Abstract

IntroductionThere is no consensus as to the best surgical approach to use when doing total hip arthroplasty (THA). There has been renewed interest in recent years in so-called anatomic minimally invasive direct anterior approaches (DAA). However, their reduced impact has not been confirmed with imaging data. This led us to carry out a prospective study to 1) evaluate fatty infiltration (FI) of muscles around the hip joint and 2) analyze how this FI changes over time. HypothesisTHA done by the DAA induces FI of the anterolateral muscles around the hip adjacent to the approach. Material and methodsA continuous case series of THA by DAA using a traction table was done by a single experienced surgeon. MRI images (GE Optima* MR360 1.5T) were taken preoperatively, then at 3 months and 1 year after the THA surgery. Muscle FI was classified as described by Goutallier by an independent radiologist on all the muscles around the hip joint. A Wilcoxon test was used to compare the preoperative MRI data to the data at 3 months and 1 year postoperative. ResultsSixty-nine MRI examinations were done in 23 patients. Two were not interpretable because the patient moved during the preoperative acquisition. No intraoperative or postoperative complications were reported. None of the patients had hip pain or limped at 1 year postoperative. The FI was significantly worse from the preoperative MRI to the 3-month postoperative MRI (p=0.02) and 1-year MRI (p=0.0007) in the internal obturator muscle and at 1 year in the piriformis muscle (p=0.04). There was no significant difference for the other muscles. The rectus femoris, superior and inferior gemellus muscles and the quadratus femoris could not be analyzed. DiscussionOur hypothesis was not confirmed, although we had a paradoxical finding of muscle FI in the posterior lateral rotator muscles not the anterolateral muscles after THA by DAA. These lesions may be secondary to detachment or denervation of these muscles when elevating the femur to prepare the femoral canal or insert the stem. Level of evidenceIV; Prospective case series.

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