Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate the pathogenesis, the incidence, and the results of arthroscopic treatment of os acetabuli (OSA) in a group of patients with diagnosis of femoro-acetabular impingement (FAI).
Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the full documentation of 294 hips in 273 patients (21 bilateral) operated for FAI through hip arthroscopy. We reviewed all radiographs and arthro-MRI in order to identify the incidence of OSA.
A 25-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of pulmonary embolism and suspected fat embolism after sustaining bilateral femoral shaft fracture. A left arm weakness, tachycardia and sudden hemoglobin drop delayed his definitive fixation with intramedullary nailing. His clinical course was further complicated by bleeding from the pin sites of the external fixators which had initially been used to temporarily stabilize his femoral fractures (clotting disturbances).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatients with ASR implants (resurfacing and large-diameter (XL) metal-on-metal (MoM) total hip arthroplasty), even if asymptomatic and with a stable prosthesis, may present extremely high blood metal ion levels. We report on a consecutive series of fourteen ASR revisions, focusing on osteolysis and their radiographic correspondence and their correlation with blood metal ion levels. At revision, seven hips revealed severe periacetabular osteolysis which was radiographically undetectable in six and asymptomatic in five.
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