An OA may lead to an increase in BMD as a result of increased subchondral bone formation with stiffer bone, leading to mechanical stress on cartilage during impact loading and development of subchondral sclerosis and osteophytes [14, 22]. The protective effect of this against fracture may be outweighed by the effect osteoarthritis has RAD001 clinical trial on the hip in reducing range of motion, especially rotation and
abduction/adduction, proprioception and muscle strength [6, 23] and thus increasing both the risk of falling and the risk of a fracture if a fall occurs. When comparing the non-injured side, we found more OA in the fracture patients than in the contusion patients. The difference found on the non-injured side was unexpected,
and no studies have, to our knowledge, previously reported this. Earlier studies have only investigated the injured side [5]. The results for the non-injured side should be interpreted with caution, as it is a post hoc exploratory analysis. However, a higher proportion of OA on the non-injured side in fracture patients may point to an influence on fall mechanics due to a stiffer joint with changed proprioception leading to a higher risk of fracture. The number of patients is larger on the non-injured side as we included the patients receiving a hemiarthroplasty for the analysis of the contralateral, uninjured hip. There was a tendency towards more OA on the injured side for trochanteric fractures than for femoral neck fractures with an MJS in the hips with femoral neck fractures STA-9090 in vivo of 3.72 mm compared to 3.42 mm in the trochanteric fractures and Farnesyltransferase a tendency towards more OA according to K&L in the trochanteric group (Table 2). This supports previous findings of less OA in patients with femoral neck fractures than in patients with trochanteric fractures and gives some support to claims that OA protects against femoral neck fractures, but may lead to a S63845 research buy relative increase in trochanteric fractures [5, 6, 15, 24]. The retrospective nature of this study leads to potential weaknesses. A selection
bias is a potential problem with case–control studies. However, the cases were from our prospective in-house fracture register, and the controls were all patients with the diagnosis “hip contusion” from the discharge register, and thus unselected. The patients were recruited from the community hospital area and should be representative of the general population. A strength of our study is the use of a control group. Patients with hip trauma admitted to the hospital even in the absence of a fracture are probably frail, as most patients who contuse their hip will be treated as outpatients. The ones requiring admission may have previous hip pathology, such as osteoarthritis, which may be painful when traumatized. This, however, does not seem to be the case in our patients.