PurposeThe acetabular coverage in osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH) affects the need for surgical intervention, and the collapse of the femoral head remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the relation between the acetabular coverage and the need for surgical treatment and femoral head collapse.MethodsThe study included 158 patients with 252 hips with glucocorticoid administration and idiopathic ONHF without osteoarthritis changes. The mean age at the first visit was 45.2 years, and the mean follow-up period was 92.2 months. All ONFH hips were subsequently divided into two groups: those needing surgical intervention and those without surgery. Additionally, it divided 167 initially non-collapsed hips into those that either later collapsed or not. Radiographic parameters with the centre-edge angle, acetabular roof obliquity, sharp angle, and necrotic location, following the guidelines of the Japanese Investigation Committee, were evaluated.ResultsThere were no significant differences in radiographic parameters between the 106 hips that underwent surgery and the 146 hips without surgery. Among the 167 hips without initial collapse, 91 eventually collapsed while 76 did not; their radiographic findings have no significant differences. The necrotic locations were significantly larger in hips requiring surgical intervention or femoral head collapse. Furthermore, 21.8% (55 out of 252 hips) had acetabular dysplasia, which did not significantly correlate with the necessity for surgical treatment or the incidence of femoral head collapse.ConclusionsAcetabular coverage has little effect on the necessity for surgical treatment and femoral head collapse in ONFH patients over a long-term follow-up.
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