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Patient Resources for Diseases & Surgeries:
About Osteonecrosis
You have been given this brochure either because you or some member of your family has been diagnosed with osteonecrosis (ON). ON is not particularly common, afflicting approximately 20,000 new patients per year in the U.S. However, patients are relatively young, with an average age of 38 (although any age can be affected). Since the diagnosis does not affect longevity there are several hundred thousand patients in the U.S. alone who are living with the disease. The purpose of this pamphlet is to provide you with information to help you understand the condition and some of the important issues with treatment.
What is osteonecrosis?
The term literally means death of bone (osteo=bone, necrosis=death). It has been known by a number of other names including ischemic necrosis of bone, aseptic necrosis and AVN (standing for avascular necrosis). AVN has been quite popular in its use because it is shorter to say and write. More recently the term ON has been adopted.
ON can affect virtually any bone, but for practical purposes most cases
involve only the hip, knee, shoulder or ankle joints in decreasing order
of frequency. In fact, ON of the hip accounts for more than 90% of the
cases.
There are two major forms of ON, post-traumatic and non-traumatic. Minor trauma
is not believed to cause ON. Even major injury does not often result
in ON. Certain kinds of fracture, where the blood vessels to part of
the bone have been physically damaged, may result in ON.
Non-traumatic ON has been associated with a wide variety of diseases including gout,
lupus, sickle cell disease, kidney or liver disease, and clotting disorders.
In addition, high dosage steroid (cortisone) use is sometimes associated
with ON, as well as high alcohol consumpution. Finally, as many as 30%
of all patients with osteonecrosis are otherwise completely healthy
with no associated risk factor. This is called "idiopathic,"
a medical term meaning "of unknown cause."
Who's at Risk?
If a person is completely healthy, the risk of getting osteonecrosis is
quite small, probably less than one in 100,000. Another way to understand
this is that most of the people who get ON probably have an underlying
health problem. Children, as young as 4 and extending to the teens,
get a form of ON which is called Legg-Calve-Perthe's disease (Perthe's
for short) after the doctors who first described it. Most patients are
between 30 and 50 with an average age of 38. Patients over the age of
50 are likely to have developed ON either by a fracture of the hip or
more rarely in association with disease of the major blood vessels to
the lower leg. Although the specific cause of the bone death is not
precisely known except in the case of fracture, a number of conditions
have been associated with ON. The most common includes a history of
high dose steroid treatment for some medical condition (including Lupus,
chronic lung disease, an organ transplant, etc). Low dose steroids (cortisone,
prednisone, etc) commonly used for bee stings, poison ivy and acute
allergies are not thought to cause ON. The next most common associated
condition is a history of alcohol intake. The higher the intake the
higher the risk.
The mechanisms by which these two risk factors (alcohol and steroids) cause
ON are not well understood. The third most common group, are those patients
who have no risk factors at all, and these patients are a true medical
mystery. No matter what the cause, the symptoms and course of the disorder
are remarkably similar.
First Symptoms
Unfortunately many patients with ON have had the disease for quite some time before
symptoms are present. The initial symptoms are usually pain or aching
in the affected joint with activity, which subsides after the activity
has stopped. Symptoms usually begin slowly and may initially be intermittent.
As the disease progresses, the pain increases and is associated with
stiffness. Limping becomes common. In the hip, the most common joint
affected, the pain is usually felt in the groin.
Diagnosis
The principle diagnostic tool is the x-ray. By the time that most patients
have significant symptoms, the disease is advanced enough to be seen on
standard x-rays. In most cases the x-ray will show the area of bone that
is involved. However, the very earliest stages of the ON cannot be seen
on a regular x-ray. A widely used and relatively new tool is called an
MRI which stands for Magnetic Resonance Imaging. These
special images are able to detect tissue changes that may not be seen
on plain x-ray.
Occasionally, your doctor may order a CAT scan which is a special series
of x-rays, interpreted by the computer to show the three dimensional structure
of the bone. Any of these tests will help the doctor to determine how
advanced the disease is in your case.
Prevention
There are no known effective prevention measures. However steroids should
only be taken as necessary and alcohol consumption should always be
in moderation. Some experimental drug protocols are being evaluated
which may have a place in treatment or prevention in the future.
Treatment Introduction
The Concept of Risk/Benefit Ratio
Before entering into a description of some of the treatments available for ON,
it is important that this concept be understood. Any surgical procedure
has a certain element of risk involved. Even no treatment at all has the
risk that the disease will progress, so doing nothing is not risk free.
Some procedures may have a lower likelihood of success but may have a
very little downside risk. Other procedures may have a higher degree of
success, but also have a higher degree of risk. The physician must work
with the patient in assessing all the factors that evaluate both risk
and benefit for the patient in their particular circumstance. What is
right for one patient may be absolutely wrong for another. This is particularly
true for ON because each patient presents with a unique set of factors
(age, associated disease, specific joint(s) involved, extent and progression
of disease). Any treatment needs to be determined between you and your
treating physician.
Extent of Disease
The femoral head is the most frequent bone involved and will be used for
this discussion. It is rare for the entire weight-bearing surface of
the femoral head to be involved. However if more than half of the surface
is involved, treatments designed to preserve the femoral head have a
much lower chance of success.
Progression of the Disease
In the earliest stage of the disease. It cannot be seen by a normal x-ray.
Diagnosis is by MRI. Once it can be seen on x-ray, it is not actually
the dead bone that can be seen but the response of the living bone to
the area of necrosis. The advanced stages begin when the dead bone starts
to fail mechanically through a process of microfractures of the bone.
Eventually, this will result in damage to the other side of the joint,
and need for a total joint replacement.
The greater the extent of the disease and the more advanced the progression,
the less likely that the joint can be saved. Fortunately, joint replacement
procedures today are highly successful, even in the relatively young
patients affected by ON. It is always the physicians desire to preserve
the normal joint whenever possible. Unfortunately many patients present
with advanced, extensive disease.
Non-Surgical Treatement
Protected Weight Bearing
Crutches or a walker are very useful in alleviating the pain associated with ON.
They can also be useful in protecting the joint between the time of
diagnosis and scheduling of elective surgery. They may also play a role
in limiting progression while associated medical conditions are managed.
However, protected weight bearing alone is never adequate treatment
for ON and will not result in cure of the condition, no matter how long
it is maintained. Rarely, an associated medical condition may result
in a patient not being able to have surgery. In this case, protected
weight bearing may be an effective long-term solution for pain control.
Surgical Treatment
Core Decompression
This is a simple surgical procedure, which involves taking a plug
of bone out of the involved area. It is applicable for mild to moderate
degree of involvement that has not yet progressed to collapse. Because
this involves creating a hole in the bone, six weeks of protected weight
bearing is necessary to avoid fracture through the hole, one of the
complications of the procedure. There is some controversy about this
procedure with a few series that have been reported showing generally
poor results. However, in centers that do this procedure frequently,
most series have reported good results in the appropriate cases.
Bone Grafting
When a section of the bone has died, as is the case in ON, for some reason
it doesn't seem to heal. One of the ways that can cause the bone to
heal is to surgically remove the dead bone and fill the empty space
with bone graft that is either taken from the patient or from the bone
bank. The success of this approach depends upon the quantity of bone
that has died. Another problem is that during the healing process, which
can be very long (6-12 months) the patient must be on weight-bearing
restriction.
Vascularized Bone Grafting
Regular bone graft, whether from the bone bank or from the patient
is itself dead bone. It serves as a scaffold for the body to build new
bone around but the body also has to grow a new blood supply. For this
procedure, a bone with its blood vessels is taken from the patient and
hooked up to blood vessels near the hip. The dead bone is removed from
the femoral head and replaced with the grafted bone that carries with
it it's own blood supply. The advantage of this approach is that the
body doesn't have to rebuild a new blood supply and the bone graft retains
its physical and mechanical properties.
Healing and complete filling of the defect still has to take place, during which
time crutches or a walker has to be used. The disadvantage also
is that a substantial piece of bone has to be taken from the lower leg
(the fibula, the smaller bone of the lower leg below the knee). Some
patients will develop symptoms in the area from which the bone graft
is taken. The operation also takes several hours and requires a team
experienced in these techniques.
Osteotomy
Usually it is the main weight-bearing area of the bone that is involved with
ON. In some cases the bone can be cut below the area of involvement
and rotated or turned so that another portion of the bone that is not
involved in the ON can become the new weight-bearing area. These operations
are not very common anymore, but may apply to special cases.
Femoral Head Resurfacing
Initially only the femoral head is involved, not the socket of the hip joint.
FHR involves implanting a metal hemisphere over the femoral head, which
exactly matches the size of the original femoral head. This is similar
to capping a tooth when the root is still good, as opposed to pulling
the tooth and putting in a false tooth. It is known that over a period
of many years, the metal head will gradually wear out the socket and
will need to be converted to a total hip replacement. This procedure
is designed to "buy time" for the younger individual whose
extent of disease or degree of progression is such that one of the preservative
procedures listed above cannot be performed. Most patients with ON are
under 50. It is generally believed that total hip replacement today
will not last the 30+ most of these patients will require. Therefore,
if 2 procedures are likely to be necessary, it is important that the
first procedure does not make the second procedure more difficult or
less likely to succeed. A THR following a failed femoral head resurfacing
is more likely to be successful than revision THR that follows a failed
primary THR.
Femoral Head Replacement
This is basically half a total hip replacement.
All comments about femoral head resurfacing apply to femoral head replacement.
However, because a femoral head replacement also puts a stem inside
the femoral bone (the femoral shaft) it is a little more extensive than
the resurfacing procedure. If it needs to be revised, it is a little
more difficult to convert to a total hip replacement than the resurfacing
procedure.
Total Hip Replacement
When the ON is advanced to the point that there is involvement of the socket
as well, then the only thing that will be effective is either a hip
fusion (making the hip completely stiff) or a total hip replacement.
Total hip replacement is one of the most successful surgical procedures
ever devised. Success rates are usually above 95%! The problem
with total hip replacements for patients with ON is that it is not uncommon
for the patient to have a life expectancy of more than 40 or even 50
years. With current technology we don't think that it is likely that
a total hip replacement will last that long. For this reason, many physicians
will want to try some procedure to put off total hip replacement for
a few years even when it is known that that procedure will not in itself
be successful forever. If your disease is advanced, and/or extensive,
then THR may be the only thing that makes sense.
Future Directions
Although there are several hundred thousand patients alive in the U.S. with ON,
this is largely due to the fact that the average patient will live 30-40
years. With only 15-20,000 new cases each year (this is about the same
number of practicing orthopedic surgeons in the U.S.).
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