1.Role and mechanism of macrophage-mediated osteoimmune in osteonecrosis of the femoral head.
Yushun WANG ; Jianrui ZHENG ; Yuhong LUO ; Lei CHEN ; Zhigang PENG ; Gensen YE ; Deli WANG ; Zhen TAN
Chinese Journal of Reparative and Reconstructive Surgery 2024;38(1):119-124
OBJECTIVE:
To summarize the research progress on the role of macrophage-mediated osteoimmune in osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH) and its mechanisms.
METHODS:
Recent studies on the role and mechanism of macrophage-mediated osteoimmune in ONFH at home and abroad were extensively reviewed. The classification and function of macrophages were summarized, the osteoimmune regulation of macrophages on chronic inflammation in ONFH was summarized, and the pathophysiological mechanism of osteonecrosis was expounded from the perspective of osteoimmune, which provided new ideas for the treatment of ONFH.
RESULTS:
Macrophages are important immune cells involved in inflammatory response, which can differentiate into classically activated type (M1) and alternatively activated type (M2), and play specific functions to participate in and regulate the physiological and pathological processes of the body. Studies have shown that bone immune imbalance mediated by macrophages can cause local chronic inflammation and lead to the occurrence and development of ONFH. Therefore, regulating macrophage polarization is a potential ONFH treatment strategy. In chronic inflammatory microenvironment, inhibiting macrophage polarization to M1 can promote local inflammatory dissipation and effectively delay the progression of ONFH; regulating macrophage polarization to M2 can build a local osteoimmune microenvironment conducive to bone repair, which is helpful to necrotic tissue regeneration and repair to a certain extent.
CONCLUSION
At present, it has been confirmed that macrophage-mediated chronic inflammatory immune microenvironment is an important mechanism for the occurrence and development of ONFH. It is necessary to study the subtypes of immune cells in ONFH, the interaction between immune cells and macrophages, and the interaction between various immune cells and macrophages, which is beneficial to the development of potential therapeutic methods for ONFH.
Humans
;
Femur Head/pathology*
;
Osteonecrosis/therapy*
;
Macrophages/pathology*
;
Inflammation
;
Femur Head Necrosis/pathology*
2.Evaluation and treatment strategy of limb length discrepancy after total hip arthroplasty.
Chao LI ; Ming Liang JI ; Wan Shuang ZHANG ; Jun LU ; Yong Gang LI
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2023;61(2):95-99
Limb length discrepancy(LLD) is a common complication after total hip arthroplasty (THA). Good positioning of the prosthesis and suitable soft tissue tension are essential to ensure hip joint stability. Patients will be more satisfied if almost the same length of both lower extremities is achieved. Preoperative comprehensive evaluation of patients is helpful to prevent the occurrence of LLD after surgery. Therefore, the pelvic spine conditions, as well as type and cause of LLD should be analyzed in detail before surgery. During operation, limb length should be adjusted by touching the position of patella, Kirschner's wires positioning and referring to the relationship between the center of femoral head and the tip of greater trochanter. After surgery, it is necessary to clearly distinguish true LLD from functional LLD, and make a reasonable therapeutic plan according to patient's symptoms and the range of differences in limb length. This article reviews the latest literatures based on clinical practice experience and summarizes the research status of LLD after THA, which helps joint surgeons to have an in-depth understanding of this postoperative complication.
Humans
;
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip/adverse effects*
;
Femur
;
Femur Head
;
Lower Extremity
;
Pelvis
3.Disastrous triad of femoral head:femoral neck fracture meeting fracture-dislocation of femoral head.
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2023;36(3):216-221
Femoral head and ipsilateral femoral neck fractures are serious and complicated injuries, which usually yield unsatisfactory results using conventional hip-preserving surgery. The key point of the management and prognosis mainly lies in femoral neck fractures. An apparent and consecutive relationship exists between femoral neck fractures and femoral head fracture-hip dislocation in such injuries. It is believed that disastrous triad of femoral head (DTFH) could summarize these specific injuries, and reflect the injury mechanism and prognostic characteristics. Based on our clinical observation and literature review, DTFH could be divided into three subgroups:TypeⅠ, common DTFH, in which femoral neck fractures occur following femoral head fractures-hip dislocation due to the same trauma; TypeⅡ, iatrogenic DTFH, in which femoral neck fractures come out in the caring process of femoral head fractures-hip dislocation; Type Ⅲ, stressed DTFH, in which femoral neck fractures occur after the management of femoral head fractures-hip dislocation. In the scenario, the line of femoral neck fractures locates distally to the femoral head fractures. Herein, we will discuss clinical characteristics of these types of DTFH.
Humans
;
Femoral Fractures/complications*
;
Femoral Neck Fractures/complications*
;
Femur Head/injuries*
;
Fracture Dislocation
;
Fracture Fixation, Internal/methods*
;
Hip Dislocation/surgery*
;
Prognosis
4.Imaging measurement and analysis of related indexes of variation of femoral head rotation center.
Yan-Shan SUN ; Ji-Cheng WANG ; Chang-Kun WU ; Yong-Zhi GAO ; Jiang XIN ; Yang-Yang ZHANG
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2023;36(3):284-288
OBJECTIVE:
To provide guidance for hip replacement by analyzing the variation of femoral head rotation center in different hip diseases.
METHODS:
A total of 5 459 patients were collected from March 2016 to June 2021, who took positive and proportional plain films of both hips for various reasons. The relative position between the rotation center of the femoral head and the apex of the greater trochanter was measured. The positive variation is more than 2 mm above the top of the great trochanter, and the negative variation is more than 2 mm below the top of the great trochanter. A total of 831 patients with variation of femoral head rotation center were collected and were divided into 4 groups according to different diseases, and the variation was counted respectively. There were 15 cases in the normal group involving 10 cases of positive variation and 5 cases of negative variation. There were 145 cases of avascular necrosis of femoral head involving 25 cases of positive variation and 120 cases of negative variation. There were 346 cases of congenital hip dysplasia involving 225 cases of positive variation(including 25 cases of typeⅠ, 70 cases of type Ⅱ, 115 cases of type Ⅲ and 15 cases of type Ⅳ), and 121 cases of negative variation(including 50 cases of crowe typeⅠ, 60 cases of typeⅡ, 10 cases of type Ⅲ and 1 case of type Ⅳ). There were 325 cases of hip osteoarthritis group involving 45 cases of positive variation and 280 cases of negative variation.
RESULTS:
There was significant difference in variation of femoral head rotation center among the four groups(P<0.05). There was significant difference in variation of femoral head rotation center among different types of congenital hip dysplasia(P<0.05). There were significant differences in cervical trunk angle and eccentricity among different variations of femoral head rotation center(P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
The variation of femoral head rotation center is related to cervical trunk angle and eccentricity. The variation of femoral head rotation center is an important factor in hip diseases. The variation of femoral head rotation center is different in different hip diseases. Avascular necrosis of the femoral head and osteoarthritis of the hip were mostly negative variations. With the aggravation of congenital hip dysplasia, the variation of femoral head rotation center gradually changed from negative variation to positive variation.The variation of femoral head rotation center should be paid attention to in the preoperative planning of hip arthroplasty. It is of great significance to select the appropriate prosthesis and place the prosthesis accurately.
Humans
;
Femur Head/surgery*
;
Hip Dislocation, Congenital/surgery*
;
Hip Prosthesis
;
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip/methods*
;
Femur/surgery*
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Treatment Outcome
5.Clinical study on core decompression in treating osteonecrosis of the femoral head of the necrotic bone-in different site.
Xu CUI ; Yang-Quan HAO ; Bo DONG ; Pu-Wei YUAN ; Yu-Fei ZHANG ; Wen-Xing YU ; Chao LU
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2023;36(3):289-294
OBJECTIVE:
To analyze the clinical effect of decompression and bone grafting on osteonecrosis of the femoral head(ONFH) at different sites of necrotic lesions.
METHODS:
A total of 105 patients with ARCOⅡstage ONFH admitted from January 2017 to December 2018 were retrospectively analyzed. There were 71 males and 34 females, with an average age of (55.20±10.98) years old. The mean course of all patients was(15.91±9.85) months. According to Japanese Inveatigation Committee (JIC) classification, all patients were divided into 4 types:17 cases of type A, 26 cases of type B, 33 cases of type C1 and 29 cases of type C2. All four groups were treated with decompression of the pulp core and bone grafting. Visual analogue scale(VAS) and Harris hip joint score were used before and at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months after the operation, and the collapse of the femoral head was observed by X-ray examination within 2 years.
RESULTS:
All 105 patients were successful on operation without complications, and the mean follow-up duration was (24.45±2.75) months. Harris score showed that there was no statistical difference among four groups before surgery and 3, 6 months after surgery (P>0.05);at 12 and 24 months after surgery, there were significant differences among all groups (P<0.01). There were significant differences in intragroup Harris scores at preoperative and postoperative time points among four groups (P<0.01). VAS showed that there was no statistical difference among four groups before and 3, 6 months after surgery (P>0.05);at 12 and 24 months after surgery, there were significant differences among all groups (P<0.01). There were significant differences in VAS at preoperative and postoperative time points among four groups (P<0.01). None of the patients in four groups had femoral head collapse before and 3, 6 months after surgery. At 12 months after operation, there were 3 cases of femoral head collapse in group C and 4 cases in group C2(P>0.05);At 24 months after operation, 1 case of femoral head collapse occurred in group B, 6 cases in group C1 and 8 cases in group C2(P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
Core decompression and bone grafting can improve the effect of ONFH and hip preservation. The effect of hip preservation for ONFH is closely related to the location of the osteonecrosis lesion, so the influence of the location of lesion on the effect of hip preservation should be considered in clinical treatment, so as to make better preoperative hip preservation plan.
Male
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Adult
;
Middle Aged
;
Aged
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Femur Head Necrosis/diagnosis*
;
Femur Head/surgery*
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Decompression, Surgical
;
Bone Transplantation
6.Assessment of the local blood supply when femoral neck fracture occurs:advances in the anatomy research and its clinical application.
Sheng-Hui WU ; Yu MIAO ; Xiao-Zhong ZHU ; Guang-Yi LI
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2023;36(3):294-298
The stability of internal fixation of femoral neck fractures can be obtained through surgical techniques, the configuration of screws and bone grafting, etc. However, the blood supply injury caused by fractures could not be completely reversed by the current medical management. Hence, the comprehensive evaluation of the residual blood supply of the femoral neck, to perioperatively avoid further iatrogenic injury, has become a hotspot. The anatomy of the extraosseous blood supply of the femoral neck has been widely reported, while its clinical application mostly involved the assessment of the medial circumflex femoral artery and retinacular arteries. However, further studies are needed to explore the prognosis of patients with these artery injuries, with different degrees, caused by femoral neck fractures. Direct observations of nutrient foramina in vivo are not possible with current clinical technologies, but it is possible to make reasonable preoperative planning to avoid subsequent femoral head necrosis based on the distribution features of nutrient foramina. The anatomy and clinical application studies of the intraosseous blood supply focused on the junction area of the femoral head and neck to probe the mechanism of femoral head necrosis. Thus, the intraosseous blood supply of other regions in the femoral neck remains to be further investigated. In addition, a blood supply evaluation system based on a three-level structure, extraosseous blood vessels, nutrient foramina, and intraosseous vascular network, could be explored to assist in the treatment of femoral neck fractures.
Humans
;
Femur Head Necrosis
;
Femoral Neck Fractures/surgery*
;
Femur Neck
;
Femur Head/surgery*
;
Femoral Artery
;
Fracture Fixation, Internal
7.Effectiveness of platelet-rich plasma as an adjunct to core decompression to treatment outcomes and femoral head preservation in avascular necrosis of the hip: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
Carlo F. Fernandez ; Byron S. Angeles ; Carmelo L. Braganza
Journal of Medicine University of Santo Tomas 2023;7(2):1259-1270
Background:
Avascular necrosis (AVN) of the femoral head results from intraosseous pathology causing functional impairment. Early diagnosis allows conservative treatment like core decompression, delaying total hip arthroplasty.
Objective:
This meta-analysis aims to summarize platelet-rich plasma's (PRP) impact as an adjunct to core decompression (CD) on treatment outcomes and femoral head preservation in hip AVN.
Methods:
The study conducted a comprehensive literature search using PubMed, Cochrane Library, Science Direct, Google Scholar and Med Line, including randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and previous meta-analyses from various databases. Using a random effects model, it compared PRP+CD with bone grafting to CD with bone grafting alone in AVN patients, evaluating function, pain scores, disease progression and the need for hip surgery.
Results:
The meta-analysis examined 1041 records and included three studies. The primary outcomes were function and pain scores using Harris Hip Scoring (HHS) and Visual Analog Scale (VAS). Postoperative HHS scores at final follow-up favored the PRP+CD group significantly over CD alone. Postoperative VAS scores showed a trend towards higher scores in the CD alone group. The PRP+CD group demonstrated higher survival from disease progression compared to CD alone. Overall, the study suggests that PRP+CD led to better functional outcomes and disease progression outcomes than CD alone in AVN of the hip.
Conclusion
The PRP+CD treatment group showed significant benefits in AVN patients compared to CD alone, including higher HHS scores, improved disease progression survival and reduced need for hip surgery. Although PRP+CD resulted in decreased VAS scores, the difference was not statistically significant.
Osteonecrosis
;
Femur Head
;
Platelet-Rich Plasma
;
Randomized Controlled Trial
8.Primary repair for concurrent bilateral intertrochanteric fracture and femoral head necrosis with prolonged shank biologic total hip replacement: A case report and surgical techniques.
Yuan-Jie LIU ; Jun-Tan LI ; Yu-Yang GAO ; Pei-Yan GUO ; Tian-Xu DOU ; Xu LI
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2023;26(3):183-186
For the treatment of an intertrochanteric fracture combined with femoral head necrosis in middle-age patients, it has been controversial whether to perform fracture reduction and fixation first then total hip replacement, or direct total hip replacement. We present a rare case of 53-year-old male patient suffered from bilateral intertrochanteric fracture caused by a road traffic injury. The patient had a history of femoral head necrosis for eight years, and the Harris score was 30. We performed total hip replacement with prolonged biologic shank prostheses for primary repair. One year after the surgery, nearly full range of motion was achieved without instability (active flexion angle of 110°, extension angle of 20°, adduction angle of 40°, abduction angle of 40°, internal rotation angle of 25°, and external rotation angle of 40°). The Harris score was 85. For the middle-aged patient with unstable intertrochanteric fractures and osteonecrosis of the femoral head, we can choose primary repair for concurrent bilateral intertrochanteric fracture and femoral head necrosis with prolonged shank biologic total hip replacement.
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Humans
;
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip/methods*
;
Femur Head/surgery*
;
Femur Head Necrosis/surgery*
;
Fracture Fixation, Internal/methods*
;
Hip Fractures/surgery*
;
Biological Products
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Retrospective Studies
9.Finite element analysis for predicting osteonecrosis of the femoral head collapse based on the preserved angles.
Shun LU ; Tianye LIN ; Mincong HE ; Xiaoming HE ; Xianshun HE ; Jiaqing TIAN ; Tengfei WEI ; Zhiwei ZHAN ; Kun LIN ; Qiushi WEI
Chinese Journal of Reparative and Reconstructive Surgery 2023;37(11):1394-1402
OBJECTIVE:
To establish finite element models of different preserved angles of osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH) for the biomechanical analysis, and to provide mechanical evidence for predicting the risk of ONFH collapse with anterior preserved angle (APA) and lateral preserved angle (LPA).
METHODS:
A healthy adult was selected as the study object, and the CT data of the left femoral head was acquired and imported into Mimics 21.0 software to reconstruct a complete proximal femur model and construct 3 models of necrotic area with equal volume and different morphology, all models were imported into Solidworks 2022 software to construct 21 finite element models of ONFH with LPA of 45°, 50°, 55°, 60°, 65°, 70°, and 75° when APA was 45°, respectively, and 21 finite element models of ONFH with APA of 45°, 50°, 55°, 60°, 65°, 70°, 75° when LPA was 45°, respectively. According to the physiological load condition of the femoral head, the distal femur was completely fixed, and a force with an angle of 25°, downward direction, and a magnitude of 3.5 times the subject's body mass was applied to the weight-bearing area of the femoral head surface. The maximum Von Mises stress of the surface of the femoral head and the necrotic area and the maximum displacement of the weight-bearing area of the femoral head were calculated and observed by Abaqus 2021 software.
RESULTS:
The finite element models of ONFH were basically consistent with biomechanics of ONFH. Under the same loading condition, there was stress concentration around the necrotic area in the 42 ONFH models with different preserved angles composed of 3 necrotic areas with equal volume and different morphology. When APA was 60°, the maximum Von Mises stress of the surface of the femoral head and the necrotic area and the maximum displacement of the weight-bearing area of the femoral head of the ONFH models with LPA<60° were significantly higher than those of the models with LPA≥60° ( P<0.05); there was no significant difference in each index among the ONFH models with LPA≥60° ( P>0.05). When LPA was 60°, each index of the ONFH models with APA<60° were significantly higher than those of the models with APA≥60° ( P<0.05); there was no significant difference in each index among the ONFH models with APA≥60° ( P>0.05).
CONCLUSION
From the perspective of biomechanics, when a preserved angle of ONFH is less than its critical value, the stress concentration phenomenon in the femoral head is more pronounced, suggesting that the necrotic femoral head may have a higher risk of collapse in this state.
Adult
;
Humans
;
Femur Head/surgery*
;
Finite Element Analysis
;
Stress, Mechanical
;
Femur/diagnostic imaging*
;
Femur Head Necrosis/surgery*
10.Expert consensus on clinical drug prevention and treatment of osteonecrosis of the femoral head(2022).
Wei SUN ; Fu-Qiang GAO ; Zi-Rong LI
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2023;36(8):724-730
With the in-depth understanding of osteonecrosis of femoral head (ONFH), and more and more patients seeking medical treatment in the early stage of the disease, surgical treatment of femoral head necrosis alone is no longer sufficient for the current treatment of patients' demand, how to rationally and effectively apply drugs to strengthen the early prevention and treatment of femoral head necrosis and delay the progression of disease is becoming more and more important. This article combines the latest expert consensus and evidence-based medical evidence on the principles of ONFH diagnosis and treatment in Chinese and Western medicine at home and abroad, combined with domestic actual clinical application experience, and is organized by experts from Association Related to Circulation Osseous Chinese Microcirculation Society (CSM-ARCO) to write this consensus, focusing on the types of ONFH drugs, the characteristics, safety, rationality and basic principles of drug use provide reference opinions for the safe, reasonable, standardized and effective drug use of medical institutions at all levels. This consensus is only an expert guideline based on literature and clinical experience, not as a requirement for mandatory implementation, let alone as a legal basis. The clinical practice could be tailored to the actual local conditions to develop appropriate prevention and treatment measures for patients.
Humans
;
Consensus
;
Femur Head
;
Femur Head Necrosis/prevention & control*


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