Adhesions in the setting of hip arthroscopy

Author:

Ruzbarsky Joseph J12,Soares Rui W3,Comfort Spencer M1ORCID,Arner Justin W4,Philippon Marc J12

Affiliation:

1. Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado, USA

2. Steadman Clinic and United States Coalition for the Prevention of Illness and Injury in Sport, Vail, Colorado, USA

3. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA

4. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract

With the growing number of primary arthroscopies performed, patients requiring revision hip arthroscopies for various issues is high including postoperative adhesion formation, a source of pain, mechanical symptoms, range of motion limitation, stiffness, and microinstability. Adhesions are a consequence of biological pathways that have been stimulated by injury or surgical interventions leading to an increased healing response. Preventative efforts have included surgical adjuncts during/after primary hip arthroscopy, biologic augmentation, and postoperative rehabilitation. Treatment options for adhesion formation includes surgical lysis of adhesions with or without placement of biologic membranes aimed at inhibiting adhesion reformation as well as systemic medications to further reduce the risk. Postoperative rehabilitation exercises have also been demonstrated to prevent adhesions as a result of hip arthroscopy. Ongoing clinical trials are further investigating pathways and prevention of adhesion formation.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

Reference34 articles.

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4. Potential usefulness of losartan as an antifibrotic agent and adjunct to platelet-rich plasma therapy to improve muscle healing and cartilage repair and prevent adhesion formation;Huard,2018

5. Pathological mechanisms and therapeutic outlooks for arthrofibrosis;Usher,2019

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