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General Orthopaedics

A RESOURCEFUL TECHNIQUE OF RETRIEVING THE WELL-FIXED FRACTURED FEMORAL COMPONENT FOLLOWING TOTAL HIP REPLACEMENTS

The International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA), 28th Annual Congress, 2015. PART 4.



Abstract

Background

Fractures of the femoral component are well reported complications that present a challenging task in revision total hip arthroplasty. Albeit being uncommon, with an incidence of 0.23–11%, the consequences can be devastating. Its extraction being a demanding undertaking that is potentially detrimental to the remaining host bone. Several techniques have been described to address this complex issue prior to revision: drilling of the exposed part of the femoral stem and attaching a threaded extraction device, surface undercutting with an extraction device wedged in, femoral trephine techniques, creation of a femoral cortical window, an extended femoral osteotomy procedure, as well as extraction by means of retrograde nail impaction. Here we present the modified technique we employed in the revision of a failed cementless extensively porous coated femoral component that had fractured at the neck-stem interface.

Technique

The proximal femoral component was visualized and an orthopedic burr and a femoral osteotome employed surrounding the component. Utilizing a Midas Rex® MR7 drill with its metal cutting attachment, a circular recess was created in the shoulder of the femoral component. This facilitated the application of the distal end of a universal slap hammer. The component was retrieved successfully with no associated bone loss negating the need for a femoral osteotomy.

Discussion

Revision hip arthroplasty is a perplexing field where unpredictable prosthetic failures require innovation to tackle the unique problems encountered. Our method allows a safe and efficient alternative in retrieving femoral components with no associated complications.


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