1 / 35

Arthroscopic Treatment of Abductor Failure

Arthroscopic Treatment of Abductor Failure. ICL 250: Advanced Surgical Techniques Wednesday, February 16 th , 2011 Bryan T. Kelly, MD Co-Director Center for Hip Pain and Preservation. Bryan T. Kelly, MD Hospital for Special Surgery

jela
Télécharger la présentation

Arthroscopic Treatment of Abductor Failure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Arthroscopic Treatment of Abductor Failure ICL 250: Advanced Surgical Techniques Wednesday, February 16th, 2011 Bryan T. Kelly, MD Co-Director Center for Hip Pain and Preservation

  2. Bryan T. Kelly, MD Hospital for Special Surgery Disclosure: I DO NOT have a financial interest in any commercial products or service presented in this lecture AND DO NOT INTEND to discuss off label or investigational use of products or services.

  3. Types of financial relationships and the companies with whom I have relationships are as follows: Pivot Medical, Inc.: Consultant Smith & Nephew: Educational Consultant A2 Surgical: Consultant

  4. The Peritrochanteric Space Greater Trochanter Iliotibial Band • Space between the Greater Trochanter and Iliotibial Band • Analogous to the subacromial space in the shoulder

  5. Peritrochanteric Space Pathology • External Snapping Hip • Greater Trochanteric Pain Syndrome • Recalcitrant Trochanteric Bursitis • Gluteus Medius Tears • Gluteus Minimus Tears

  6. Greater Trochanteric Pain Syndrome (GTPS) • Lateral sided hip pain and tenderness • Common clinical syndrome peaking between the 4th and 6th decades of life. 4♀:1♂ • Previously known as “Trochanteric Bursitis” • Bursal distention is actually uncommon • Kingzett-Taylor et al, 1999 • Bird et al, 2001 • The initial pathology usually occurs in the tendons attached to the greater trochanter. The adjacent bursae are secondarily involved. • Gordon EJ, 1961

  7. GTPS (cont.) • Vast majority respond to conservative mgt. • Recalcitrant cases are often due to gluteus medius or minimus tendon tears. • Prospective MRI evaluation of 24 middle aged women with intractable GTPS • 45.8% had gluteus medius tendon tears • Bird et al, 2001 • Prospective US evaluation of 75 pts with GTPS • 53/75 had gluteus medius tendinopathy • 25 of these 53 had full or partial g. medius tears • Connell et al, 2002

  8. Rotator Cuff Tears of the Hip • Bunker et al, 1997 • 22% of patients with femoral neck fractures had gluteus medius tears • Kagan A, 1999 • Seven pts with recalcitrant GTPS ranging from 2mos – 10yrs • Open repair through bone tunnels & or side-to–side after debride • F/u at 45 mos, all were free of pain • Howell et al, 2001 • 20% of women undergoing THA for OA had abductor tears

  9. Footprint Anatomy • Most gluteus medius tears occur anteriorly, at the junction with the minimus. Gluteus Minimus Gluteus Medius

  10. Dwek J. et al MR imaging of the hip abductors: normal anatomy and commonly encountered pathology at the greater trochanter. Magnetic Resonance Imaging Clinics of North America. 13(4):691-704, vii, 2005 Nov • 4 facets, 3 have distinct insertions

  11. Anterior Facet • 2 parts to Gluteus minimus • tendon attachment lateral to joint capsule • Muscular attachment to superior joint capsule

  12. Lateral Facet • Middle and Anterior portions of the medius attach to the lateral facet • Also continues anteriorly to cover insertion of minimus

  13. Superoposterior Facet • Main insertion point for the posterior portion of the medius.

  14. Posterior Facet • No muscle attachments • Trochanteric bursa

  15. Clinical Presentation: Recalcitrant GTPS – Abductor Tear • Sometimes a history of a “pop” or sudden injury. • Age group late 50’s to 60’s • Females > Males. • Failure of corticosteroid injections. • Refractory lateral sided hip pain. • Abductor weakness. • MRI confirmation. • In some (many ?) cases, refractory trochanteric bursitis may be overlooked tears of the gluteus medius and minimus.

  16. Arthroscopic Management An arthroscopic approach through the peritrochanteric space is now possible for the repair of focal gluteus medius and minimus tendon tears.

  17. Gluteus Medius Tears

  18. Repair

  19. Abductor Repair - Preparation • In some cases trochanteric spurs may be present that can be burred down to created a better surface area for tendon healing.

  20. Case TG: Senior Triathlete • 65 y/o male • Developed left hip pain associated with training • Lateral Based • No groin pain • Treated for trochanteric bursitis with multiple injections / PT with no improvement in symptoms over 6 month period

  21. ResultsArthroscopic Abductor Repair • Results of 10 patients with minimum of 2 year f/u: • All patients had complete resolution of pain in the lateral hip. • 9 out of 10 (90%) had 5 out of 5 abductor muscle strength and one patient had 4 out of 5 strength. • All patients maintained full hip range of motion.

  22. ResultsArthroscopic Abductor Repair • Modified Harris Hip Scores at one year averaged 92.2 points (range 72-100) and Hip Outcomes Score 93.1 points (range 85-100). • 7 out of 10 patients said their hip was normal and 3 said their hip was nearly normal.

  23. ConclusionAbductor Repair • Endoscopic repair of the gluteus medius tendons to the greater trochanter can be performed in a predictable manner. • In the short term, resolution of pain and return to activity is predictable. • Long term follow-up and a larger number of patients in prospective trials will provide further insight into the treatment of abductor repairs.

  24. Massive Tears with Retraction • Open Abductor Repair with tissue mobilization and Release

  25. Irreparable Massive Tears with Retraction • Gluteus Maximus Transfer

  26. Thank You

More Related