Amyloid deposition in osteoarthritis of the hip.

Standard

Amyloid deposition in osteoarthritis of the hip. / Niggemeyer, Oliver; Steinhagen, Jörn; Deuretzbacher, Georg; Zustin, Jozef; Rüther, Wolfgang.

In: ARCH ORTHOP TRAUM SU, Vol. 131, No. 5, 5, 2011, p. 637-643.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Niggemeyer, O, Steinhagen, J, Deuretzbacher, G, Zustin, J & Rüther, W 2011, 'Amyloid deposition in osteoarthritis of the hip.', ARCH ORTHOP TRAUM SU, vol. 131, no. 5, 5, pp. 637-643. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20848114?dopt=Citation>

APA

Niggemeyer, O., Steinhagen, J., Deuretzbacher, G., Zustin, J., & Rüther, W. (2011). Amyloid deposition in osteoarthritis of the hip. ARCH ORTHOP TRAUM SU, 131(5), 637-643. [5]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20848114?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Niggemeyer O, Steinhagen J, Deuretzbacher G, Zustin J, Rüther W. Amyloid deposition in osteoarthritis of the hip. ARCH ORTHOP TRAUM SU. 2011;131(5):637-643. 5.

Bibtex

@article{dfb39d90f39c4504bc3fc19e8be8195b,
title = "Amyloid deposition in osteoarthritis of the hip.",
abstract = "PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to examine the frequency of amyloid deposition in patients with end-stage hip osteoarthritis (OA). Further, their impact on the clinical situation and the OA severity were analyzed. METHODS: Fifty patients with OA who consecutively underwent total hip replacement were prospectively evaluated. The X-rays of the patients were analyzed using a radiological score (Kellgren-Lawrence) to quantify the amount of radiological changes. A clinical score [Harris hip score (HHS)] was preoperatively calculated for every patient. Specimens from the femoral head of bone and cartilage, and additionally 1 cm(2) of the capsule, were obtained from every patient intraoperatively for analyzing the amyloid deposition histologically. A histological grading was also performed. On a subset of patients with amyloid deposits, the subtypes were characterized immunohistologically. RESULTS: The only subtype of amyloid was ATTR. There was a high, significant correlation between articular amyloid deposition and the age of the patient at the time of the operation. No correlation was found for any other measured item, such as signs of inflammation in the blood samples, histological grading, radiological score or clinical score. CONCLUSIONS: The frequency of amyloid deposits in the joint increases with age, and it can generally be considered to be of no pathologic significance, since a correlation with the radiological and histological changes was ruled out by our study. Thus, the presence of ATTR amyloid may simply be an incidental finding in aged joints.",
author = "Oliver Niggemeyer and J{\"o}rn Steinhagen and Georg Deuretzbacher and Jozef Zustin and Wolfgang R{\"u}ther",
year = "2011",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "131",
pages = "637--643",
journal = "ARCH ORTHOP TRAUM SU",
issn = "0936-8051",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Amyloid deposition in osteoarthritis of the hip.

AU - Niggemeyer, Oliver

AU - Steinhagen, Jörn

AU - Deuretzbacher, Georg

AU - Zustin, Jozef

AU - Rüther, Wolfgang

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to examine the frequency of amyloid deposition in patients with end-stage hip osteoarthritis (OA). Further, their impact on the clinical situation and the OA severity were analyzed. METHODS: Fifty patients with OA who consecutively underwent total hip replacement were prospectively evaluated. The X-rays of the patients were analyzed using a radiological score (Kellgren-Lawrence) to quantify the amount of radiological changes. A clinical score [Harris hip score (HHS)] was preoperatively calculated for every patient. Specimens from the femoral head of bone and cartilage, and additionally 1 cm(2) of the capsule, were obtained from every patient intraoperatively for analyzing the amyloid deposition histologically. A histological grading was also performed. On a subset of patients with amyloid deposits, the subtypes were characterized immunohistologically. RESULTS: The only subtype of amyloid was ATTR. There was a high, significant correlation between articular amyloid deposition and the age of the patient at the time of the operation. No correlation was found for any other measured item, such as signs of inflammation in the blood samples, histological grading, radiological score or clinical score. CONCLUSIONS: The frequency of amyloid deposits in the joint increases with age, and it can generally be considered to be of no pathologic significance, since a correlation with the radiological and histological changes was ruled out by our study. Thus, the presence of ATTR amyloid may simply be an incidental finding in aged joints.

AB - PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to examine the frequency of amyloid deposition in patients with end-stage hip osteoarthritis (OA). Further, their impact on the clinical situation and the OA severity were analyzed. METHODS: Fifty patients with OA who consecutively underwent total hip replacement were prospectively evaluated. The X-rays of the patients were analyzed using a radiological score (Kellgren-Lawrence) to quantify the amount of radiological changes. A clinical score [Harris hip score (HHS)] was preoperatively calculated for every patient. Specimens from the femoral head of bone and cartilage, and additionally 1 cm(2) of the capsule, were obtained from every patient intraoperatively for analyzing the amyloid deposition histologically. A histological grading was also performed. On a subset of patients with amyloid deposits, the subtypes were characterized immunohistologically. RESULTS: The only subtype of amyloid was ATTR. There was a high, significant correlation between articular amyloid deposition and the age of the patient at the time of the operation. No correlation was found for any other measured item, such as signs of inflammation in the blood samples, histological grading, radiological score or clinical score. CONCLUSIONS: The frequency of amyloid deposits in the joint increases with age, and it can generally be considered to be of no pathologic significance, since a correlation with the radiological and histological changes was ruled out by our study. Thus, the presence of ATTR amyloid may simply be an incidental finding in aged joints.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 131

SP - 637

EP - 643

JO - ARCH ORTHOP TRAUM SU

JF - ARCH ORTHOP TRAUM SU

SN - 0936-8051

IS - 5

M1 - 5

ER -