Purpose: Our purpose was to develop an alternative method to divide the acetabulum and femoral
head into different zones based on anatomic landmarks clearly visible during arthroscopy
to facilitate reporting the geographic location of intra-articular injuries. Methods: Two vertical lines are positioned across the acetabulum aligned with the anterior
and posterior limits of the acetabular notch. A horizontal line is positioned aligned
with the superior limit of the notch perpendicular to the previous lines. The lines
divide the acetabulum into 6 zones. Numbers are assigned to each zone in consecutive
order. Zone 1 is the anterior-inferior acetabulum. The numbers progress around the
notch until zone 5 is assigned to the posterior-inferior acetabulum. Zone 6 is the
acetabular notch. The same method is applied to the femoral head. Six experienced
hip arthroscopists were instructed in the zone and clock-face methods and were asked
to identify and describe the geographic locations of lesions at the acetabular rim,
acetabular cartilage, and femoral head in the same cadaveric specimen. Results: The zone method was more reproducible than the clock-face method in the geographic
description of intra-articular injuries on the acetabulum and the femoral head. Conclusions: Among a group of expert hip arthroscopists, the zone method was more reproducible
than the clock-face method. Clinical Relevance: The presented method divides the acetabulum into 6 different zones based on the acetabular
notch. The zones are the same for right- and left-side hips. The same method is applied
for the femoral head allowing, for the first time, a geographic description of pathology.
Key Words
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Article info
Publication history
Published online: February 13, 2008
Footnotes
The authors report no conflict of interest.
Identification
Copyright
© 2008 Arthroscopy Association of North America. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.