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Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT01474031

Prospective Study Deltamotion - DAA THA Study

Status
Terminated
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
29 (actual)
Sponsor
Universitaire Ziekenhuizen KU Leuven · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

1. Introduction Few gait analytical data are available concerning the Direct Anterior Approach (DAA) in total hip arthroplasty (THA). All the studies have focused on immediate post-operative recovery. These studies have in general some important shortcomings in order to accurately evaluate the biomechanics of the replaced hip joint. None of the published reports have reported on consecutive intervals of pre-op - 6w - 3m - 6m - 12m. This is of interest as we know that recovery with other approaches takes \>1 year. It might be that the DAA approach leads to normal gait patterns at 3m or 6m and that these patterns do not differ from the normal pattern or at \>1y post-op. None of the reports utilized out-of-plane movements such as coming down or up stairs or squads. Utilizing trunk markers is frequently not done but it is important to evaluate the centre of mass position during gait. Very few studies utilize kinetic data, which are important in order to thoroughly evaluate the biomechanics and loading of the hip. And maybe most importantly, the biomechanical effect of the diameter of the articulating surface on gait parameters following the DAA has never been evaluated. One of the most important advantages of the DAA is the muscle sparing aspect and the presumption that the femoral anatomy and biomechanics can be more accurately and precisely restored. If the diameter of the articulating surface has then also been reconstructed to the almost anatomical diameter, we can assume that this should be the most optimal reconstruction of the hip joint currently available. This could lead to early return to normal gait, to optimal joint loading and a minimal amount of stress shielding of the femoral bone. The aim of this project is to prospectively analyse the biomechanics of the hip joint of a THA with a Deltamotion articulating surface utilizing the Direct Anterior Approach. 2. Materials and Methods Hypothesis: The temporo-spatial parameters (velocity, cadence, step length, and stride length) and gait kinematic and kinetic data (external hip and knee muscle moments) are not significantly different between the study and control group at the evaluated time intervals indicating normal or near normal gait patterns in the early post-operative recovery phase.

Detailed description

Estimated inclusion time: 1 July 2011 - 31 December 2013 Cohorts: 20 DAA subjects - 20 control subjects Assessments: * Time interval: pre-op - 3m - 6m - 12m * Gait analysis with surface EMG and trunk markers: * Unipodal standing: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on FP * Level walking: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on FP * Chair rise: 3 trials, both legs on FP * Stair ascent: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on first FP * Stair descent: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on first FP * Squat: 3 trials, both legs on FP * Bipodal squat: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on FP * Functional scores (HHS, UCLA, HOOS, SF-36)

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERBiomechanics* Time interval: pre-op - 3m - 6m - 12m * Assessment of all subjects: * XR * Gait analysis with surface EMG and trunk markers: * Unipodal standing: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on FP * Level walking: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on FP * Chair rise: 3 trials, both legs on FP * Stair ascent: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on first FP * Stair descent: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on first FP * Squat: 3 trials, both legs on FP * Bipodal squat: 3 trials Right and 3 trials Left on FP * Functional scores (HHS, UCLA, HOOS, SF-36)

Timeline

Start date
2011-10-01
Primary completion
2013-07-01
Completion
2013-07-01
First posted
2011-11-17
Last updated
2020-11-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Belgium

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01474031. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.