The results of Charnley stabilisation of the hip in forty-three patients observed for one to four and a half years are reported. The operation readily produced a bony fusion in young patients and also in some of the older ones. Fibrous ankylosis, with or without some movement in the joint, gave an excellent result. Even when a pseudarthrosis or a stress fracture occurred, the clinical result often showed a definite improvement. Only three patients did not benefit from the operation, though none of these showed any significant increase in their disability.
A carefully planned operation may be expected to check increasing deformity without doing harm, and to make subsequent bony stabilisation easier. In favourable cases it may be possible to restore muscle balance and stability, making further surgery unnecessary. A longer follow-up is necessary to determine to what extent this ideal can be achieved.