postoperative offset changed within +/-20%. 23% of patients whose FO changed more than 20% showed significantly worse outcome score than the patients whose FO change remained within +/-20% of initial value. Mean MBI and HHS were negatively correlated with FO change. After adjusting for confounding factors, significant correlation remained between modification of FO and MBI, but not between FO change and HHS (B=4.576: beta=0.235: 95% confidence interval of B: 0.534 to 8.135).
CONCLUSIONS: FO was not properly restored in 23% of subjects receiving bipolar hemiarthroplasty due to femoral neck fracture. FO restoration independently predicted fair MBI after the surgery. Therefore, surgeons should pay attention to restoring FO with meticulous templating.
MeSH

DOI
10.1016/j.injury.2017.03.022
PMID
28365072
Appears in Collections:
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Orthopedic Surgery
Ajou Authors
원, 예연
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