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 |