Crowe IV complete dislocated hips were thought to be difficult for primary THA. Correction for leg length discrepancy associated with nerve palsy or tough to reduction during surgery. Purpose of this study was to evaluate 3.5cm total leg length correction for any type of Crowe IV patients setting in anatomical positioning of acetabular cup with femoral shortening osteotomy. 24 hips were evaluated averaged 28 months after primary THA. Correction length of center of rotation, amount of femoral shortening, Harris hip score, and abductor muscle power recovery with MicroFet 2 caluculator. Bilateral cases were preformed with 6 months interval. Length of femur and tibia compared to contralateral normal side were evaluated from plain radiograms.Purpose
Materials & Methods
Dysplastic acetabulum (DDH) have some difficulty even if with conventional approach of THA. Indication or contraindication is not clear with MIS THA. The purpose of this study was to evaluate complications with mini antero-lateral approach for DDH patients. 1523 DDH hips were evaluated. Follow-up periods were averaged 36 mos. (24–74). 612 were Crowe I, 628 of II, and 283 of III. Crowe IV hips were contra-indicated. Leg length discrepancy (LLD) before and after surgery, OR time, complications during and after surgery, and length of hospital stay were evaluated.Purpose
Materials & Methods
Suggestions for improved wear performance of total knee replacements have included replacement of standard CoCr femoral components with ceramic. Yttria-stabilized zirconia (y-TZP) was introduced as high-strength and high toughness ceramic as an alternative to alumina ceramic. Since the introduction of zirconia in 1985, the clinical outcomes and successes for hip joint have been controversial. Y-TZP ceramics have been studied both experimentally and clinically. Magnesia-stabilized zirconia (Mg-PSZ) also appears promising for total knee replacements (TKR). Mg-ZrO2 and CoCr femoral condyles were compared in the VanguardTM knee configuration (Biomet Inc, IN). Molded tibial inserts (GUR1050) were gamma-irradiation sterilization to 3.2-Mrad under argon. Knee simulation was conducted on a 6 station simulator (Shore Western Manufacturing, Monrovia, CA). Motion included 20 degrees of flexion/extension, 5 degrees of internal/external rotation and 5 mm of AP-translation. All knee components were subjected to 6 million cycles of normal walking (2.9 kN max, freq 1.4 Hz). Lubricant was 50% alfa-calf serum diluted to 20 mg/ml protein and using EDTA additive. Test duration was 6 million cycles (6-Mc), and wear was measured by weight-loss techniques. For wear trending of CoCr/PE and MGZ/PE, linear wear trends were apparent from 1 to 6 Mc test duration. The control implants (CoCr/PE) showed excellent linear trending (regression coeff r>
0.99) with wears rate averaging 6.3 mm3/Mc. These data showed good control of experimental variance (<
10%). The ZrO2/PE combination showed good linear trending (r >
0.86) with wear rate averaging only 0.8 mm3/Mc. This set also showed good control of experimental variance (<
15%. The MGZ/PE wear was 8-fold reduced from that of CoCr/PE. The laboratory knee wear simulation appeared very supportive of femoral condyles of Mg-stabilized zirconia. Such implants may provide excellent performance for active patients who may risk high wear rates over many years of use.