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Surgical approach influences periprosthetic femoral bone density

Surgical approach influences periprosthetic femoral bone density
Surgical approach influences periprosthetic femoral bone density
Our hypothesis was that the bone mineral density of the proximal femur is altered significantly by surgical approach. The change in long-term periprosthetic bone mineral density in relation to the alteration of the musculature after the anterolateral (Group A) and transgluteal approaches (Group B) has been compared. There were 35 hips (30 patients) in Group A and 47 hips (37 patients) in Group B. No significant differences were seen between groups with respect to age, gender, diaphyseal bone mineral density distribution, or average stem size in a Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test. Measurement of bone mineral density in femoral Gruen zones revealed a significant bone loss in Group B compared with Group A in the multivariate analysis, which was confirmed by univariate post hoc tests in Zones I, II, VI, and VII (multiple significance according to Bonferroni-Holm's procedure). The functional outcome, however, showed no significant differences between the two groups postoperatively. A potential reason for the bone mineral density shift might have been a redistribution of the musculoskeletal loading across the hip after a transgluteal, compared with an anterolateral, surgical approach. A difference in the muscular damage caused by the two surgical approaches seems to have a significant influence on the long-term bone loss.
adult, aged, 80 and over, arthroplasty, replacement, hip, methods, bone density, bone remodeling, calcification, physiologic, densitometry, equipment failure analysis, female, femur, femur physiopathology, femur radiography, femur surgery, humans, male, middle aged, multivariate analysis, prosthesis failure, retrospective studies
0009-921X
153-159
Perka, C.
075d2c0e-b277-4a76-8b14-548bce0bb133
Heller, M.O.
3da19d2a-f34d-4ff1-8a34-9b5a7e695829
Wilke, K.
33d4066a-2339-4ed0-8410-c867e46718de
Taylor, W.R.
4f1cd2b0-4963-4b10-bbde-da586c069e77
Haas, N.P.
2eb6acab-3bde-4c16-8e57-6be990ad420f
Zippel, H.
752b8785-de9e-4c4d-b1a5-d0a8aa17a954
Duda, G.N.
32d09622-34ad-49dd-8314-3f61c99a764e
Perka, C.
075d2c0e-b277-4a76-8b14-548bce0bb133
Heller, M.O.
3da19d2a-f34d-4ff1-8a34-9b5a7e695829
Wilke, K.
33d4066a-2339-4ed0-8410-c867e46718de
Taylor, W.R.
4f1cd2b0-4963-4b10-bbde-da586c069e77
Haas, N.P.
2eb6acab-3bde-4c16-8e57-6be990ad420f
Zippel, H.
752b8785-de9e-4c4d-b1a5-d0a8aa17a954
Duda, G.N.
32d09622-34ad-49dd-8314-3f61c99a764e

Perka, C., Heller, M.O., Wilke, K., Taylor, W.R., Haas, N.P., Zippel, H. and Duda, G.N. (2005) Surgical approach influences periprosthetic femoral bone density. Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 432, 153-159. (doi:10.1097/01.blo.0000149814.40480.8e). (PMID:15738816)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Our hypothesis was that the bone mineral density of the proximal femur is altered significantly by surgical approach. The change in long-term periprosthetic bone mineral density in relation to the alteration of the musculature after the anterolateral (Group A) and transgluteal approaches (Group B) has been compared. There were 35 hips (30 patients) in Group A and 47 hips (37 patients) in Group B. No significant differences were seen between groups with respect to age, gender, diaphyseal bone mineral density distribution, or average stem size in a Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test. Measurement of bone mineral density in femoral Gruen zones revealed a significant bone loss in Group B compared with Group A in the multivariate analysis, which was confirmed by univariate post hoc tests in Zones I, II, VI, and VII (multiple significance according to Bonferroni-Holm's procedure). The functional outcome, however, showed no significant differences between the two groups postoperatively. A potential reason for the bone mineral density shift might have been a redistribution of the musculoskeletal loading across the hip after a transgluteal, compared with an anterolateral, surgical approach. A difference in the muscular damage caused by the two surgical approaches seems to have a significant influence on the long-term bone loss.

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More information

Published date: March 2005
Keywords: adult, aged, 80 and over, arthroplasty, replacement, hip, methods, bone density, bone remodeling, calcification, physiologic, densitometry, equipment failure analysis, female, femur, femur physiopathology, femur radiography, femur surgery, humans, male, middle aged, multivariate analysis, prosthesis failure, retrospective studies
Organisations: Bioengineering Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 348508
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348508
ISSN: 0009-921X
PURE UUID: 4a1827c0-2342-457f-bbe8-0f3a7ce8a64d
ORCID for M.O. Heller: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7879-1135

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Date deposited: 26 Feb 2013 12:48
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:43

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Contributors

Author: C. Perka
Author: M.O. Heller ORCID iD
Author: K. Wilke
Author: W.R. Taylor
Author: N.P. Haas
Author: H. Zippel
Author: G.N. Duda

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