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Entwicklung, aktuelle Konzepte und zukünftige Entwicklungen in der arthroskopischen Hüftchirurgie

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Fortschritte in der speziellen Hüftchirurgie
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Zusammenfassung

Die Hüftarthroskopie wurde erstmals 1931 von Michael Burman beschrieben, der feststellte, „dass es offensichtlich unmöglich ist, eine Nadel zwischen den Kopf des Oberschenkels und die Hüftpfanne einzuführen.“ Seit dieser Aussage aus dem Jahr 1931 hat sich natürlich eine Menge getan. In den letzten zwei Jahrzehnten hat die Hüftarthroskopie exponentiell zugenommen, und es wird erwartet, dass diese Zahl bis zum Jahr 2023 allein im Vereinigten Königreich auf 1388 % ansteigen wird.

Die Hüftarthroskopie, die ursprünglich als diagnostisches Instrument gedacht war, ist heute eine anerkannte und akzeptierte Behandlungsmethode für die meisten intraartikulären, aber auch für eine Reihe extraartikulärer Pathologien der Hüfte.

Jüngste Studien haben bewiesen, dass die Hüftarthroskopie im Vergleich zur offenen Operation sicherer ist und eine kürzere Erholungszeit aufweist. Darüber hinaus hat sich gezeigt, dass sie im Vergleich zur Physiotherapie bei Patienten mit femoroacetabulärem Impingement einen größeren klinischen und wirtschaftlichen Nutzen hat und daher als Standardbehandlung für diese Patientengruppe gilt.

Ziel dieses Kapitels ist es, dem Leser einen Überblick über die Hüftarthroskopie zu geben: von der ersten Beschreibung, der historischen Entwicklung, den Indikationen, den technischen Aspekten und Komplikationen bis hin zu den zukünftigen Trends dieser innovativen Technik.

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Weiss, O., Lim, A., Kamal, J., Khanduja, V. (2023). Entwicklung, aktuelle Konzepte und zukünftige Entwicklungen in der arthroskopischen Hüftchirurgie. In: Drescher, W.R., Koo, KH., Windsor, R.E. (eds) Fortschritte in der speziellen Hüftchirurgie. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-27202-8_7

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