Knebel Ashley, Singh Manjot, Farias Michael J, Nassar Joseph E, Liu Jonathan, Diebo Bassel G, Cohen Eric M, Daniels Alan H
Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Department of Orthopedics, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
J Orthop. 2025 May 4;64:189-193. doi: 10.1016/j.jor.2025.05.006. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Footdrop is a relatively uncommon complication following total hip arthroplasty (THA) caused by injury to the sciatic and peroneal nerve. Few studies have evaluated the risk factors or trends for the development of this challenging complication. As such, this study aims to describe the epidemiology, procedural risk factors, and related complications of postoperative footdrop following THA.
Adult primary or revision THA patients were identified using the PearlDiver database. Eligible patients were filtered into cohorts based on the development of footdrop within 90 days of surgery and matched 1:1 by age, sex, and comorbidities. Epidemiological trends in footdrop were evaluated by age and year between 2010 and 2022. Patient demographics, comorbidities, procedural characteristics, hospital outcomes, and occurrence of intra- and post-operative complications were compared.
In total, 2282 footdrop (0.3 %) and 893,159 (99.8 %) no footdrop THA patients were included, with a mean age of 64.9 years and 56.2 % were women. The incidence of footdrop decreased from 0.3 % to 0.2 % between 2010 and 2022 and was not associated with age. Preoperatively, footdrop patients more frequently underwent revision THA (Footdrop = 12.3 % vs No footdrop = 5.7 %, < 0.001) and had more medical comorbidities ( < 0.001). Intraoperatively, they had higher rates of hemorrhage (0.7 % vs 0.2 %, = 0.034) and nerve injury (0.7 % vs 0.1 %, < 0.001). Postoperatively, they frequently reported acute kidney injury, urinary tract infection, wound-related complications, hematoma, prosthetic joint infection, aseptic loosening, and revisions (all < 0.004).
Patients developing footdrop following THA were more likely to be women, undergoing revision surgery, and had higher rates of prior lumbar fusion and medical comorbidities. They reported more postoperative complications and subsequent revisions following THA. This study informs us of the risk factors footdrop and may contribute to better patient counseling and surgical planning before undergoing THA.
足下垂是全髋关节置换术(THA)后一种相对少见的并发症,由坐骨神经和腓总神经损伤引起。很少有研究评估这种具有挑战性的并发症发生的危险因素或趋势。因此,本研究旨在描述THA术后足下垂的流行病学、手术风险因素及相关并发症。
使用PearlDiver数据库识别成年初次或翻修THA患者。符合条件的患者根据术后90天内是否发生足下垂分为队列,并按年龄、性别和合并症进行1:1匹配。评估2010年至2022年间足下垂的年龄和年份相关的流行病学趋势。比较患者的人口统计学、合并症、手术特征、住院结局以及术中和术后并发症的发生情况。
总共纳入了2282例发生足下垂的(0.3%)和893,159例未发生足下垂的(99.8%)THA患者,平均年龄为64.9岁,56.2%为女性。2010年至2022年间足下垂的发生率从0.3%降至0.2%,且与年龄无关。术前,发生足下垂的患者更常接受翻修THA(足下垂组=12.3% vs无足下垂组=5.7%,P<0.001)且合并更多内科疾病(P<0.001)。术中,他们有更高的出血率(0.7% vs 0.2%,P=0.034)和神经损伤率(0.7% vs 0.1%,P<0.001)。术后,他们经常报告急性肾损伤、尿路感染、伤口相关并发症、血肿、人工关节感染、无菌性松动和翻修(均P<0.004)。
THA后发生足下垂的患者更可能为女性,接受翻修手术,且既往腰椎融合和内科合并症的发生率更高。他们报告了更多的术后并发症以及THA后的后续翻修。本研究告知了我们足下垂的危险因素,可能有助于在进行THA前更好地向患者咨询和进行手术规划。