Survival analysis of hips treated with flexion osteotomy for femoral head necrosis.

Standard

Survival analysis of hips treated with flexion osteotomy for femoral head necrosis. / Drescher, W; Fuerst, Martin; Hahne, H J; Helfenstein, A; Petersen, W; Hassenpflug, J.

in: J BONE JOINT SURG BR, Jahrgang 85, Nr. 7, 7, 2003, S. 969-974.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Drescher, W, Fuerst, M, Hahne, HJ, Helfenstein, A, Petersen, W & Hassenpflug, J 2003, 'Survival analysis of hips treated with flexion osteotomy for femoral head necrosis.', J BONE JOINT SURG BR, Jg. 85, Nr. 7, 7, S. 969-974. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14516029?dopt=Citation>

APA

Drescher, W., Fuerst, M., Hahne, H. J., Helfenstein, A., Petersen, W., & Hassenpflug, J. (2003). Survival analysis of hips treated with flexion osteotomy for femoral head necrosis. J BONE JOINT SURG BR, 85(7), 969-974. [7]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14516029?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Drescher W, Fuerst M, Hahne HJ, Helfenstein A, Petersen W, Hassenpflug J. Survival analysis of hips treated with flexion osteotomy for femoral head necrosis. J BONE JOINT SURG BR. 2003;85(7):969-974. 7.

Bibtex

@article{0ffc0c0aeada49c28e7e9e4c49da7541,
title = "Survival analysis of hips treated with flexion osteotomy for femoral head necrosis.",
abstract = "The treatment of osteonecrosis of the femoral head (FHN) is controversial. It mainly occurs in young patients in whom total hip replacement is best avoided because of an increased risk of revision. The objective of this long-term follow-up study was to evaluate the outcome of intertrochanteric flexion osteotomy as a hip joint preserving operation for FHN. Over a 19-year period we carried out 70 intertrochanteric flexion osteotomies for FHN in 64 patients. The mean follow-up was 10.4 years (3.0 to 20.3). The overall mean Harris hip score increased from 51 points preoperatively to 71 points postoperatively. Six patients (9%) developed early postoperative complications. A total of 19 hips (27%) underwent total hip arthroplasty at a mean of 8.7 years after osteotomy. The five-year survival rate was 90%. Survival rates of hips in Ficat stage 2 were higher than those in stages 3 or 4. Hips with a preoperative necrotic angle of 200 degrees. Our findings suggest that flexion osteotomy is a safe and effective procedure in Ficat stage 2 and 3 FHN, preferably with a necrotic angle of",
author = "W Drescher and Martin Fuerst and Hahne, {H J} and A Helfenstein and W Petersen and J Hassenpflug",
year = "2003",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "85",
pages = "969--974",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Survival analysis of hips treated with flexion osteotomy for femoral head necrosis.

AU - Drescher, W

AU - Fuerst, Martin

AU - Hahne, H J

AU - Helfenstein, A

AU - Petersen, W

AU - Hassenpflug, J

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - The treatment of osteonecrosis of the femoral head (FHN) is controversial. It mainly occurs in young patients in whom total hip replacement is best avoided because of an increased risk of revision. The objective of this long-term follow-up study was to evaluate the outcome of intertrochanteric flexion osteotomy as a hip joint preserving operation for FHN. Over a 19-year period we carried out 70 intertrochanteric flexion osteotomies for FHN in 64 patients. The mean follow-up was 10.4 years (3.0 to 20.3). The overall mean Harris hip score increased from 51 points preoperatively to 71 points postoperatively. Six patients (9%) developed early postoperative complications. A total of 19 hips (27%) underwent total hip arthroplasty at a mean of 8.7 years after osteotomy. The five-year survival rate was 90%. Survival rates of hips in Ficat stage 2 were higher than those in stages 3 or 4. Hips with a preoperative necrotic angle of 200 degrees. Our findings suggest that flexion osteotomy is a safe and effective procedure in Ficat stage 2 and 3 FHN, preferably with a necrotic angle of

AB - The treatment of osteonecrosis of the femoral head (FHN) is controversial. It mainly occurs in young patients in whom total hip replacement is best avoided because of an increased risk of revision. The objective of this long-term follow-up study was to evaluate the outcome of intertrochanteric flexion osteotomy as a hip joint preserving operation for FHN. Over a 19-year period we carried out 70 intertrochanteric flexion osteotomies for FHN in 64 patients. The mean follow-up was 10.4 years (3.0 to 20.3). The overall mean Harris hip score increased from 51 points preoperatively to 71 points postoperatively. Six patients (9%) developed early postoperative complications. A total of 19 hips (27%) underwent total hip arthroplasty at a mean of 8.7 years after osteotomy. The five-year survival rate was 90%. Survival rates of hips in Ficat stage 2 were higher than those in stages 3 or 4. Hips with a preoperative necrotic angle of 200 degrees. Our findings suggest that flexion osteotomy is a safe and effective procedure in Ficat stage 2 and 3 FHN, preferably with a necrotic angle of

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 85

SP - 969

EP - 974

IS - 7

M1 - 7

ER -