Abstract
Introduction: End-stage hip arthritis secondary to femoral head avascular necrosis (AVN) in young patients is a therapeutic challenge. Hip resurfacing (HR) has been showing excellent medium-term results in patients with osteoarthritis. Destructive changes in a large segment of the femoral head from AVN can increase the risk of postoperative femoral neck fracture or femoral head collapse following a resurfacing procedure. Careful patient selection and precise operative technique are vital to success. This is a study of the results of HR in patients with arthritis secondary to femoral head osteonecrosis.
Methods: This is a single-surgeon consecutive series with a 4 to 14-year (mean 8.6) follow-up. 95 patients (104 hips) with Ficat-Arlet grade III or IV osteonecrosis and treated with HR at a mean age of 43 (range 18 to 68) years. Two patients died due to unrelated causes and none is lost to follow-up. Revision for any reason was the end-point. Unrevised patients were assessed clinically and with Oxford hip scores and AP and lateral radiographs.
Results: Nine failures (1 fracture, 5 femoral head collapse, 2 infections, 1 cup loosening) give a failure rate of 8.7% and a cumulative survivorship of 89% at 14 years. In one further patient the femoral component has tilted into varus. He is asymptomatic but knows that he may need a revision if symptoms develop. No other patient shows clinical or radiological adverse signs.
Discussion and Conclusion: Several studies suggest that the results of arthroplasty are generally worse in AVN compared to those in osteoarthritis. HR has demosntrated good results in young patients with good quality femoral head bone. Reviewing the above results it appears to us that the relatively poorer cumulative survival observed in patients with a diagnosis of AVN (89%) makes AVN a relative contraindication to hip resurfacing.
Correspondence should be addressed to BHS c/o BOA, at the Royal College of Surgeons, 35–43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London, WC2A 3PE, England.