Because the femoral head/neck junction is preserved in hip resurfacing, patients may be at greater risk of impingement, leading to abnormal wear patterns and pain. We assessed femoral head/neck offset in 63 hips undergoing metal-on-metal hip resurfacing and in 56 hips presenting with non-arthritic pain secondary to femoroacetabular impingement. Most hips undergoing resurfacing (57%; 36) had an offset ratio ≤0.15 pre-operatively and required greater correction of offset at operation than the rest of the group. In the non-arthritic hips the mean offset ratio was 0.137 (0.04 to 0.23), with the offset ratio correlating negatively to an increasing α angle. An offset ratio ≤0.15 had a 9.5-fold increased relative risk of having an α angle ≥ 50.5°. Most hips undergoing resurfacing have an abnormal femoral head/neck offset, which is best assessed in the sagittal plane. © 2007 British Editorial Society of Bone and Joint Surgery.
CITATION STYLE
Beaulé, P. E., Harvey, N., Zaragoza, E., Le Duff, M. J., & Dorey, F. J. (2007). The femoral head/neck offset and hip resurfacing. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery - Series B, 89(1), 9–15. https://doi.org/10.1302/0301-620X.89B1.18011
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