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OSTEONECROSIS OF THE HIP TREATED BY INTERTROCHANTERIC OSTEOTOMY
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1988
Year
Unknown Venue
Bone DiseaseSkeletal TraumaHip ArthroplastyOsteopathyOsteoarthritisOrthopaedicsSurgeryJoint ReplacementOperation 71Femoral HeadMusculoskeletal SurgeryMedicineOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryAdvanced Joint DestructionPhysical Therapy
We have reviewed the results of 106 intertrochanteric osteotomies performed for osteonecrosis of the femoral head. The average age at operation was 47.5 years. At two years from operation 71% of the hips had a clinically satisfactory result and at final follow-up, an average of 8.2 years after operation, 58% continued to have excellent or good rating. Twenty-four hips had needed total replacement or arthrodesis because of pain. Patients aged less than 55 did better than those operated on after that age, and hips with an idiopathic or post-traumatic aetiology did considerably better than alcohol-induced or steroid-induced cases. In view of these findings we believe that in the younger adult, in the absence of metabolic bone disease or advanced joint destruction, intertrochanteric osteotomy should be considered for the freatment of osteonecrosis.