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Avascular necrosis (AVN), also known as osteonecrosis, is a condition resulting from compromised blood supply to bone, leading to bone ischemia, cellular death, and eventual structural collapse of the affected area.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qX_J2f9l0AQ
Common Sites
| Site | Notes |
|---|---|
| Femoral head | Most common site (especially in adults) |
| Humeral head | Often post-traumatic or corticosteroid-induced |
| Knee (femoral condyles) | Often medial femoral condyle |
| Scaphoid & Lunate | Prone due to tenuous vascular supply |
| Talus | Common after fracture (e.g., neck of talus) |
| Vertebral body | Known as Kümmell disease (delayed collapse) |
Pathophysiology involves interruption of microvascular circulation, leading to bone marrow infarction, trabecular necrosis, and ultimately subchondral collapse.
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Traumatic | Fractures (esp. femoral neck, talus, scaphoid), dislocations |
| Non-traumatic | Corticosteroids, alcohol abuse, sickle cell disease, SLE, pancreatitis, radiation, Caisson’s disease (diving), chemotherapy, transplant |

| Stage | Symptoms |
|---|---|
| Early | May be asymptomatic or mild pain with activity |
| Progressive | Pain at rest, stiffness, limited ROM |
| Advanced | Joint collapse, secondary osteoarthritis |
| Modality | Imaging features |
|---|---|
| XR | Often normal in early stages |
Later stages: • Sclerosis, flattening of articular surface • Joint space narrowing, secondary OA changes | | MR | Most sensitive for early detection • T1: Low signal in necrotic area (geographic, well-demarcated) • T2/STIR: Double line sign: inner bright (granulation tissue), outer dark (sclerosis) • Post-contrast: Lack of enhancement in necrotic core | | CT | • Useful in surgical planning • Shows subchondral fracture, sclerosis, and collapse clearly | | Bone Scan | • Early: “cold spot” (decreased perfusion) • Late: increased uptake at reactive margins |

A 9 year-old female with a known history of ‣ presented with a history of pain over the left hip. (a) AP X-ray of the pelvis showed increased opacity secondary to sclerosis at the articular end of the left femoral head without significant deformity. A thin crescenteric radiolucency can be seen in the subchondral region, shown closely in (b) by arrow, consistent with ‣
Case courtesy Dr Supriya Paul & Dr Marrie Pagu // 2025 // #SMCHCase
Ficat and Arlet Classification for femoral head AVN:
| Stage | Radiologic Findings |
|---|---|
| I | Normal X-ray, MRI abnormal |
| II | Sclerosis, cysts, no collapse |
| III | Subchondral fracture (‣ ) |
| IV | Femoral head collapse, joint space narrowing, secondary arthritis |