Diagnostic Hip Arthroscopy
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Table of Contents
Diagnostic hip arthroscopy is a minimally-invasive surgical technique used to accurately provide intraoperative information and potentially treat certain intra-articular (such as labral tears, chondral defects, and femoroacetabular impingement) and extra-articular (such as capsular tears, ischiofemoral impingement, and pediatric deformities) hip pathologies. The use of this procedure in the United States is becoming more common; annual rates are increasing by as much as 365% since 2004. Within this rapid increase of utilization, the three most common procedures being performed with diagnostic hip arthroscopy are labral repair, femoroplasty, and acetabuloplasty. In this case, a young female athlete is being assessed for left anterior hip pain recalcitrant to nonoperative management. The patient was placed in a supine position with an anterolateral portal and modified anterior portal being placed into the left hip. A puncture capsulorrhaphy was performed to examine the labrum, femoral head, and transverse ligament. Then, the medial structures and peripheral compartment were visualized. Throughout the procedure, the only treatable hip pathology identified was labral fraying consistent with a minor labral tear. It was determined that the fraying was not significant enough to require surgical repair, so labral debridement was chosen. Other areas of labral fraying and fatty degeneration were identified, but they were not significant enough to be treated intraoperatively. The procedure was completed with no complications.
Orthopedics; hip joint; cartilage, articular; labrum.
Hip pain in young adults and adolescents has an annual incidence of 0.44%, but the presence of symptoms in this population usually reflects a higher significance for pathologic disorders.1 Diagnosing hip pathology in younger patients becomes challenging when their symptoms are non-specific and physical findings are not clear. Furthermore, imaging studies can miss up to 10% of hip injuries in patients.2 Hip pathology can be intra-articular (such as labral tears, femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) , synovial disease, and chondral defects) or extra-articular (such as capsular tears, ischiofemoral impingement, and piriformis debridement). Diagnostic hip arthroscopy is a minimally invasive surgical technique that can more accurately grade this pathology and potentially provide intraoperative therapeutic benefits. In this case, the patient had a minor labral tear. Labral tears often occur more frequently in women between the ages of 15–41 years old.3 These tears typically occur in the anterosuperior region. Diagnostic hip arthroscopy has emerged as an alternative modality to radiographic imaging that more accurately identifies and treats this hip pathology. This case was resolved with arthroscopic labral debridement. Overall, hip arthroscopy is becoming more popular in the United States with an increase in annual rates as high as 365% from 2004 to 2009.4
This patient is a 24-year-old female who arrived at the office with a chief complaint of left anterior hip and groin pain for the past 3 months. The patient used to be a college athlete and remains active playing in a competitive soccer league. She stated that her hip has made clicking sounds with internal rotation for the past few years, but that the pain is relatively new. The patient rated the pain as a constant, aching 4/10 pain that increases to a 6/10 after playing soccer. She also claimed that her left hip feels more stiff after running and is no longer relieved with NSAIDs or rest. She attempted physical therapy for 4 weeks with no relief. Corticosteroid injection showed minimal benefit that lasted less than a week. This patient had no pertinent past medical history.
Physical examination showed no tenderness on palpation to her pelvis and bilateral thighs. The patient’s pain was exacerbated when her left hip was brought from a fully flexed, externally rotated, and abducted position to a position of extension, internal rotation, and adduction. An audible snapping sound was also heard with this maneuver. The patient had a normal lower extremity range of motion bilaterally and no sensory loss or paresthesia.
This patient underwent a complete pelvic screening evaluation that included an anteroposterior (AP) view, a cross-table lateral view, and a frog lateral view. X-ray imaging showed no signs of FAI, joint depression, developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH), tumor, arthritis, or structural trauma.
When labral tears are suspected, a magnetic resonance arthrogram (MRA) is found to be the imaging study of choice in identifying pathology. MRA has been found in previous studies to have a sensitivity ranging from 60–91%, a specificity of 44%, and a positive predictive value of 93%.3 MRA was negative for labral tears and identified no additional structural abnormalities in this patient. Although all imaging was negative for a labral tear, a patient with her symptoms cannot be ruled out for a labral tear until she undergoes a diagnostic hip arthroscopy.
Female patients with labral tears of the hip are normally associated with those who play sports that require repetitive pivoting motions on a loaded femur. This occurs in sports such as soccer, ice hockey, ballet, and golf. It is suspected that women are at a higher risk for these tears due to a higher incidence of acetabular dysplasia and joint laxity. Previous studies have shown that up to 61% of patients have an insidious onset,5 and it is believed to be associated with microtrauma in the end-range motion positions of hyperabduction, hyperextension, and external rotation. Pain is often noted during periods of increased physical activity, such as rising from a seated position or squatting.6
Patients with labral tears usually receive initial nonoperative treatment options that consist of rest, NSAIDs as needed, physical therapy, and/or hip injections with or without steroids. However, there is no long-term follow-up data found in the literature on conservative management of hip labral tears. Furthermore, there is no data that shows which therapeutic exercises in physical therapy are most effective.7
Surgical treatment is usually started once conservative management fails. Arthroscopic debridement of the labrum and/or arthroscopic labral repair are more invasive options. Arthroscopic debridement of labral tears is indicated when the tear is not amenable to surgical repair. Results are promising with up to 89% of patients claiming “improved status” at an average of 16.5 months after the procedure.3 Arthroscopic surgical labrum repair is indicated for full-thickness tears at the labral-chondral junction. Unfortunately for both procedures, long-term outcomes are not well documented in the literature.3
Diagnostic hip arthroscopy was chosen due to the patient’s failure with conservative management and imaging being unable to identify any hip pathology. The goal of this arthroscopic procedure was to examine intra-articular structures of the hip (such as the labrum, femoral head, transverse ligament, medial structures, and the peripheral compartment), identify pathology, and treat any pathology present. During the procedure, some fraying of the labrum was identified. However, the labral damage was not severe enough to require surgical repair, so it was determined during the procedure that labral debridement was the best option.
Diagnostic hip arthroscopy has been shown to benefit patients with extra-articular pathology that includes recalcitrant trochanteric bursitis, snapping hip syndromes, and gluteus medius tendon tears. Arthroscopy should also be considered for intra-articular hip pathologies such as septic arthritis, FAI lesions, assessment of chondral defects, and acetabular labral tears.8 Patients with full-thickness tears at the labral-chondral junction are better candidates for arthroscopic labral repair (instead of debridement). Arthroscopic labral debridement is indicated in those with labral tears that are not amenable to surgical repair.
Hip arthroscopy is contraindicated in those with severe osteoporotic bone, hip ankylosis, open wounds, and joint contractures.9,10 Poor prognostic indicators with the arthroscopic repair of the hip are those with associated arthritic changes. In patients with concomitant structural abnormalities (such as FAI and DDH), labral debridement has been frequently inadequate; those patients may benefit from other joint-preserving arthroscopic procedures. Furthermore, hip arthroscopy and isolated labral treatment in these patients may accelerate the process of arthritis.9
There are some pathologies for which arthroscopy has been proven to be effective in treating, but open surgical techniques have shown better outcomes. Some examples of pathologies that arthroscopy should not be the default procedure for include acetabular dysplasia, Legg-Calve-Perthes disease, and chronic slipped capital femoral epiphysis (SCFE).
Morbid obesity is a relative contraindication, so obese patients should consider weight loss and physiotherapy prior to arthroscopic surgery. These patients should be aware that they typically have worse outcomes due to their higher association with osteoarthritis.11 Obesity is associated with lower overall postoperative outcomes and a much higher rate of revision surgeries.10-11
Diagnostic hip arthroscopy was first introduced to cadavers in 1931; it was not clinically applied to a patient until 1939. However, there was a low number of clinical studies and reports done on this procedure until the 1980s.8,11 The proper use of distraction was a significant development for visualizing the central compartment, which led to a large increase in utilization during this timeframe. The arthroscopic indications expanded from intra-articular pathologies to extra-articular pathologies (as well as pediatric hip disorders). This later led to the first textbook on hip arthroscopy being published by Richard Villar; he became the founding member and president of the International Society for Hip Arthroscopy (ISHA) in 2008. ISHA then published several manuscripts on surgical techniques, which helped further advance the procedure globally. From 2002–2013 (internationally and in the United States), the use of hip arthroscopy has increased by as much as sevenfold. Throughout the United States, the three most common hip arthroscopic procedures being performed are labral repair, femoroplasty, and acetabuloplasty.11
Patients undergoing diagnostic hip arthroscopy are commonly placed on a supine fracture table with a lateralized perineal post under general anesthesia. The two portals used are the anterolateral (placed 1 cm adjacent to the anterior-superior border of the greater trochanter) and modified anterior (placed slightly lateral and distal to the site of intersection of a sagittal line distally through the anterior superior iliac spine and a transverse line across the tip of the trochanter), which enter using fluoroscopic or ultrasound guidance. Intra-articular visualization through the arthroscope is optimized when the medium fluid flow rate is 0.7 L/min, fluid pressure is balanced with mean arterial pressure, and dilute epinephrine (1:100,000) is present in the arthroscopic field.12 During this procedure, the surgeon evaluates the central and medial compartments of the hip to provide necessary intraoperative information to properly treat the patient. Diagnostic hip arthroscopy typically lasts less than an hour, and operative times vary depending on what pathology is identified. Patients are usually discharged from the hospital on the same day as the procedure.
There are a wide variety of complications that come with this highly skilled procedure, but overall complication rates in recent studies ranged from 1.4–7.3%.4,8,10 The three most common complications are neuropraxia (0.92%), iatrogenic chondral and labral injury (0.69%), and heterotopic ossification (0.60%). Major complications only amounted to 4.8% of all complications, with the most common one being abdominal fluid extravasation.11 The conversion rate to total hip replacement is 4.2%.4
Diagnostic hip arthroscopy is a minimally-invasive surgical technique for identifying pathology and providing operative information that may not be evident with available imaging modalities.2 In this case, an anterolateral and modified anterior portal was used with the patient in a supine position to look for pathology throughout the left hip. The anterolateral portal was placed using a spinal needle and fluoroscopic guidance, 1–2 cm anterior and superior to the anterosuperior border of the greater trochanter. A small skin incision was then made with an 11 blade. This is followed by placement of a cannula and dilators. A second spinal needle was then placed at the midline between the superior greater trochanter and the ASIS, with confirmation on intra-articular placement using arthroscopic visualization. The procedure then began with a puncture capsulorrhaphy to start identifying structures within the hip. After examining the medial structures and the peripheral compartment, the only pathology identified during the procedure was fraying of the labrum and slight yellow discoloration. The more severe areas with fraying were treated arthroscopically with labral debridement, while less severe fraying was not treated intraoperatively. No other significant hip pathology was found throughout the procedure. There were no intraoperative complications associated with this operation.
Standard arthroscopic equipment; fluoroscopic equipment.
Nothing to disclose.
The patient referred to in this video article has given their informed consent to be filmed and is aware that information and images will be published online.
Citations
- Röling MA, Mathijssen NM, Bloem RM. Incidence of symptomatic femoroacetabular impingement in the general population: a prospective registration study. J Hip Preserv Surg. 2016;3(3):203-207. doi:10.1093/jhps/hnw009.
- Alfikey A, El-Bakoury A, Karim MA, Farouk H, Kaddah MA, Abdelazeem AH. Role of arthroscopy for the diagnosis and management of post-traumatic hip pain: a prospective study. J Hip Preserv Surg. 2019;6(4):377-384. doi:10.1093/jhps/hnz052.
- Hunt D, Clohisy J, Prather H. Acetabular labral tears of the hip in women. Phys Med Rehab Clin N Am. 2007;18:497-520, ix. doi:10.1016/j.pmr.2007.05.007.
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Zeman P, Rafi M, Kautzner J. Evaluation of primary hip arthroscopy complications in mid-term follow-up: a multicentric prospective study. Int Orthop. 2021 Oct;45(10):2525-2529. doi:10.1007/s00264-021-05114-1.
- Burnett RS, Della Rocca GJ, Prather H, Curry M, Maloney WJ, Clohisy JC. Clinical presentation of patients with tears of the acetabular labrum. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2006;88(7):1448-1457. doi:10.2106/JBJS.D.02806.
- Raut S, Daivajna S, Nakano N, Khanduja V. ISHA-Richard Villar Best Clinical Paper Award: Acetabular labral tears in sexually active women: an evaluation of patient satisfaction following hip arthroscopy. J Hip Preserv Surg. 2018;5(4):357-361. doi:10.1093/jhps/hny046.
- Lewis CL, Sahrmann SA. Acetabular labral tears. Phys Ther. 2006;86(1):110-121. doi:10.1093/ptj/86.1.110.
- Jamil M, Dandachli W, Noordin S, Witt J. Hip arthroscopy: indications, outcomes and complications. Int J Surg. 2018;54(Pt B):341-344. doi:10.1016/j.ijsu.2017.08.557.
- Parvizi J, Bican O, Bender B, et al. Arthroscopy for labral tears in patients with developmental dysplasia of the hip: a cautionary note. J Arthroplasty. 2009 Sep;24(6 Suppl):110-3. doi:10.1016/j.arth.2009.05.021.
- Smart LR, Oetgen M, Noonan B, Medvecky M. Beginning hip arthroscopy: indications, positioning, portals, basic techniques, and complications. Arthroscopy. 2007 Dec;23(12):1348-53. doi:10.1016/j.arthro.2007.06.020.
- Shukla S, Pettit M, Kumar KHS, Khanduja V. History of hip arthroscopy. J Arthrosc Surg Sport Med. 2020;1(1):73-80. doi:10.25259/JASSM_21_2020.
- Stone AV, Howse EA, Mannava S, Miller BA, Botros D, Stubbs AJ. Basic hip arthroscopy: diagnostic hip arthroscopy. Arthrosc Tech. 2017;6(3):e699-e704. doi:10.1016/j.eats.2017.01.013.
Cite this article
Haese JPD, Martin SD. Diagnostic hip arthroscopy. J Med Insight. 2025;2025(31). doi:10.24296/jomi/31.
Procedure Outline
Table of Contents
- High Flow Rate
- Puncture-Capsule Orifice
- Pulvinar, Condyloid Notch, and Ligamentum Teres
- Discoloration of Labrum
- Articular Cartilage Bubbling
- Labral Fraying
- Assessment of Labral Damage
- Shave Labral Fray
- Medial Gutter, Medial Synovial Fold, and Zona Orbicularis
- Range of Motion
- Labral Seal
- Opening Capsule via Increased Flow Rate
- Lateral Synovial Fold and Vasculature
Transcription
CHAPTER 1
Just the obturator, yeah. So we’re just gonna dilate up our portal here. Let me have the Mitech now. 60 - you want to go down a little? Go down to 50. 50 or 40? 50. So heat is bad for the hip, so we really run high-flow when we are running this thing. I’m gonna dilate this out because this is gonna - you can back up a little bit - this is gonna be our main viewing portal now. We wanna - we use puncture capsulorrhaphy, so we're just coming through with the puncture instead of just doing - doing a T capsulorrhaphy where we open up the whole thing. And we want this perfectly circular 'cause any - any little overhanging edges are gonna be magnified 19 times here. It’s like trying to operate with a washcloth sticking in your eyes.
CHAPTER 2
So this is her pulvinar right here with her ligamentum teres right here. It's on the left. It’s this structure right here. Do you have a probe? So this is her ligamentum teres right here. That's the main ligament between the femoral head and the acetabulum. This is her pulvinar. Little bit of bleeding. Whole thing is called a cotyloid notch 'cause the pulvinar is this fatty stuff right here. This tissue right here. Has a vessel in it for the head, which is a - just a branch of the obturator artery - just supplies about 10 to 15% of blood supply to the head. Back our cam up to give us a little bit more excursion on this probe. So you can see this little yellow discoloration, right here? So see that - how everything is so white and there's yellow discoloration of her labrum? The femoral head looks good. And all the way down to bottom. Transverse ligament is where the labrum goes real wide here to narrow. That's - right there is the beginning of the transverse ligament. That's the 6-o’clock position for this hip. Then 12 o’clock would be about where we're coming through right here. She's got a little bit of bubbling of her articular cartilage right here. I’m gonna let my fellow take a feel here, and then we’re gonna look all the way around. Yep, go ahead. Besides some fraying of the labrum where we came in, I don't - I don’t see a lot on this. A lot of times if they have a big labral tear, as you come in, it’s just everywhere. She's only 24 so she's got some pretty good tissue, but do you see all this yellow discoloration? But still, we would never just debride for that 'cause you’d cause more damage than you’d correct. So if you look at the femoral head, it looks really nice. Little bit of fraying of the labrum right here. This area right here. No, I saw it coming in. I mean, it's just - it's very mild. It's a combination of that with a little bit of bubbling. Can you come on in here and give us a spot?
CHAPTER 3
So we're gonna probe this and make sure that there's nothing through and through on both sides here. What we have been doing on some patients, if they're really bubbled out, is we microfracture behind them, but you can see how pretty smooth this is here. Then as it comes over here, the kind of labral junction is a little bit bubbled with a little bit at fraying of her labrum - but, you know, overall - not terrible. Then the question would be whether not to put some anchors and sutures in. I - I think it's pretty superficial. So I’m gonna take that out. Let me have the obturator for blue. 5-0. I’m just gonna switch out here. Can I have a shaver please? You can see this right here - this fraying on the edge here. Right there. In that little area right there, but the rest of labrum looks good. And - see the fraying goes all the way down to there. Might be why you caught it. Keep it right there.
CHAPTER 4
When they're right on the edge like this, you know, and they're not ripped off of the chondrolabral junction - pretty tough to justify elevating that whole thing down. Now if she had a big pinch or a big overhang, I would do that. I would take the whole thing down, but she doesn't. She just has some fraying. What we're gonna do is let this come over us. I'll take the Mitek-O. Okay, obturators are blue. So Drew, I’m gonna show you - when these aren't straight up and down, I’m gonna show you what happens. You're always working back on yourself. With these portals. So I’m torquing it to get it in there. Just going to touch it. I’m just dabbing it to resist the edge. When her head goes in, it will compress that right back down. That's all you need, okay? We used to hit it with the ultrasonic chisel, which is heat, and the problem with that is we really don't feel that it's good for the labrum. Now hold that right there, Drew, as I bring this back. Well, we did a study, and we looked at the heat that's generated by these thermal probes - and it can go up to average like 71 degrees centigrade. You only need 51 degrees to kill chondrocytes. And when you get bubbles from doing any cutting or blading, those temperatures can go up over 100 degrees, and that’s centigrade. Yeah, so it's a huge amount of energy. When the bubbles burst, they disperse all that energy right in the spot where you're operating.
CHAPTER 5
Okay, up to 70 on the pump. So everything off that side. Get ready to flex her. Back up a little bit. Yep, 70 in the pump in case I come out. I put maybe with slight abduction and internal rotation so I have the femoral neck parallel to the floor. Going in. Traction off. All of it. So 40 - yeah - right there and have her in. Lock it there. Now this is a medial gutter right here. This is the medial synovial fold right there. That thing up on top is called a zona orbicularis. The capsule attaches to it kind of like - if you think of a hot air balloon, the balloon attached to a ring. This is the ring for the hip. So we can move the hip, and it doesn't tether the capsule. So see all the excursion? And the ring is staying, going up and down, but it's not rotating. But yet everything's attaching to it. And that's just, you know, 45, 50 degrees of rotation. So this is her labral seal. Can we dull the overheads? This is that medial synovial fold that we ta - just talked about. This is her medial gutter, right there.
CHAPTER 6
Get a nitinol wire. I’m gonna come back out a little bit, Drew. Let me see the five-five. Now we're dilating up to five fives, which will really give us good flow. This is the peripheral compartment, so not as constrained - little bit easier for us to work with, and most importantly, we don't need traction. So you see how that collapses? See that? Then you try to get in there - forget it. Yeah, so watch what happens when I turn the fluid off and suck them out. This collapses right down. See? So if we're trying to get in and it's like that without any fluid in it, it's very difficult sometimes to get into the peripheral compartment. Whereas if we dilate it up, you see the capsule going up. I'll block this here. Opens it up quite a bit - huge difference. So that's why when we were gonna go into the peripheral compartment, we increased our flow rate, and we increased our pump pressure to 70 so we could really dilate this capsule up. This is almost medial, so she still has a little bit right there. I’m gonna clean that up. Let me have a shaver. Medial coming over to the 12-o’clock position here. Yeah. Mitek now.
CHAPTER 7
Now let me have a switching stick. This is coming all the way over laterally to where we were working. Keep our flow up. That's the area that we were debriding.
CHAPTER 8
There you watch your flow - way up. Okay, rotate her in a little bit. Now rotate her out. Okay, right there - that's the area we debrided. Can you - can suck a little bit there? So you can see, we still have a good seal. So see the seal right there? Suck a little bit. And no big bumps, so we'll move around. And all that is just soft tissue, and her blood supply coming in through the lateral synovial fold. This is all the way underneath. Right there. Suck a little bit. And where this capsular reflection is - that’s her lateral synovial fold, and the redness right there branches off the posterior superior retinacular vessel, which is right underneath this. Hold on, suck. Where its arborizing right there - that little vessel underneath. And we have about 70 on our pressure, so - if you let the blood pressure down or the pump pressure down, a lot of times you can actually see a pump. Go ahead. This is a capsular reflection off the femoral neck right here, and we're just about done. So because she's young, we won't use any marking in her joint. We'll just inject her portals. Marcaine, the numbing medication, can be cytotoxic for cartilage. This is that medial synovial fold I was telling you about right there. And I’m gonna take this out now. Okay. Alright, now let’s suck it out. Alright, yep. Good.