Spinopelvic Alignment and Its Use in Total Hip Replacement Preoperative Planning—Decision Making Guide and Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. What May Influence the Spinopelvic Alignment?
4. Problems Associated with Improper Spinopelvic Mobility and THR
5. Anatomy and Imaging
Radiographic Measurements
- Pelvic Tilt (PT)—an angle between the reference vertical line and the line joining the middle of S1 upper endplate and the center of the femoral head. The normal value ranges from 7 to 19° [31].
- Pelvic Incidence (PI)— the angle between the line that is formed by connecting the upper endplate of S1 (at its midpoint) to the femoral head axis. The normal value ranges from 38 to 56° [31].
- Pelvic Femoral Angle (PFA)—the position of the femur in relation to the pelvis. It is the angle centered at the femoral head, between the mid sacral base and down femoral shaft. The normal value ranges from 1 to 17° [31].
- Lumbar Lordosis (LL)—the segmental angle of spinal segment in lordosis, measured between the line on the upper endplate of L1 and the line on the upper endplate of S1(L1 -L5). The normal value ranges from 40 to 58° [31].
- Femoral Inclination (FI)—the angle between a vertical reference line and the axis of the femur. The normal value ranges from 0 to 8° [31].
- Sacro Femoral Angle (SFA)—the angle between the line of the upper endplate of S1 and the axis of the femur. The normal value ranges from 43 to 61° [31]
- Spino Sacral Angle (SSA)—the angle between the line of the upper endplate of S1 and a reference vertical line. The normal value ranges from 119 to 133° [31].
6. Approach to Preoperative Planning—Spinopelvic Mobility
7. Decision Making Proposition
8. Discussion
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Spinopelvic Motion | Pelvic Tilt Change | Hip Bend Change | Lumbar Lordosis | Pelvic Femoral Angle |
---|---|---|---|---|
Normal | 20°–35° | 55°–70° | 20° | 45° |
Hypermobile | >35° | <55° | >20° | <45° |
Stiff | <20° | >70° | <20° | >45° |
Types of Pelvic Position | Clinical Consequences | Potential Problems |
---|---|---|
In case of android type of pelvis (low PI, low SS, lower rotational movements) there is a tendency to retroversion, which leads to sacroiliac joints stiffness. | Low spinopelvic mobility is compensated by movement in hip joints. | Lower acetabular coverage -> risk of posterior dislocation during sitting |
In case of a gynecoid type of pelvis (high PI, high SS, anteversion, higher rotational movements, no osteoarthritis in lumbar spine). | Spinopelvic mobility is restricted by hip joint movements. Lower extension in hip joints. | Higher possibilities of adaptive changes and higher acetabular coverage -> risk of anterior dislocation during standing |
In case of lumbar spine stabilization with pelvis, with tendency to anteversion. | Higher acetabular anteversion. | Risk of anterior dislocation during standing |
In case of lumbar spine stabilization with pelvis, with tendency to retroversion (flat back). | Lower acetabular anteversion. | Risk of posterior dislocation during sitting |
Spinopelvic Alignment | Preoperative Recomandation |
---|---|
Pelvic retroversion | Higher acetabular anteversion and inclination during THR—within limits of Lewinnek’s safe zone |
Pelvic anteversion | Lower acetabular anteversion and inclination during THR—within limits of Lewinnek’s safe zone |
Lumbar spine stabilization with pelvic with tendency to anteversion | Higher acetabular anteversion during THR—up to 30° |
Lumbar spine stabilization with pelvic with tendency to retroversion | Lower acetabular anteversion during THR—up to 5° |
Patients with hypermobile spinopelvic junction | Higher acetabular anteversion during THR—up to 25° |
Patients with stiff spinopelvic junction | Higher acetabular inclination during THR—within limits of Lewinnek’s safe zone |
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Stępiński, P.; Stolarczyk, A.; Maciąg, B.; Modzelewski, K.; Szymczak, J.; Michalczyk, W.; Zdun, J.; Grzegorzewski, S. Spinopelvic Alignment and Its Use in Total Hip Replacement Preoperative Planning—Decision Making Guide and Literature Review. J. Clin. Med. 2021, 10, 3528. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10163528
Stępiński P, Stolarczyk A, Maciąg B, Modzelewski K, Szymczak J, Michalczyk W, Zdun J, Grzegorzewski S. Spinopelvic Alignment and Its Use in Total Hip Replacement Preoperative Planning—Decision Making Guide and Literature Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2021; 10(16):3528. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10163528
Chicago/Turabian StyleStępiński, Piotr, Artur Stolarczyk, Bartosz Maciąg, Krzysztof Modzelewski, Jakub Szymczak, Weronika Michalczyk, Julia Zdun, and Szymon Grzegorzewski. 2021. "Spinopelvic Alignment and Its Use in Total Hip Replacement Preoperative Planning—Decision Making Guide and Literature Review" Journal of Clinical Medicine 10, no. 16: 3528. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10163528
APA StyleStępiński, P., Stolarczyk, A., Maciąg, B., Modzelewski, K., Szymczak, J., Michalczyk, W., Zdun, J., & Grzegorzewski, S. (2021). Spinopelvic Alignment and Its Use in Total Hip Replacement Preoperative Planning—Decision Making Guide and Literature Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(16), 3528. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10163528