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Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedAcetabular morphometry for determining hip dysplasia in the Singaporean population
Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery, Apr 2006 by Umer, M, Thambyah, A, Tan, W T J, De, S Das
ABSTRACT
Purpose. To assess and evaluate the usefulness of 7 morphological measurements of the acetabulum in establishing the prevalence of acetabular dysplasia in the Singaporean population.
Methods. Standardised plain anteroposterior radiographs of 522 hip joints of 261 asymptomatic patients (mean age, 60 years; range, 16-99 years) were evaluated. The 7 morphological measurements were centre-edge angle, acetabular angle, depth-to-width ratio, roof obliquity, extrusion index, lateral subluxation, and peak-to-edge distance.
Results. 19 (7.3%) patients were acetabular dysplastic (centre-edge angle of
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Conclusion. Centre-edge angle was the most useful measurement and correlated significantly with acetabular angle, extrusion index, peak-to-edge distance, and roof obliquity. These preliminary results show a relatively higher rate (7.3%) of acetabular dysplasia in the Singaporean population, compared with other similar but larger Asian studies performed in Hong Kong (1.1%) and Korea (1.8%).
Key words: acetabulum; osteoarthritis, hip; radiography; Singapore
INTRODUCTION
Acetabular dysplasia is a condition wherein the acetabular roof is underdeveloped and remains vertically oriented and shallow, which results in a smaller surface available for weight-bearing. The weight-bearing surface therefore receives a much larger force per unit area during walking and may experience early degeneration. The criteria for determining a dysplastic hip have been defined previously.1,2 In these studies, radiographic measurements of the centre-edge angle were used to formulate diagnostic criteria for differentiating a normal hip from a dysplastic hip.
The centre-edge angle was first described by Wiberg in 1939. It is formed by the intersection of a line drawn through the midpoint of the femoral head and a second line drawn from the centre of the femoral head to the upper outer margin of the acetabulum. Values of >25° were considered normal, whereas those of
Although the centre-edge angle is widely used to determine dysplasia, its measurement can sometimes be affected by the pathological condition of the femoral head, making it difficult to locate the centre. The angle becomes even more difficult to determine if the hip is subluxed.4 Other measurements are thus worth considering: acetabular angle,4 depth-to-width ratio, extrusion index, lateral subluxation, and peak-to-edge distance have been used to evaluate hip joint morphometry.5-8 These measurements can help assess the degree of acetabular dysplasia.5,7 Therefore, the pelvic anteroposterior radiograph plays an important role in the assessment of the dysplastic hip.6,9 Acetabular dysplasia is defined by either a centre-edge angle of ≤25° (severe if ≤20°) or an acetabular depth of
The present study aimed to measure and evaluate the morphological norms of the acetabulum of the Singaporean population in order to better understand the correlation between various morphological measurements and criteria for diagnosing hip dysplasia.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
From March to May 2000, 261 patients (mean age, 60 years; range, 16-99 years) received pelvic radiographic examinations in the National University Hospital in Singapore. Patients with hip pain on presentation were excluded. Most were trauma patients; some had displaced fractures of the femoral neck wherein the femoral head remained in its original position; and some had undisplaced intertrochanteric fractures or fractures of the pubic rami. This selection of patients was prospective but non-randomised.
Standardised pelvic radiograph was taken with the patient in a supine position. The X-ray beamed from a height of one meter and focused over the pubic symphysis. A transparent template with circles and scales was placed directly over the radiograph to correctly identify the centre of the femoral head and to facilitate and elucidate the various measurements and angles. This obviated the need to first make a tracing of the hip joint and then take a measurement-a practice prone to errors.
After identifying the centre of the femoral head, a vertical line was drawn through this point. The angle subtended by this line to the line joining the centre to the outermost edge of the acetabulum was the centre-edge angle (Fig. a). A measurement of 43° was considered dysplasia.4 Depth-to-width ratio was measured using Heyman's method.8 Width was measured by a line joining the lateral edge of acetabulum to the pelvic teardrop. The depth was measured by another line perpendicular to this line at the point of the greatest acetabular depth (Fig. c). The extrusion index was a ratio of 2 measurements: the horizontal distance between the vertical lines drawn through the medial and lateral edge of the femoral head, and the distance between the lateral edge and outer edge of the acetabulum (Fig. d). Lateral subluxation was the distance between the teardrop and the medial-most edge of the femoral head (Fig. e). Roof obliquity was the angle subtended by the line connecting the inferior-most edge of the roof of the acetabulum to the lateral-most edge of the acetabulum with a parallel horizontal line (Fig. f). A measurement of
All values were recorded on a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. Analysis of variance between age and sex was performed, and Pearson's correlation coefficient was used to measure the relationship between various measurements using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (Windows 2000; SPSS version 13, Chicago [IL], US). A p value of
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