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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 212 - 212
1 May 2006
Sperling J Cofield R Schleck C Harmsen W
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Between January 1, 1976 and December 31, 1991, 195 total shoulder arthroplasties and 108 hemiarthroplasties were performed by the senior author in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. One hundred eighty-seven total shoulder arthroplasties and 95 hemiarthroplasties with complete preoperative evaluation, operative records, and minimum 2-year follow-up (mean 11.6 years) or follow-up until revision were included in the clinical analysis. Twenty patients died and one was lost to follow-up. All 303 shoulders were included in the survival analysis.

There was significant long term pain relief (P< .0001), improvement in active abduction (P< .0001), and external rotation (P< .0001) with both, hemiarthroplasty and total shoulder arthroplasty. There was not a significant difference in improvement in pain and motion comparing hemiarthroplasty and total shoulder arthroplasty for patients with a thin or torn rotator cuff. However, among patients with an intact rotator cuff, improvement in pain and abduction were significantly greater with total shoulder arthroplasty. Additionally, among patients with an intact rotator cuff, the risk for revision was significantly lower for total shoulder arthroplasty (p=0.04).

Radiographs were available for 152 total shoulder arthroplasties and 63 hemiarthroplasties with a minimum 2 year follow-up. Glenoid erosion was present in 62 of 63 hemiarthroplasties (98%). Glenoid periprosthetic lucency was present in 110 of 152 total shoulder arthroplasties (72%).

The data from this study indicate there is marked long term pain relief and improvement in motion with shoulder arthroplasty. Among patients with an intact rotator cuff, total shoulder arthroplasty appears to be the preferred procedure for pain relief, improvement in abduction, and lower risk of revision surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 87-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 363 - 364
1 Sep 2005
Von Knoch M Collins D Harmsen W Berry D Engh C Engh C
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Introduction and Aims: Hip arthroplasty alters stress patterns in the proximal femur, thereby influencing femoral bone remodelling. The purpose of our study was to determine long-term skeletal response to wellfixed total hip arthroplasty.

Method: Seventy-two hips in 66 patients (mean age 57, range 25–72; 29 male, 37 female) were evaluated with standardised measurement protocol after arthroplasty with cemented Charnley (32 hips) or uncemented 5/8 coated AML stem (40 hips). Inclusion criteria: stable implants and complete radiographic record with minimum follow-up 15–20 years. 3159 measurements were made with power calipers and normalised for magnification.

Results: There was time dependent loss of proximal cortical thickness around both stems (AML greater than Charnley; proximal medial greater than proximal lateral cortex, (p< 0.05, all parameters). At 15–20 years, median proximal medial cortical thickness decreased by 12% for Charnley and 70% for AML stems. Median proximal lateral cortical thickness decreased by 9% for Charnley and 21% for AML stems. Median cortical thickness changes around the mid and distal prosthesis for both stems was mild, with a non-statistically significant trend (p> 0.05) towards more cortical loss (2–9%) around Charnley than AML stems (0–8%). The median intramedullary width increased by 1–10%, depending on level (no difference by prosthesis type, p> 0.05). Changes continued progressively over the entire observation period.

Conclusion: This paper provides the first detailed long-term information on the effect of well-functioning hip arthroplasty on femoral morphology in a large patient group. Morphologic changes are most pronounced in the proximal medial femur and vary by implant type. Also, the medullary canal widens around a replaced hip as the patient ages.