4.2 Article

Osseous defect of the anteroinferior femoral head: is it associated with femoroacetabular impingement (FAI)?

Journal

SKELETAL RADIOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 9, Pages 1781-1790

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00256-021-03730-x

Keywords

Hip arthrography; Magnetic resonance imaging; Femoral acetabular impingement

Funding

  1. Universitat Zurich

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The femoral head defect is a common finding in MRI examinations of the hip, located in the anteroinferior aspect. There is no association with FAI, but patients with femoral head defects showed a slightly lower femoral antetorsion compared to those without defects.
Objective To evaluate the prevalence, morphology, and clinical significance of a repeatedly observed yet not examined circumscript osseous defect at the anteroinferior aspect of the femoral head, termed femoral head defect. Materials and methods Retrospective study with approval of the institutional review board. There was informed consent by all individuals. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) hip examinations of 970 individuals (age 15 to 55) were analyzed for femoral head defect. Patients with femoral head defect were matched for age and gender with patients without defect. Two readers independently assessed MRI images regarding presence, location, and morphology of the defect. MR images and radiographs were analyzed for findings of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). Femoral torsion was measured. Independent t test and chi-square test were used for statistics. Results Sixty-eight (7%) of 970 MRI examinations exhibited a femoral head defect in an anteroinferior location of the femoral head (29/400 men, 7.3%; 39/570 women, 6.8%; p = 0.8). The most frequent morphology of femoral head defect was type I, dent-like (34; 50%), followed by type II, crater-like (27; 40%), and III, cystic (7; 10%). Femoral head defect was slightly more common on the right hip (39 individuals; 57%) compared to left (29 individuals; 43%), non-significantly (p = 0.115). There was no association between FAI or its subtypes and the presence of femoral head defect (p = 0.890). Femoral antetorsion was reduced in patients with femoral head defect (12.9 degrees +/- 8.6) compared to patients without defect (15.2 degrees +/- 8.5), without statistical significance (p = 0.121). Conclusion The femoral head defect is a common finding in MRI examinations of the hip and is situated in the anteroinferior location. There was no association with FAI yet a non-significant trend towards lower femoral antetorsion in patients with femoral head defects.

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