Last revised by Daniel J Bell on 14 Sep 2023
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Citation, DOI, disclosures and article data
Citation:
Feger J, Bell D, Weerakkody Y, et al. Cam morphology (femoroacetabular impingement). Reference article, Radiopaedia.org (Accessed on 04 Jul 2024) https://doi.org/10.53347/rID-79706
Permalink:
https://radiopaedia.org/articles/79706
rID:
79706
Article created:
2 Jul 2020, Joachim Feger ◉
Disclosures:
At the time the article was created Joachim Feger had no recorded disclosures.
View Joachim Feger's current disclosures
Last revised:
14 Sep 2023, Daniel J Bell ◉
Disclosures:
At the time the article was last revised Daniel J Bell had no financial relationships to ineligible companies to disclose.
View Daniel J Bell's current disclosures
Revisions:
22 times, by 7 contributors - see full revision history and disclosures
Systems:
Musculoskeletal
Tags:
hip, sports medicine
Synonyms:
- Cam deformity
- Cam lesion
- Cam impingement
- Cam morphology
- Cam morphologies
- Cam deformities
- Cam impingements
- Cam lesions
- Cam morphology (FAI)
- Cam configuration
- Cam abnormality
- Cam abnormalities
Cam morphology refers to an abnormal morphology of the femoral head-neck junction interlinked with an osseous asphericity of the femoral head. It is one possible cause of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI).
On this page:
Article:
- Terminology
- Epidemiology
- Clinical presentation
- Pathology
- Radiographic features
- Radiological reporting
- Treatment and prognosis
- Differential diagnosis
- See also
- References
Images:
- Cases and figures
Terminology
Cam morphology is also commonly referred to as 'cam deformity','cam lesion' or 'cam abnormality'.According to the Warwick agreement ‘cam morphology’ is the preferred term 1.
Epidemiology
There is a significantly higher prevalence of cam morphology in athletes compared to non-athletes. Cam morphology is more common in males than in females.
Risk factors
A higher incidence of cam morphology has been found in high-impact sports 1-6:
football (soccer)
hockey
American football, rugby
basketball
baseball
Associations
femoroacetabular impingement
osteoarthritis of the hip: risk is 3-8 times higher than in non-athletes 2
Clinical presentation
Cam morphology itself can be and remain asymptomatic or can cause clinical signs and symptoms as typical motion or position-dependent hip or groin pain and is then referred to as femoroacetabular impingement 1,2. A painfully decreased range of motion during hip flexion, internal rotation and adduction, locking and stiffness are also described.
Complications
Cam morphology causes increased shear forces at the chondrolabral junction, possibly leading to the following 1-3:
chondrolabral separation 2,3,6
chondral damage e.g. carpet lesion
labral tears(acetabular labral tears)
Pathology
The deformity usually involves the anterosuperior aspect of the proximal femur more precisely the head-neck junction and is characterized by a loss of sphericity of the femoral head 4 and a flat or convex in cases even ‘bumpy‘ head neck-junction 1-6.
This leads to a restriction in range of motion especially during hip flexion, internal rotation and adduction with associated shear at the chondrolabral junction 3,6.
Etiology
Not yet completely understood, a combination of several factors seems to cause cam morphology 2-6:
high mechanical loading forces at the time of physeal closure (i.e. sporting activity in adolescence)
genetic predisposition (increased risk in siblings)
hormonal effect
epiphyseal growth plate shape
slipped capital femoral epiphysis
Perthes disease
coxa vara
post-traumatic e.g. malunited femoral neck fractures
Location
The cam morphology is usually most prominent in the anterosuperior position of the femoral head-neck junction 7usually between 0:30 and 2:30 on the clock face of the hip ref.
The predilection site for possible injury in cam deformity is the chondrolabral junction of the anterosuperior acetabulum 6.
Radiographic features
For initial identification of cam morphology, an AP view of the pelvis and a lateral femoral neck view is recommended 1. Cross-sectional imaging is advised for better characterization, the detection of chondral and labral lesions and preoperative planning 1,6.
Plain radiograph
AP view pelvis:the typical finding is the pistol grip appearance of the proximal femur.
Dunn view:for evaluation of contour abnormalities of the head-neck junction including femoral head-neck offset.
CT
Bone morphology and abnormalities in particular of the proximal femur can be nicely depicted 1:
loss of sphericity, flattening or a bump at the femoral head-neck junction, often found in the anterosuperior location
associated findings e.g. cysts or degenerative changes
alpha angle
femoral head-neck offset
MRI
The following morphological features can be assessed 1- 6:
loss of sphericity or a bump at the femoral head-neck junction especially in the anterosuperior location
associated findings e.g. cysts, bone marrow edema
alpha angle
>55° considered a risk factor in the anterior position
>60° in the anterosuperior position* is a recommended threshold 7
chondrolabral separation or avulsion
anterosuperior cartilage lesions e.g. carpet lesion
MR arthrography
improved detection of acetabular chondral defects 5,6
better sensitivity for the detection of labral tears 5,6
Radiological reporting
A report for preoperative should include the following 6:
description of abnormalities in the femoral head-neck junction: bump, cysts
possible coexisting pincer morphology
associated findings e.g. bone marrow edema
chondrolabral detachment and other labral pathology
chondral lesions e.g. carpet lesion
alpha angle including the plane and position
femoral anteversion
signs of early osteoarthritis: subchondral sclerosis, cysts, osteophytes
associated soft tissue injuries: musculotendinous injury
Treatment and prognosis
Cam morphology itself can be managed with preventive measures in high-risk populations e.g. athletes but should not be treated surgically if asymptomatic.
Symptomatic femoroacetabular impingement with cam morphology can be treated conservatively or surgically. Conservative treatment approaches include activity and /or lifestyle modifications, physiotherapy, watchful waiting. Surgical treatment aims at restoring hip morphology and repair or reconstruction of chondral and labral damage with arthroscopic and open surgical approaches 1,8. The indication for surgery warrants not only morphological changes but also typical clinical signs and symptoms indicative of femoroacetabular impingement 1,9.
Differential diagnosis
Possible considerations in some situations include.
slipped capital femoral epiphysis
osteoarthritis of the hip
See also
pistol grip appearance
femoroacetabular impingement
pincer morphology