In Sweden approximately 6000 patients yearly sustain displaced femoral neck fractures. During the last decade there has been a shift towards more arthroplasties at the expense of internal fixation. In 2008 approximately 75% of the dislocated femoral neck fractures in Sweden were treated with arthroplasties. Those patients are typically elderly and frail and the vast majority of them receive hemiarthroplasties. In 2005 a national hemiarthroplasty registration was established as part of the Swedish Hip Arthroplasty Register (SHAR). The SHAR aims to register all hemiarthroplasties performed in Sweden, including primary and salvage procedures. Surgical and patient details are recorded and re-operations are registered.Background
Material & Method
There was significantly better results regarding pain and function in the arthroplasty group at 4 months. At 10 years the results were still not superior for osteosynthesis. A Cox regression analysis regarding sex, age, time to surgery, smoking, osteoporosis, trauma type, preoperative function and choice of skin incision comparing the patients without hip complications at 10 years with the patients with failures in each group revealed no risk factor for failure.
3.2% of the patients (hips) have been reoperated, most commonly because of dislocation. Multiple reoperations are common. Male gender, secondary procedure and uncemented stem are associated with increased reoperation risk with 1.2, 1.7 and 1.8 times (1.2, CI: 1.0–1.6; 1.7, 1.3–2.3; 1.8 1.4–2.5). Use of uncemented fixation resulted in increased risk of reoperation, also with exclusion of uncemented Austin-Moore prostheses (1.8 times, 1.1–2.8). In a separate analysis of the two most frequent designs, use of bipolar head increased the risk of revision twice (1.4–2.8) compared to unipolar head when adjusting for other risk factors. This may reflect that fitter and more active individuals get a bipolar prosthesis and are more prone to become revised should complications occur or a true increase of complications when using bipolar head. A further analysis is in progress. Use of dorsal approach (1.6, 1.2–2.2), Austin-Moore (1.8, 1.1–3.1) and Thompson prostheses (1.8, 1.5–2.8) increased the risk of revision because of dislocation.