Since 1999 we have adopted the ceramic on ceramic bearing in total hip arthroplasty. We started with sandwich liners, abandoned afterwards in favor of all ceramic liners. We witnessed the progressive evolution of the diameters of the femoral heads from 28 mm to the actual 40 mm. Out of more than 500 implants, we experienced 1 case of fracture of the ceramics, 5 cases of squeaking and 5 dislocations. A total of 5 implants underwent revision.
We performed, from 1999, to March 2009 511 implants in 465 patients (46 bilateral). 320 patients were women, 145 men. Mean follow up is 5.3 years (6 months-10 years). Mean age was 68,4 years (18–80).
We had 5 cases of squeaking: in 1 case it recovered itself, in 2 cases the phenomenon is occasional and in 1 case it’s persistent. No revision surgery has been required by these 4 patients. 1 patient developed squeaking after a subdislocation and needed revision for substitution of the head. We revised 3 other implants: 2 for infection and 1 for a periprosthetic fracture. On the radiological side there were no signs of mobilization of the cup or of the stem. We found radiolucent lines in 35 cases: 13 in zone 1 according to Gruen, 6 in zone 2 and 16 in zone 3. Radiolucent lines were always less than 2 mm wide and stable at all radiographic controls.
Osteoporosis is an underdiagnosed and often neglected disease, with a huge impact on social costs arising from fracture management that could be avoided with an appropriate prevention programme. The approach to diagnosis is not always efficacious and cost-optimised, often suggesting instrumental densitometry in a somehow irrational way. The objective of this study is to evaluate the introduction and use of a simple score system, in order to optimise the access to instrumental diagnosis with quantitative ultrasound (QUS) densitometric technique for those patients at risk. We used the OSIRIS score system questionnaire in order to have a simple tool to manage the osteoporosis screening of patients in our centre from January to December 2003 (more than 2000 patients in total). The score risk derived for each patient was used to recommend the instrumental densitometric measurement (heel QUS) and the need for vertebral X-ray scan and morphometric evaluation. In a further analysis on a more limited number of patients, we searched for correlations between densitometry with other score systems (O.R.A.I.,N.O.F.,S.C.O.R.E.,A.B.O.N.E.) and with pre-existing fragility fractures (vertebral and non-vertebral). Our data suggest that a correlation exists between OSIRIS score risk and heel QUS densitometric T-score, suggesting the usefulness and validity of such a score system in order to optimise the access to instrumental diagnosis of osteoporosis.