Reperfusion pattern of the immature femoral head after critical ischemia: A microsphere study in pigs

Authors

  • Wolf Drescher
  • Thomas Schneider
  • Cordelia Becker
  • Lise Hobolth
  • Wolfgang Rüther
  • Cody Bünger
  • Ebbe S Hansen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679909000978

Abstract

The topographic reperfusion pattern of the femoral head after critical ischemia has not yet been investigated. We determined the blood flow of the porcine hip regions with the femoral head epiphysis divided into 24 subregions by the tracer microsphere technique. Blood flow was measured under steady-state conditions, at the end of a 6-hour increase in intracapsular hip joint pressure to 250 mm Hg, and 4 hours after release of the joint tamponade. Total femoral head epiphyseal blood flow decreased with ischemia and regained steady-state perfusion after tamponade. The reperfusion pattern of the femoral head epiphysis appeared identical with that of the steady state before ischemia. However, 2 of the 11 experimental epiphyses remained ischemic in the reperfusion phase. We conclude that hip joint tamponade above the arterial pressure level for 6 hours causes global ischemia in the femoral head epiphysis in the immature pig, without regional differences in reperfusion, and that reperfusion occurs at a level like that of the steady state before ischemia.

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Published

1999-01-01

How to Cite

Drescher, W., Schneider, T., Becker, C., Hobolth, L., Rüther, W., Bünger, C., & Hansen, E. S. (1999). Reperfusion pattern of the immature femoral head after critical ischemia: A microsphere study in pigs. Acta Orthopaedica, 70(5), 439–445. https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679909000978