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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 357 - 357
1 May 2010
Gosvig K Jacobsen S Sonne-holm S Palm H Magnusson E
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Introduction: Cam-type femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) is a pre-osteoarthritic condition causing premature joint degeneration. Cam-deformities are characterised by decreased cranial offset of the femoral head/neck junction and aspherity of the femoral head causing delamination of the acetabular cartilage and detachment of the acetabular labrum. To asses the epidemiological aspects of cam-type FAI we evaluated Nötzlis alpha angle and our own Triangular Index (TI) for use on plain AP pelvic radiographs.

Materials and Methods: Cam malformation was assessed in 2.803 pelvic radiographs by the alpha (α) angle and the TI to define pathological cut off values. The α-angle and TI were assessed in AP and lateral hip radiographs of 164 patients scheduled for THR and the influence of varying rotation on the α-angle and TI was assessed in femoral specimens. The distribution of Cam-deformities was assessed in 3.712 standardized AP pelvic radiographs using the α-angle and TI.

Results: Mean AP α-angle male/female was 55°/45°. The α-angle and TI was highly interrelated, OR 8.6–35 (p< 0.001). Almost all cam-malformations were identifiable in AP projections, sensitivity 88–94% compared to axial view. The TI proved robust for cam identification during rotation (± 20°) compared to the α-angle (−10° to +20°). The distribution of pathologic TI and α-angle (Right/Left) were 11.6/12.5% and 6.1/7.4% in males and 2.2/3.2% and 2.1/3.8% in females. We found a pronounced sexrelated difference in cam-deformity distribution, OR 2.0–6.3 (p< 0.001).

Conclusion: The triangular index and the α-angle were found reliable for epidemiological purpose. Overall prevalence of definite cam-deformity was app. 10% in men and 2,5% in women.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1309 - 1316
1 Oct 2007
Gosvig KK Jacobsen S Palm H Sonne-Holm S Magnusson E

Femoroacetabular cam impingement is thought to be a cause of premature osteoarthritis of the hip.

The presence of cam malformation was determined in 2803 standardised anteroposterior (AP) pelvic radiographs from the Copenhagen Osteoarthritis Study by measuring the alpha (α) angle and the triangular index, a new measure of asphericity of the femoral head. In addition, the α-angle and the triangular index were assessed on the AP and lateral hip radiographs of 82 men and 82 women randomly selected from patients scheduled for total hip replacement (THR). The influence of varying femoral rotation on the α angle and the triangular index was also determined in femoral specimens under experimental conditions.

From the 2803 radiographs the mean AP α-angle was 55° (30° to 100°) in men and 45° (34° to 108°) in women. Approximately 6% of men and 2% of women had cam malformation. The α-angle and triangular index were highly inter-related. Of those patients scheduled for THR, 36 men (44%) and 28 women (35%) had cam malformation identifiable on the AP radiographs. The triangular index proved to be more reliable in detecting cam malformation when the hip was held in varying degrees of rotation.

The combination of the α-angle and the triangular index will allow examination of historical radiographs for epidemiological purposes in following the natural history of the cam deformity.