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Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players

OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to characterize the radiographic proximal femoral and acetabular anatomy for professional (NHL) hockey players, and to correlate with objective assessments of hip range-of-motion and current or prior hip symptoms / surgery. METHODS: One hundred and eightee...

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Autores principales: Larson, Christopher M., Fuller, Don, Ross, James R., Rowley, David, Giveans, M. Russell, Stone, Rebecca M., Bedi, Asheesh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4901915/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967116S00075
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author Larson, Christopher M.
Fuller, Don
Ross, James R.
Rowley, David
Giveans, M. Russell
Stone, Rebecca M.
Bedi, Asheesh
author_facet Larson, Christopher M.
Fuller, Don
Ross, James R.
Rowley, David
Giveans, M. Russell
Stone, Rebecca M.
Bedi, Asheesh
author_sort Larson, Christopher M.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to characterize the radiographic proximal femoral and acetabular anatomy for professional (NHL) hockey players, and to correlate with objective assessments of hip range-of-motion and current or prior hip symptoms / surgery. METHODS: One hundred and eighteen hips in 59 professional hockey players with one NHL organization (mean age 24.2, range 18-36) underwent a history and physician examination by two independent orthopedic surgeons for direct flexion, adduction, abduction in extension and flexion, and internal and external rotation at 90 degrees of flexion. A history of current or previous groin / hip pain or prior hip and/or core muscle surgery was noted. Well-positioned anteroposterior (AP) pelvis and bilateral Dunn lateral radiographs were obtained for all players with measurements performed independently by two-fellowship trained, hip preservation surgeons to assess acetabular and proximal femoral morphology. Statistical analysis was performed with linear regression models, Pearson and Spearman correlations, as well as intra-class correlation coefficients to assess inter-rater reliability, with p<0.05 defined as significant. RESULTS: Good to Very Good reliability of radiographic assessments were revealed (ICC = .749 - .958, p<.01). With regards to acetabular retroversion, 64% of the athletes had a positive-crossover sign (COS), while 86% and 60% had a positive posterior wall (PWS) and prominent ischial spine sign (ISS), respectively. Mean lateral center edge angle (LCEA) was 28.3(◦) ± 4.6(◦), and mean Tonnis angle 7.0(◦) ± 4.1(◦). 18% of hips demonstrated borderline dysplasia (LCEA 20(◦)-25(◦)) and 3% frank dysplasia (LCEA<20(◦)). Femoral head asphericity as assessed by AP and lateral alpha angles was 52.2(◦) ± 11.2(◦) and 61.0(◦) ± 10.1(◦), respectively. Both the mean AP and lateral head-neck offset ratio was 0.14 ± 0.02. 85% and 89% of hips demonstrated cam-type proximal femoral morphology based on increased alpha angle and reduced head-neck offset respectively. Very good reliability was confirmed for all ROM assessment (ICC > 0.80) with the exception of direct adduction, which demonstrated good reliability (ICC = 0.69). Mean hip flexion was 107.4±6.7, abduction and adduction 37.6±8.7 and 20.5±5.2 respectively, and IR and ER in 90 degrees of flexion 26.1±6.6 and 44.2±8.6 respectively. 31.4% percent of hips had current or prior history of hip related pain / surgery. Higher AP, lateral, and maximal alpha angles all correlated with decreased hip internal rotation (p=0.004). Greater AP alpha angle correlated with decreased hip extension /abduction (p=0.025), and greater lateral and maximal alpha angle correlated with decreased hip flexion / abduction (p=0.001). Acetabular parameters (LCE, COS, ISS, Tonnis angle) did not correlate with hip ROM. Decreased hip ER correlated with an increased risk for current or prior hip related pain / surgery (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Hip anatomy in NHL hockey players is characterized by highly prevalent cam-type morphology (>85%) and acetabular retroversion (> 60%). In addition, dysplasia (21%) was relatively common. Greater cam type morphology (higher alpha angle) correlated with decreased hip IR, Ext / ABD, and Flex / ABD ROM, whereas acetabular parameters did not correlate with hip ROM. Only decreased hip ER was predictive of hip related pain / surgery.
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spelling pubmed-49019152016-06-10 Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players Larson, Christopher M. Fuller, Don Ross, James R. Rowley, David Giveans, M. Russell Stone, Rebecca M. Bedi, Asheesh Orthop J Sports Med Article OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to characterize the radiographic proximal femoral and acetabular anatomy for professional (NHL) hockey players, and to correlate with objective assessments of hip range-of-motion and current or prior hip symptoms / surgery. METHODS: One hundred and eighteen hips in 59 professional hockey players with one NHL organization (mean age 24.2, range 18-36) underwent a history and physician examination by two independent orthopedic surgeons for direct flexion, adduction, abduction in extension and flexion, and internal and external rotation at 90 degrees of flexion. A history of current or previous groin / hip pain or prior hip and/or core muscle surgery was noted. Well-positioned anteroposterior (AP) pelvis and bilateral Dunn lateral radiographs were obtained for all players with measurements performed independently by two-fellowship trained, hip preservation surgeons to assess acetabular and proximal femoral morphology. Statistical analysis was performed with linear regression models, Pearson and Spearman correlations, as well as intra-class correlation coefficients to assess inter-rater reliability, with p<0.05 defined as significant. RESULTS: Good to Very Good reliability of radiographic assessments were revealed (ICC = .749 - .958, p<.01). With regards to acetabular retroversion, 64% of the athletes had a positive-crossover sign (COS), while 86% and 60% had a positive posterior wall (PWS) and prominent ischial spine sign (ISS), respectively. Mean lateral center edge angle (LCEA) was 28.3(◦) ± 4.6(◦), and mean Tonnis angle 7.0(◦) ± 4.1(◦). 18% of hips demonstrated borderline dysplasia (LCEA 20(◦)-25(◦)) and 3% frank dysplasia (LCEA<20(◦)). Femoral head asphericity as assessed by AP and lateral alpha angles was 52.2(◦) ± 11.2(◦) and 61.0(◦) ± 10.1(◦), respectively. Both the mean AP and lateral head-neck offset ratio was 0.14 ± 0.02. 85% and 89% of hips demonstrated cam-type proximal femoral morphology based on increased alpha angle and reduced head-neck offset respectively. Very good reliability was confirmed for all ROM assessment (ICC > 0.80) with the exception of direct adduction, which demonstrated good reliability (ICC = 0.69). Mean hip flexion was 107.4±6.7, abduction and adduction 37.6±8.7 and 20.5±5.2 respectively, and IR and ER in 90 degrees of flexion 26.1±6.6 and 44.2±8.6 respectively. 31.4% percent of hips had current or prior history of hip related pain / surgery. Higher AP, lateral, and maximal alpha angles all correlated with decreased hip internal rotation (p=0.004). Greater AP alpha angle correlated with decreased hip extension /abduction (p=0.025), and greater lateral and maximal alpha angle correlated with decreased hip flexion / abduction (p=0.001). Acetabular parameters (LCE, COS, ISS, Tonnis angle) did not correlate with hip ROM. Decreased hip ER correlated with an increased risk for current or prior hip related pain / surgery (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Hip anatomy in NHL hockey players is characterized by highly prevalent cam-type morphology (>85%) and acetabular retroversion (> 60%). In addition, dysplasia (21%) was relatively common. Greater cam type morphology (higher alpha angle) correlated with decreased hip IR, Ext / ABD, and Flex / ABD ROM, whereas acetabular parameters did not correlate with hip ROM. Only decreased hip ER was predictive of hip related pain / surgery. SAGE Publications 2016-03-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4901915/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967116S00075 Text en © The Author(s) 2016 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This open-access article is published and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - No Derivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/), which permits the noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction of the article in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. You may not alter, transform, or build upon this article without the permission of the Author(s). For reprints and permission queries, please visit SAGE’s Web site at http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav.
spellingShingle Article
Larson, Christopher M.
Fuller, Don
Ross, James R.
Rowley, David
Giveans, M. Russell
Stone, Rebecca M.
Bedi, Asheesh
Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players
title Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players
title_full Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players
title_fullStr Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players
title_short Characterizing Radiographic Hip Anatomy and Relationship to Hip Range of Motion and Symptoms in National Hockey League (NHL) Players
title_sort characterizing radiographic hip anatomy and relationship to hip range of motion and symptoms in national hockey league (nhl) players
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4901915/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967116S00075
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