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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 46 - 46
23 Jun 2023
Mallett K Guarin S Sierra RJ
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Dual mobility (DM) components are increasingly used to prevent and treat dislocation after total hip arthroplasty (THA). Intraprosthetic dissociation (IPD) is a known rare complication of these implants and has reportedly decreased with modern implants. The purpose of this paper is to report the diagnosis and treatment of modern DM IPD.

1453 DM components were implanted between 2010 and 2021. 695 in primary and 758 in revision THA. 49 hips sustained a dislocation of the large head and 5 sustained an IPD at presentation. 6 additional IPD occurred at the time of reduction of large head. The average age was 64, 54% were female and the mean follow-up was three years. Of the 11 IPD, 8 had a history of instability, 5 had abductor insufficiency, 4 had prior lumbar fusion, and 3 were conversions from fracture.

The overall IPD incidence was 0.76%. Ten of the 11 DM IPD were missed at initial presentation or at the time of reduction, and all were discharged with presumed reduction. The mean time from IPD to surgical treatment was 3 weeks. One patient died with an IPD at 5 months. A DM head was reimplanted in six, two underwent revision of the acetabular component with exchange of DM head, and four were revised to a constrained liner. The re-revision rate was 55% at a mean 1.8 years. None of the patients who underwent cup revision required subsequent re-revision while half of the constrained liners and exchange of DM heads required re-revision.

The overall rate of DM dislocation or IPD is low. It is critical to identify an IPD on radiographs as it was almost universally missed at presentation or when it occurred iatrogenically. For patients presenting with IPD, the surgeon should consider acetabular revision and conversion to a constrained liner or a larger DM, with special attention to removing impinging structures that could increase the risk of re-dislocation.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 1 - 1
1 Nov 2021
Mallett K Trousdale R Sierra R Abdel M Berry D
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Previous work has demonstrated increased implant failure in patients with DDH compared to osteoarthritis with historic methods and implants. This study examines outcomes of modern total hip arthroplasty (THA) techniques using uncemented fixation and cross-linked PE (XLPE) bearings for DDH.

A consecutive series of 879 patients with DDH who underwent primary THA with uncemented components and a XLPE bearing at a single institution between 1999 and 2016 were identified. Mean age at index arthroplasty was 51 years, with 78% females. Mean follow-up was 8 years.

5- and 10-year survivorships free of revision were 98.4% and 98%, respectively. 5- and 10-year survivorships free of reoperation for any reason were 97% and 96%, respectively. Survivorship free of acetabular revision for aseptic loosening was 99.8% at 5 and 10 years, while survivorships free of femoral revision for aseptic loosening were 99.7% at 5 years and 99.5% at 10 years. Survivorship free of reoperation for PE damage (2 liner fractures, 2 rim damage from impingement) was 99.3% at 10 years. There were no revisions for bearing surface wear or osteolysis. 13% of patients experienced complications (4% dislocation, 3.3% wound complication rate). Ten-year survivorship free of reoperation for instability was 99.2%. 8 patients developed infection requiring operation (<1%). 100 patients had a prior pelvic osteotomy (11%), which did not increase rate of complications (p=0.22) or reoperations (p=0.51).

Fixation with modern uncemented implants has dramatically reduced implant loosening in patients with DDH, and the use of XLPE bearings has markedly reduced revision for PE wear/osteolysis in this young patient population, leading to dramatically improved mid/long-term survivorship compared to historic series.