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Three‐dimensional assessment of impingement risk in geometrically parameterised hips compared with clinical measures
Author(s) -
Cooper Robert J.,
Mengoni Marlène,
Groves Dawn,
Williams Sophie,
Bankes Marcus J.K.,
Robinson Philip,
Jones Alison C.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
international journal for numerical methods in biomedical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.741
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 2040-7947
pISSN - 2040-7939
DOI - 10.1002/cnm.2867
Subject(s) - acetabulum , deformity , medicine , osteoarthritis , radiography , femur , orthodontics , joint (building) , biomechanics , femoroacetabular impingement , parametric statistics , mathematics , radiology , surgery , anatomy , structural engineering , pathology , statistics , alternative medicine , engineering
Abnormal bony morphology is a factor implicated in hip joint soft tissue damage and an increased lifetime risk of osteoarthritis. Standard 2‐dimensional radiographic measurements for diagnosis of hip deformities, such as cam deformities on the femoral neck, do not capture the full joint geometry and are not indicative of symptomatic damage. In this study, a 3‐dimensional geometric parameterisation system was developed to capture key variations in the femur and acetabulum of subjects with clinically diagnosed cam deformity. The parameterisation was performed for computed tomography scans of 20 patients (10 female and 10 male). Novel quantitative measures of cam deformity were taken and used to assess differences in morphological deformities between males and females. The parametric surfaces matched the more detailed, segmented hip bone geometry with low fitting error. The quantitative severity measures captured both the size and the position of cams and distinguished between cam and control femurs. The precision of the measures was sufficient to identify differences between subjects that could not be seen with the sole use of 2‐dimensional imaging. In particular, cams were found to be more superiorly located in males than in females. As well as providing a means to distinguish between subjects more clearly, the new geometric hip parameterisation facilitates the flexible and rapid generation of a range of realistic hip geometries including cams. When combined with material property models, these stratified cam shapes can be used for further assessment of the effect of the geometric variation under impingement conditions.

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