Determination of preoperative risk factors for iliopsoas tendonitis after total hip arthroplasty: A simulation study

Author:

Hardwick‐Morris Max123ORCID,Twiggs Joshua12ORCID,Miles Brad12,Al‐Dirini Rami M. A.3ORCID,Taylor Mark3ORCID,Balakumar Jitendra4ORCID,Walter William L.56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 360 Med Care Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Enovis Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. College of Science and Engineering Flinders University Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. Melbourne Orthopaedic Group Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. Institute of Bone and Joint Research, Kolling Institute The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

6. Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatic Surgery Royal North Shore Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractThis study aims to identify preoperative risk factors for iliopsoas tendonitis after total hip arthroplasty, a complication typically attributed to acetabular cup position and orientation, using a validated iliopsoas impingement detection simulation. Analyzing CT scans and X‐rays of 448 patients using a validated preoperative planning protocol, patients were simulated for iliopsoas impingement and categorized into at‐risk and not at‐risk groups based on a prior validation study, with a 23% at‐risk incidence. Implementing a propensity score matching algorithm to reduce covariate imbalance, we identified factors that may exacerbate risk of iliopsoas tendonitis. Parameters that were investigated included standing pelvic tilt, functional femoral rotation, and the difference between the planned acetabular cup diameter and native femoral head diameter (ΔC‐NFH). Comparing pelvic tilt, we found a significant difference between the groups (at‐risk: −6.0°, not at‐risk: −0.7°; p << 0.01). A similar trend was noted for ΔC‐NFH (at‐risk: +5.7 mm, not at‐risk: +5.1 mm; p = 0.01). Additional simulations of at‐risk patients indicated increased anteversion of the acetabular cup reduces impingement risk more effectively than medialisation. These findings suggest that spinopelvic parameters may exacerbate iliopsoas irritation risk, underscoring their importance in preoperative planning and patient expectation management. Similar findings of a greater than 6 mm difference between cup size and native femoral head diameter being a significant risk for iliopsoas tendonitis have been observed before, underscoring its potential veracity. These results may provide surgeons with a simple threshold that can be used in determining a cup size to reduce the risk of iliopsoas tendonitis.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference24 articles.

1. Tendon Disorders After Total Hip Arthroplasty: Evaluation and Management

2. Groin pain after replacement of the hip

3. Anterior iliopsoas impingement after total hip arthroplasty: diagnosis and conservative treatment in 9 cases;Ala Eddine T;Rev Chir Orthop Reparatrice Appar Mot,2002

4. The Prevalence of Groin Pain After Metal-on-Metal Total Hip Arthroplasty and Total Hip Resurfacing

5. Why large-head metal-on-metal hip replacements are painful

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