On the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion

At the limits of the range of hip motion, impingement, subluxation and edge loading can cause osteoarthritis in natural hips or early failure hip replacements. The aim of this PhD was to investigate the role of hip joint soft tissues throughout the range of hip motion to better understand their role...

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Main Author: van Arkel, Richard
Other Authors: Jeffers, Jonathan ; Amis, Andrew
Published: Imperial College London 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724114
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7241142019-03-05T15:30:14ZOn the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motionvan Arkel, RichardJeffers, Jonathan ; Amis, Andrew2015At the limits of the range of hip motion, impingement, subluxation and edge loading can cause osteoarthritis in natural hips or early failure hip replacements. The aim of this PhD was to investigate the role of hip joint soft tissues throughout the range of hip motion to better understand their role in preventing (or perhaps even causing) these problematic load cases. A musculoskeletal model was used to investigate the muscular contribution to edge loading and found that in the mid-range of hip motion, the lines of action of hip muscles pointed inward from the acetabular rim and thus would stabilise the hip. However, in deep hip flexion with adduction, nearly half the muscles had unfavourable lines of action which could encourage edge loading. Conversely, in-vitro tests on nine cadaveric hips found that the hip capsular ligaments were slack in the mid-range of hip motion but tightened to restrain excessive hip rotation in positions close to the limits of hip motion. This passive restraint prevented the hip from moving into positions where the muscle lines of action were found to be unfavourable and thus could help protect the hip from edge loading. The ligaments were also found to protect the hip against impingement and dislocation. Out of the labrum, the ligamentum teres and the three capsular ligaments, it was found that the iliofemoral and ischiofemoral ligaments were primary restraints to hip rotation. These two capsular ligaments should be prioritised for protection/repair during hip surgery to maintain normal hip passive restraint. Whilst this can be technically demanding, failing to preserve/restore their function may increase the risk of osteoarthritic degeneration or hip replacement failure.617.5Imperial College Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724114http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/51147Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 617.5
spellingShingle 617.5
van Arkel, Richard
On the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion
description At the limits of the range of hip motion, impingement, subluxation and edge loading can cause osteoarthritis in natural hips or early failure hip replacements. The aim of this PhD was to investigate the role of hip joint soft tissues throughout the range of hip motion to better understand their role in preventing (or perhaps even causing) these problematic load cases. A musculoskeletal model was used to investigate the muscular contribution to edge loading and found that in the mid-range of hip motion, the lines of action of hip muscles pointed inward from the acetabular rim and thus would stabilise the hip. However, in deep hip flexion with adduction, nearly half the muscles had unfavourable lines of action which could encourage edge loading. Conversely, in-vitro tests on nine cadaveric hips found that the hip capsular ligaments were slack in the mid-range of hip motion but tightened to restrain excessive hip rotation in positions close to the limits of hip motion. This passive restraint prevented the hip from moving into positions where the muscle lines of action were found to be unfavourable and thus could help protect the hip from edge loading. The ligaments were also found to protect the hip against impingement and dislocation. Out of the labrum, the ligamentum teres and the three capsular ligaments, it was found that the iliofemoral and ischiofemoral ligaments were primary restraints to hip rotation. These two capsular ligaments should be prioritised for protection/repair during hip surgery to maintain normal hip passive restraint. Whilst this can be technically demanding, failing to preserve/restore their function may increase the risk of osteoarthritic degeneration or hip replacement failure.
author2 Jeffers, Jonathan ; Amis, Andrew
author_facet Jeffers, Jonathan ; Amis, Andrew
van Arkel, Richard
author van Arkel, Richard
author_sort van Arkel, Richard
title On the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion
title_short On the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion
title_full On the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion
title_fullStr On the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion
title_full_unstemmed On the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion
title_sort on the biomechanics of ligaments and muscles throughout the range of hip motion
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2015
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724114
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