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Table 1 Cases of fluid extravasation after hip arthroscopy – demographic data and hip operative procedure

From: Abdominal compartment syndrome – the prevention and treatment of possible lethal complications following hip arthroscopy: a case report

Authors, year of publication and reference number

Age and gender

Hip treatment procedures

Time of surgery (minutes) and surgical position

Bartlett et al., 1998[3]

50-year-old man

1. Loose-body removal 13 days after acetabular fracture of both columns treated with open reduction–internal fixation using an ilioinguinal approach

135/lateral position

Haupt et al., 2008[4]

15-year-old girl

1. Capsulotomy

105/lateral position

2. Adhesion releases after open acetabular retroversion corrected by trimming the anterosuperior rim with reattachment of the labrum.

Sharma et al., 2009[5]

45-year-old woman

1. Limited capsulectomy

160/supine position

2. Labral repair

3. Psoas release

Fowler and Owens, 2010[6]

42-year-old man

1. Limited capsulectomy

95/lateral position

2. Psoas tenotomy

3. Debridement of the anterior and superior labrum and pincer-type lesion

Verma and Sekiya, 2010[7]

21-year-old woman

1. Capsulotomy

139/supine position

 

2. Iliopsoas tenotomy

3. Osteoplasty to treat the femoroacetabular cam impingement

Ladner et al., 2010[8]

42-year-old woman

1. Limited capsulectomy

165/supine position

2. Debridement of the irreparable large labral tear

3. Chondroplasty on the acetabular rim

4. Osteoplasty of the femoral head-neck junction and acetabular rim

Current case

55-year-old woman

1. Capsulotomy

120/supine position

2. Iliopsoas tenotomy

3. Osteoplasty to treat the femoroacetabular pincer and cam impingement

  

4. Resection of trochanteric bursa in relation to gluteus medius tendon