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Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome and Total Hip Arthroplasty: Joint Biomechanics Before and After Surgery

Surgical interventions on the hip joint have greatly increased over the past decade, with the cumulative cost total hip arthroplasties (THA) alone exceeding $400B/year by 2020. Although positive patient-reported outcomes and satisfaction after THA and hip preservation for cam femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) are among the highest in orthopaedics, a limited number of research has investigated the biomechanics of dynamic activities following-up the surgery. This doctoral thesis examined the kinematics, muscle force component, and hip contact loading in pre- and postoperative patients during the deep squat motion. Specifically, this research: 1) examined muscle strength and pelvic kinematics in asymptomatic FAI, 2) examined lower-limb kinematics and muscle activity in postoperative patients who underwent either THA or FAI correction during a deep squat task, and 3) examined muscle force contributions and hip contact forces (HCF) during dynamic motion in postoperative FAI patients.
First, clinical and medical imaging evaluations classified the participants into three groups: symptomatic FAI, asymptomatic FAI (FAD – participants had the cam deformity, but no pain), and healthy controls. The FAD participants had significantly greater hip extensor strength compared to the FAI and CTRL groups, which allowed them to achieve greater pelvic mobility and squat as deep as the CTRL group.
Second, at the follow-up for the FAI surgery the patients showed increased pelvic ROM during the squat, and weakness associated with hip flexion and hip flexion-with-abduction were associated with postoperative alterations. For the THA follow-up analyses, the patients using a dual- mobility (DM) prosthesis reached an anterior pelvic tilt similarly to the CTRL during the dynamic parts of the squat; however, without returning its neutral tilt at the bottom of the squat, while the single- bearing (SB) prosthesis was associated with excessive hip abduction during the squat.
Third, a generic full-body musculoskeletal model (MSKM) was optimized to allow for the analysis of tasks with a high range of motion (ROM; e.g. deep squat task), which controlled muscle moment arms during the high joint flexions to avoid the model’s motor tendon units (MTU) to penetrate the bony structures and respect the anatomical via points. Simulation performed during gait demonstrated that FAI patients enhance medial-lateral hip stability postoperatively, allowing reduced dynamic forces of the muscles associated with the sagittal aspect of the gait due to a less compensatory strategy to stabilize the hip joint. Furthermore, simulations performed during deep squat showed a higher anterior pelvic tilt in postoperative FAI patients as a ‘restore to native’ mechanism once the cam-deformity was no longer present. Increased semimembranosus force was linked to higher vertical HCF and total magnitude.
The outcomes of this research include findings for gait and squat analyses that provide a better understanding of the pelvic mobility and hip muscle forces in hip diseases. In silico models can improve biomechanical assessment of postoperative patients in order to quantify surgical effectiveness and support clinicians in making subject-specific case decisions. The contributions also lay on the assertion of helping us to formulate future research directions in biomechanics applied to the orthopaedics field.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/38638
Date31 December 2018
CreatorsSantos Catelli, Danilo
ContributorsLamontagne, Mario
PublisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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