2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.arth.2014.10.014
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Pelvic Tilt in Patients Undergoing Total Hip Arthroplasty: When Does it Matter?

Abstract: Pelvic tilt (PT) affects the functional anteversion and inclination of acetabular components in total hip arthroplasty (THA). One-hundred and thirty-eight consecutive patients who underwent unilateral primary THA were reviewed. Most cases had some degree of pre-operative PT, with 17% having greater than 10° of PT on standing pre-operative radiographs. There was no significant change in PT following THA. A computer model of a hemispheric acetabular component implanted in a range of anatomic positions in a pelvi… Show more

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Cited by 180 publications
(179 citation statements)
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“…An increase in functional anteversion of the acetabular component is thought to be protective against posterior dislocation in the sitting position, because it provides more posterior coverage of the prosthetic head [19] and reduces the likelihood of anterior impingement of the prosthetic femoral neck on the edge of the acetabular cup or bone [12]. Our study patients experienced a mean increase in posterior pelvic tilt of 22°from standing to sitting position, which is similar to values reported in previous studies [19,25,35], and this increase in posterior pelvic tilt would increase the functional anteversion of the acetabular component by approximately 15° [29,31]. It might be important to consider the outliers, which include 3% of patients (with and without DDD) who actually rotated their pelvises forward (more anterior tilting pelvises) from standing to sitting position.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…An increase in functional anteversion of the acetabular component is thought to be protective against posterior dislocation in the sitting position, because it provides more posterior coverage of the prosthetic head [19] and reduces the likelihood of anterior impingement of the prosthetic femoral neck on the edge of the acetabular cup or bone [12]. Our study patients experienced a mean increase in posterior pelvic tilt of 22°from standing to sitting position, which is similar to values reported in previous studies [19,25,35], and this increase in posterior pelvic tilt would increase the functional anteversion of the acetabular component by approximately 15° [29,31]. It might be important to consider the outliers, which include 3% of patients (with and without DDD) who actually rotated their pelvises forward (more anterior tilting pelvises) from standing to sitting position.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 85%
“…The patient's inability to accommodate postural changes through the lumbar spine after spine surgery, with limited change in pelvic tilt during functional activities, may explain the reported dislocation event. Pelvic tilt affects the functional orientation of acetabular components in patients undergoing THA, such that increasing posterior pelvic tilt increases functional acetabular inclination and anteversion, while decreasing pelvic tilt will result in the loss of functional inclination and anteversion [31]. Previous studies have shown that preoperative pelvic tilt from standing to sitting position can be used to reliably predict postoperative THA cup orientation with standing and sitting lateral radiographs [19,23].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…showed that every 1° increase in anterior pelvic tilt would result in a reduction of acetabular anteversion by 0.7°–0.8°. Other studies also obtained similar conclusions.…”
Section: Effects Of Pelvic Tilt On Acetabular Anteversionsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…LL was proposed to be directly affected by SS, and the two were positively correlated. The changes in the pelvic tilt need to be compensated by changes in the LL, eventually reaching the balance of the sagittal plane. Different compensation mechanisms might be activated when the spine is deformed: the spinal segments on both sides of the deformed parts can be compensated in the case of adequate spinal flexibility.…”
Section: Correlation Between Sagittal Morphology Of the Spine And Pelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[1] about the role of pelvic sagittal alignment in the functional orientation of the acetabular cup in total hip arthroplasty (THA).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%