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Imaging characteristics of hip joint microinstability: a case-control study of hip arthroscopy patients. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on hip microinstability, a condition that's tough to diagnose due to a lack of clear criteria, and aims to evaluate the prevalence and accuracy of various imaging findings using X-rays and MRIs.
  • Researchers compared imaging results from 224 hips (112 with microinstability and 112 without) that had undergone arthroscopic surgery, assessing different morphological features that might indicate microinstability.
  • Four significant predictors for microinstability were identified: labral hyperplasia and a decreased lateral center edge angle on MRI, along with the absence of specific signs on X-rays; however, many other imaging parameters previously thought to be related were not actually associated with the condition.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Hip microinstability is a clinical entity increasingly recognized and treated but challenging to diagnose with a lack of objective criteria. This study assessed the prevalence and diagnostic accuracy of different imaging findings for hip microinstability on radiograph and MR.

Methods: A retrospective case-control study of 224 hips treated with arthroscopic surgery by a single orthopedic surgeon, 112 hips with clinical microinstability and 112 controls without. Pre-operative radiograph and MRI/MRA imaging were evaluated by two musculoskeletal radiologists to assess morphological parameters and imaging signs reportedly associated with hip microinstability.

Results: Four imaging features reached significance as predictors of microinstability via three-step logistic regression: labral hyperplasia and decreased lateral center edge angle on MR (OR 2.45 and 0.93, respectively) and the absence of positive ischial spine sign and absence of osteophytes on radiographs (OR 0.47 and 0.28, respectively). Increased acetabular anteversion and absence of cam lesions were more likely in the microinstability group (p = 0.02 and 0.04, respectively), but not independent predictors. Labral tears, chondral loss, abnormal ligamentum teres, anterior capsule thinning, iliocapsularis to rectus femoris ratio, posterior crescent sign, cliff sign, and femoro-epiphyseal acetabular roof (FEAR) index were not associated with microinstabillity.

Conclusion: Imaging features may be predictive of hip microinstability in some cases. Decreased LCEA, increased acetabular anteversion, and labral hyperplasia were associated with microinstability in this study, while many other published imaging findings were not. Imaging remains complementary, but not definitive, in the diagnosis of hip microinstability.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00256-024-04802-4DOI Listing

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