Khanduja Vikas, Darby Nicholas, O'Donnell John, Bonin Nicolas, Safran Marc R
Young Adult Hip Service, Addenbrooke's, Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, UK.
St Vincent's Private Hospital East Melbourne, East Melbourne, Australia.
Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2023 Jan;31(1):40-49. doi: 10.1007/s00167-022-06933-4. Epub 2022 Apr 30.
Hip microinstability is a relatively new diagnosis which is increasingly being discussed in the literature and yet there are no clear guidelines for making a diagnosis. Microinstability has generally been defined as persistent excessive hip motion that has become symptomatic especially with pain. This aim of this Delphi study was to seek expert opinion to formulate a diagnostic criteria for hip microinstability.
A Delphi methodology was used for this consensus study. A literature search was conducted on PubMed up to March 2019 using the keywords ((hip) and (microinstability)) to identify relevant articles on this topic. All relevant criteria used for diagnosing hip microinstability were collated to create a questionnaire and further criterion suggested by the experts were included as well. Four rounds of questionnaires were delivered via an online survey platform. Between each round the authors acted as administrating intermediaries, providing the experts with a summary of results and synthesising the next questionnaire. The expert panel was comprised of 27 members: 24 (89%) orthopaedic surgeons and 3 (11%) physiotherapists from around the world.
Expert panel participation in rounds 1-4 was: 27 (100%), 20 (74%), 21 (78%) and 26 (96%) respectively. A literature review by the authors identified 32 diagnostic criteria to populate the first questionnaire. Experts suggested amending three criteria and creating five new criteria. The panel converged on ranking 3 (8%) of criteria as "Not important", 20 (54%) as "Minor Factors" and 14 (38%) as "Major Factors". No criteria was ranked as "Essential". Criteria were subcategorised into patient history, examination and imaging. Experts voted for a minimum requirement of four criteria in each subcategory, including at least six "Major factors". The final diagnostic tool was approved by 20 (77%) of the final round panel.
This study describes the first known expert consensus on diagnosing hip microinstability. The relative complexity of the final diagnostic tool is illustrative of the difficulty clinicians' face when making this diagnosis.
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髋关节微不稳定是一种相对较新的诊断,在文献中讨论得越来越多,但尚无明确的诊断指南。微不稳定通常被定义为持续的过度髋关节活动,尤其是伴有疼痛症状的情况。本德尔菲研究的目的是征求专家意见,以制定髋关节微不稳定的诊断标准。
本共识研究采用德尔菲法。截至2019年3月,在PubMed上使用关键词((髋关节)和(微不稳定))进行文献检索,以识别关于该主题的相关文章。整理所有用于诊断髋关节微不稳定的相关标准以创建问卷,并纳入专家建议的进一步标准。通过在线调查平台发放四轮问卷。在每轮之间,作者充当管理中介,向专家提供结果总结并综合下一份问卷。专家小组由27名成员组成:来自世界各地的24名(89%)骨科医生和3名(11%)物理治疗师。
专家小组在第1 - 4轮的参与率分别为:27(100%)、20(74%)、21(78%)和26(96%)。作者进行的文献综述确定了32条诊断标准以纳入第一份问卷。专家们建议修改3条标准并制定5条新标准。专家小组一致将3条(8%)标准列为“不重要”,20条(54%)列为“次要因素”,14条(38%)列为“主要因素”。没有标准被列为“必需”。标准被细分为患者病史、检查和影像学。专家们投票赞成每个子类别至少需要4条标准,包括至少6条“主要因素”。最终诊断工具获得最后一轮专家小组中20名(77%)成员的认可。
本研究描述了关于诊断髋关节微不稳定的首个已知专家共识。最终诊断工具的相对复杂性说明了临床医生在做出该诊断时面临的困难。
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