Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 20 of 78
Results per page:
Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 10, Issue 9 | Pages 594 - 601
24 Sep 2021
Karunaseelan KJ Dandridge O Muirhead-Allwood SK van Arkel RJ Jeffers JRT

Aims. In the native hip, the hip capsular ligaments tighten at the limits of range of hip motion and may provide a passive stabilizing force to protect the hip against edge loading. In this study we quantified the stabilizing force vectors generated by capsular ligaments at extreme range of motion (ROM), and examined their ability to prevent edge loading. Methods. Torque-rotation curves were obtained from nine cadaveric hips to define the rotational restraint contributions of the capsular ligaments in 36 positions. A ligament model was developed to determine the line-of-action and effective moment arms of the medial/lateral iliofemoral, ischiofemoral, and pubofemoral ligaments in all positions. The functioning ligament forces and stiffness were determined at 5 Nm rotational restraint. In each position, the contribution of engaged capsular ligaments to the joint reaction force was used to evaluate the net force vector generated by the capsule. Results. The medial and lateral arms of the iliofemoral ligament generated the highest inbound force vector in positions combining extension and adduction providing anterior stability. The ischiofemoral ligament generated the highest inbound force in flexion with adduction and internal rotation (FADIR), reducing the risk of posterior dislocation. In this position the hip joint reaction force moved 0.8° inbound per Nm of internal capsular restraint, preventing edge loading. Conclusion. The capsular ligaments contribute to keep the joint force vector inbound from the edge of the acetabulum at extreme ROM. Preservation and appropriate tensioning of these structures following any type of hip surgery may be crucial to minimizing complications related to joint instability. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2021;10(9):594–601


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 94-B, Issue 7 | Pages 901 - 907
1 Jul 2012
Esposito CI Walter WL Roques A Tuke MA Zicat BA Walsh WR Walter WK

We analysed 54 alumina ceramic-on-ceramic bearings from total hip replacements retrieved at one centre after a mean duration of 3.5 years (0.2 to 10.6) in situ. These implants were obtained from 54 patients (16 men and 38 women) with a mean age of 67 years (33 to 88) who underwent revision for a variety of reasons. Posterior edge loading was found in the majority of these retrievals (32 out of 54). Anterosuperior edge loading occurred less often but produced a higher rate of wear. Stripe wear on the femoral heads had a median volumetric wear rate of 0.2 mm. 3. /year (0 to 7.2). The wear volume on the femoral heads corresponded to the width of edge wear on the matching liner. Anteversion of the acetabular component was found to be a more important determinant than inclination for wear in ceramic bearings. Posterior edge loading may be considered to be a normal occurrence in ceramic-on-ceramic bearings, with minimal clinical consequences. Edge loading should be defined as either anterosuperior or posterior, as each edge loading mechanism may result in different clinical implications


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 32 - 32
1 May 2019
Palit A King R Gu Y Pierrepont J Hart Z Elliott M Williams M
Full Access

Background. It is not always clear why some patients experience recurrent dislocation following total hip arthroplasty (THA). In order to plan appropriate revision surgery for such patients, however, it is important to understand the specific biomechanical basis for the dislocation. We have developed a novel method to analyse the biomechanical profile of the THA, specifically to identify edge loading and prosthetic impingement, taking into account spinopelvic mobility. In this study we compare the results of this analysis in THA patients with and without recurrent dislocation. Methods. Post-operative CT scans and lateral standing and seated radiographs of 40 THA patients were performed, 20 of whom had experienced postoperative dislocation. The changes in pelvic and femoral positions on the lateral radiographs were measured between the standing and seated positions, and a 3D digital model was then generated to simulate the movement of the hip when rising from a chair for each patient. The path of the joint reaction force (JRF) across the acetabular bearing surface and the motion of the femoral neck relative to the acetabular margin were then calculated for this “sit-to-stand” movement, in order to identify where there was risk of edge loading or prosthetic impingement. Results. For every patient it was possible to model the path of the JRF and the femoral neck relative to the acetabular component. The analysis predicted either edge loading or prosthetic impingement in significantly more patients in the “dislocating” group compared to the “non-dislocating” group (figure 1). Conclusions. This method of biomechanical simulation may be able to identify edge loading and / or prosthetic impingement in THA patients who have experienced recurrent dislocation. This may be helpful in planning appropriate revision surgery. For any figures or tables, please contact the authors directly


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 3 | Pages 307 - 314
1 Mar 2011
Matthies A Underwood R Cann P Ilo K Nawaz Z Skinner J Hart AJ

This study compared component wear rates and pre-revision blood metal ions levels in two groups of failed metal-on-metal hip arthroplasties: hip resurfacing and modular total hip replacement (THR). There was no significant difference in the median rate of linear wear between the groups for both acetabular (p = 0.4633) and femoral (p = 0.0872) components. There was also no significant difference in the median linear wear rates when failed hip resurfacing and modular THR hips of the same type (ASR and Birmingham hip resurfacing (BHR)) were compared. Unlike other studies of well-functioning hips, there was no significant difference in pre-revision blood metal ion levels between hip resurfacing and modular THR. Edge loading was common in both groups, but more common in the resurfacing group (67%) than in the modular group (57%). However, this was not significant (p = 0.3479). We attribute this difference to retention of the neck in resurfacing of the hip, leading to impingement-type edge loading. This was supported by visual evidence of impingement on the femur. These findings show that failed metal-on-metal hip resurfacing and modular THRs have similar component wear rates and are both associated with raised pre-revision blood levels of metal ions


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 21 - 21
1 Oct 2018
Amstutz H Duff ML
Full Access

Introduction. Because of concerns regarding excessive wear and short-term failures attributed to the metal-on-metal bearings, the use of metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasty (MOMHRA) has been greatly reduced since 2008, despite great mid-term results for well-designed implants and in certain patient populations. The true cause of excessive wear was then unknown. Therefore, identification of true risk factors for the procedure became paramount to refine indications and improve survivorship outcomes. Methods. Over the last 10 years, a systematic search of the US national library of Medicine and National institutes of health with the key words “metal-on-metal” and hip resurfacing” was conducted and returned 2186 items. Of these items, 862 were deemed relevant to our research purposes and entered in our center's reference database from which this review was performed. Results. Edge loading is the main culprit for high wear and high serum Co and Cr ion concentrations because it disrupts the fluid film lubrication of the device. Computation of the contact patch to rim distance (CPR), an estimate of the joint's functional coverage, is the best predictor of potential edge loading and excessive wear. Both in vivo and in vitro studies show that the wear of well-designed and well-positioned MOM bearings diminishes over time with continued use, an advantage only featured by MOM bearings. Systemic wear-related complications and hypersensitivity to metal once thought to be common are in fact rare occurrences. In addition, metal-related revisions only represent a small portion of the various modes of failure encountered with well-designed HRA. In our series of 1321 hips with only 0.5% lost to follow-up, 11 patients underwent revision surgery for excessive wear or adverse local tissue reaction. All but 2 had mal-positioned acetabular components (CPR distance <10mm). One of these 2 patients had serum cobalt and chromium levels of 13 and 9 µg/L respectively, despite a CPR distance of 18.3 mm, while the other showed a peri-prosthetic fluid collection estimated at 111cc on MRI. Component aseptic loosening (acetabular or femoral) remains, as is also the case for total hip arthroplasty (THA), the leading indication for revision surgery, even though substantial progress has been reported to reduce its incidence. Femoral neck fractures and loosening are associated with the surgeon's learning curve which can be avoided with proper training. The survivorship of the femoral component in our series after implementation of surgical technique changes is 99.2% at 10 years for an overall survivorship of 95.5%. A diagnosis of DDH is associated with a higher failure rate, particularly from socket loosening, while women without risk factors have a survivorship of 98.6% at 15 years. Conclusion. HRA has often been, but should not be associated with the results of large head metal-on-metal THA which often present with a different set of failure mechanisms. Now that most of the risk factors for HRA have been identified, and solutions found, a balanced perspective of its results is needed because the long-term data available validate the low wear of MOM bearings which was predicted in the early hip simulator studies. Considering the tremendous progress made in surgical technique and the advanced tribological knowledge acquired with the last 20 years of investigations related to MOM HRA, all the conditions are present to make this procedure a success for lifetime durability as shown in our series where 44 patients (54 hips) have died without a revision at a mean follow-up time of 9.7 years (range, 1.8 to 19.7). For HRA, when devices with adequate coverage and clearance of the ball by the socket are used, severe developmental dysplasia and inadequate surgical technique are responsible for most failures at 10 to 15 years of follow-up. It is our opinion that the advantages of HRA over THA (such as absence of thigh pain, a low dislocation rate, no taper corrosion, and the preservation of proximal femoral bone mineral density and the ability to maintain high activity levels without penalty) now outweigh the risks of using a MOM bearing


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1169 - 1177
1 Sep 2011
Underwood R Matthies A Cann P Skinner JA Hart AJ

The Articular Surface Replacement (ASR) hip resurfacing arthroplasty has a failure rate of 12.0% at five years, compared with 4.3% for the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing (BHR). We analysed 66 ASR and 64 BHR explanted metal-on-metal hip replacements with the aim of understanding their mechanisms of failure. We measured the linear wear rates of the acetabular and femoral components and analysed the clinical cause of failure, pre-revision blood metal ion levels and orientation of the acetabular component. There was no significant difference in metal ion levels (chromium, p = 0.82; cobalt, p = 0.40) or head wear rate (p = 0.14) between the two groups. The ASR had a significantly increased rate of wear of the acetabular component (p = 0.03) and a significantly increased occurrence of edge loading (p < 0.005), which can be attributed to differences in design between the ASR and BHR. The effects of differences in design on the in vivo wear rates are discussed: these may provide an explanation as to why the ASR is more sensitive to suboptimal positioning than the BHR


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1158 - 1164
1 Sep 2007
Lusty PJ Watson A Tuke MA Walter WL Walter WK Zicat B

We studied 33 third generation, alumina ceramic-on-ceramic bearings retrieved from cementless total hip replacements after more than six months in situ. Wear volume was measured with a Roundtest machine, and acetabular orientation from the anteroposterior pelvic radiograph. The overall median early wear rate was 0.1 mm. 3. /yr for the femoral heads, and 0.04 mm. 3. /yr for the acetabular liners. We then excluded hips where the components had migrated. In this stable subgroup of 22 bearings, those with an acetabular anteversion of < 15° (seven femoral heads) had a median femoral head wear rate of 1.2 mm. 3. /yr, compared with 0 mm. 3. /yr for those with an anteversion of ≥15° (15 femoral heads, p < 0.001). Even under edge loading, wear volumes with ceramic-on-ceramic bearings are small in comparison to other bearing materials. Low acetabular anteversion is associated with greater wear


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1072 - 1078
1 Aug 2010
Grammatopoulos G Pandit H Glyn-Jones S McLardy-Smith P Gundle R Whitwell D Gill HS Murray DW

Pseudotumours are a rare complication of hip resurfacing. They are thought to be a response to metal debris which may be caused by edge loading due to poor orientation of the acetabular component. Our aim was to determine the optimal acetabular orientation to minimise the risk of pseudotumour formation. We matched 31 hip resurfacings revised for pseudotumour formation with 58 controls who had a satisfactory outcome from this procedure. The radiographic inclination and anteversion angles of the acetabular component were measured on anteroposterior radiographs of the pelvis using Einzel-Bild-Roentgen-Analyse software. The mean inclination angle (47°, 10° to 81°) and anteversion angle (14°, 4° to 34°) of the pseudotumour cases were the same (p = 0.8, p = 0.2) as the controls, 46° (29° to 60°) and 16° (4° to 30°) respectively, but the variation was greater. Assuming an accuracy of implantation of ± 10° about a target position, the optimal radiographic position was found to be approximately 45° of inclination and 20° of anteversion. The incidence of pseudotumours inside the zone was four times lower (p = 0.007) than outside the zone. In order to minimise the risk of pseudotumour formation we recommend that surgeons implant the acetabular component at an inclination of 45° (± 10) and anteversion of 20° (± 10) on post-operative radiographs. Because of differences between the radiographic and the operative angles, this may be best achieved by aiming for an inclination of 40° and an anteversion of 25°


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 26 - 26
1 May 2019
King R Wang X Qureshi A Vepa A Rahman U Palit A Williams M Elliott M
Full Access

Background. Over 10% of total hip arthroplasty (THA) surgeries performed in England and Wales are revision procedures. 1. Malorientation of the acetabular component in THA may contribute to premature failure due to mechanisms such as edge loading and prosthetic impingement. It is known that the pelvis flexes and extends during activities of daily living (ADLs), and excessive pelvic motion can contribute to functional acetabular malorientation. Preoperative radiographs can be performed to measure changes in pelvic tilt during ADLs to identify high risk individuals and inform surgical decision making. However, radiographs require time-consuming radiation exposure, and are unable to provide truly dynamic 3-dimensional analysis. The purpose of this study was to develop and evaluate a motion capture method using inertial measurement units (IMUs). This would provide a rapid, non-invasive analysis of pelvic tilt which could be used to support surgical planning. Methods. Patients awaiting THA were fitted with a bespoke device consisting of a 3D-printed clamp which housed the IMU and positioned over the sacrum. A wide elastic belt was fitted around the patient's waist to keep the device in place. Movement data was transmitted wirelessly to a tablet computer. Pelvic tilt was measured in standing, flexed seated and step-up positions while undergoing X-rays with the IMU capturing the data in parallel. Statistical analysis included measures of correlation between the X-ray and IMU measurements. Results. Measurements from 30 patients indicated a moderate-strong correlation (R. 2. = .87; Figure 1) between IMU and radiological measures of AP pelvic tilt. Conclusions. A novel device has been developed that can suitably track pelvic movements. This could potentially be used to identify patients with large changes in pelvic tilt, and thereby inform surgical planning. For any figures or tables, please contact the authors directly


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 95-B, Issue 3 | Pages 314 - 319
1 Mar 2013
Masjedi M Nightingale CL Azimi DY Cobb JP

We examined the relationship between the size of the femoral cam in femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) and acetabular pathomorphology to establish if pincer impingement exists in patients with a femoral cam. CT scans of 37 symptomatic impinging hips with a femoral cam were analysed in a three-dimensional study and were compared with 34 normal hips. The inclination and version of the acetabulum as well as the acetabular rim angle and the bony acetabular coverage were calculated. These measurements were correlated with the size and shape of the femoral cams. While the size of the femoral cam varied characteristically, the acetabular morphology of the two groups was similar in terms of version (normal mean 23° (. sd. 7°); cam mean 22° (. sd.  9°)), inclination (normal mean 57° (. sd. 5°); cam mean 56° (. sd. 5°)), acetabular coverage (normal mean 41% (. sd. 5%); cam mean 42% (. sd. 4%)) and the mean acetabular rim angle (normal mean 82° (. sd. 5°); cam mean 83° (. sd. 4°)). We found no correlation between acetabular morphology and the severity of cam lesion and no evidence of either global or focal over-coverage to support the diagnosis of ‘mixed’ FAI. The femoral cam may provoke edge loading but removal of any acetabular bearing surface when treating cam FAI might induce accelerated wear. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2013;95-B:314–19


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1527 - 1534
1 Nov 2010
Grammatopoulos G Pandit H Murray DW Gill HS

Pseudotumour is a rare but important complication of metal-on-metal hip resurfacing that occurs much more commonly in women than in men. We examined the relationship between head-neck ratio (HNR) and pseudotumour formation in 18 resurfaced hips (18 patients) revised for pseudotumour and 42 asymptomatic control resurfaced hips (42 patients). Patients in whom pseudotumour formation had occurred had higher pre-operative HNR than the control patients (mean 1.37 (. sd. 0.10) vs mean 1.30 (. sd. 0.08) p = 0.001). At operation the patients with pseudotumours had a greater reduction in the size of their femoral heads (p = 0.035) and subsequently had greater neck narrowing (mean 10.1% (. sd. 7.2) vs mean 3.8% (. sd. 3.2) p < 0.001). No female patient with a pre-operative HNR ≤ 1.3 developed a pseudotumour. We suggest that reducing the size of the femoral head, made possible by a high pre-operative HNR, increases the risk of impingement and edge loading, and may contribute to high wear and pseudotumour formation. As the incidence of pseudotumour is low in men, it appears safe to perform resurfacing in men. However, this study suggests that it is also reasonable to resurface in women with a pre-operative HNR ≤ 1.3


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 11 - 11
1 Aug 2018
Muirhead-Allwood S Logishetty K van Arkel R Ng G Cobb J Jeffers J
Full Access

The hip joint capsular ligaments (CL) passively restrain extreme range of motion (ROM) by wrapping around the native femoral head, and protect against impingement, edge loading wear and dislocation. This study compared how ligament function was affected by device (hip resurfacing arthroplasty, HRA; dual mobility total hip arthroplasty, DM-THA; and conventional THA, C-THA), with and without CL repair. It was hypothesized that ligament function would only be preserved when native anatomy was preserved: with restoration of head-size (HRA or DM-THA) and repair. Eight normal male cadaveric hips were skeletonised, retaining the hip capsule. CL function was quantified by measuring ROM by internally (IR) and externally rotating (ER) the hip in six functional positions, ranging from full extension with abduction to full flexion with adduction (squatting). Native ROM was compared to ROM after posterior capsulotomy and HRA, and C-THA and DM-THA, before and after surgical CL repair. ROM increased most following C-THA (max 62°), then DM-THA (max 40°), then HRA (max 19°), indicating later engagement of the capsule and reduced biomechanical function with smaller head-size. Dislocations also occurred in squatting after C-THA and DM-THA. CL-repair following HRA restored ROM to the native hip (max 8°). CL-repair following DM-THA reduced ROM hypermobility in flexed positions only and prevented dislocation (max 36°). CL-repair following C-THA did not reduce ROM or prevent dislocation. When HRA was combined with repair, native anatomy was preserved and ligament function was restored. For DM-THA with repair, ligament function depended on the movement of the mobile bearing resulting in near-native function in some positions, but increased ROM when ligaments were unable to wrap around the head/neck. Following C-THA, the reduced head-size resulted in inferior capsular mechanics in all positions as the ligaments remained slack, irrespective of repair. Choosing devices with anatomic head-sizes (resurfacing or dual-mobility) and repairing the capsular ligaments may protect against instability in the early postoperative period


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 62 - 62
1 Jan 2018
Muirhead-Allwood S Jeffers J
Full Access

The hip joint capsule passively restrains extreme range of motion protecting against impingement, dislocation and possibly edge loading. These functions would be advantageous following total hip arthroplasty (THA) however the degree of capsular excision, preservation and/or repair greatly varies between surgeons/approaches. Therefore, we asked: how does THA affect capsular ligamentous biomechanics? Which factors have the biggest influence?. For this laboratory based, cadaveric model, THA was performed through the acetabular medial wall, thus preserving the entire hip capsule. A previously published testing rig was used to measure capsular function by internally and externally rotating the hip in each of five hip positions (standing, sitting, gait heel strike, and two impingement risk positions, full flexion with adduction & extension with abduction). N=8 hips were tested both before and after THA allowing for repeated measurements between the native and replaced hip. The ROM before the capsule engaged increased following THA (p<0.05), indicating reduced biomechanical function. Internal rotation was affected more than external rotation. Increasing neck length restored the ROM more towards the native condition. Increasing head size also had a small positive effect, but less than neck length. Following THA, the capsular ligaments were no longer able to wrap around the smaller femoral head thereby limiting their ability to restrain excessive hip movement. The anterior capsule is affected less than the posterior, and may benefit from being preserved length. A repair to the posterior capsule should compensate for the reduced THA head size in order to restore function


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 26 - 26
1 Jan 2018
MacDonald S Howard J Goyal P Yuan X Lanting B Teeter M Naudie D McCalden R
Full Access

Lewinnek's safe zone recommendation to minimise dislocations was a target of 5–25° for anteversion angle and 30–50° for inclination angle. Subsequently, it was demonstrated that mal-positioning of the acetabular cup can also lead to edge loading, liner fracture, and greater conventional polyethylene wear. The purpose of this study was to measure the effect of acetabular cup position on highly crosslinked polyethylene wear in total hip arthroplasty (THA) at long-term follow-up. We identified all patients that underwent primary THA with a minimum of 10 years follow-up using an institutional database in London, Ontario, Canada. Patients with a single implant design consisting of a 28 mm cobalt chromium head and highly crosslinked polyethylene liner (ram extruded, GUR 1050, 100 kGy gamma irradiated, remelted, ethylene oxide sterilised) were selected for inclusion. In total, 85 hips from 79 recruited patients were analysed. Patients underwent a supine radiostereometric analysis (RSA) exam in which the x-ray sources and detectors were positioned to obtain an anterior-posterior and cross-table lateral radiograph. Acetabular cup anteversion angle, inclination angle, and 3D penetration rate (including wear and creep) were measured from the stereo radiograph pairs. At a mean follow-up of 13 years (range, 10–17 years) the mean penetration rate was 0.059 mm/year (95% CI: 0.045 to 0.073 mm/year). Mean anteversion angle was 18.2° (range, −14 to 40°) and mean inclination angle was 43.6° (range, 27 to 61°). With respect to the Lewinnek safe zone, 67% hips met the target for anteversion angle, 77% met the target for inclination angle, and 51% met the target for both. There was no correlation between anteversion angle and penetration rate (r = −0.14, p = 0.72) or between inclination angle and penetration rate (r = 0.11, p = 0.35). There was also no difference (p = 0.07) in penetration rate between hips located within the Lewinnek safe zone for both anteversion angle and inclination angle (mean 0.057 mm/year, 95% CI: 0.036 to 0.079 mm/year) and those outside the safe zone (mean 0.062 mm/year, 95% CI: 0.042 to 0.083 mm/year). Acetabular cup position had no effect on the wear rate of highly crosslinked polyethylene at long-term follow-up. Although care should still be taken to correctly position the acetabular cup for stability, highly crosslinked polyethylene is a forgiving bearing material that can withstand a wide range of cup positions without negatively impacting longevity due to wear


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 6 | Pages 416 - 423
2 Jun 2023
Tung WS Donnelley C Eslam Pour A Tommasini S Wiznia D

Aims

Computer-assisted 3D preoperative planning software has the potential to improve postoperative stability in total hip arthroplasty (THA). Commonly, preoperative protocols simulate two functional positions (standing and relaxed sitting) but do not consider other common positions that may increase postoperative impingement and possible dislocation. This study investigates the feasibility of simulating commonly encountered positions, and positions with an increased risk of impingement, to lower postoperative impingement risk in a CT-based 3D model.

Methods

A robotic arm-assisted arthroplasty planning platform was used to investigate 11 patient positions. Data from 43 primary THAs were used for simulation. Sacral slope was retrieved from patient preoperative imaging, while angles of hip flexion/extension, hip external/internal rotation, and hip abduction/adduction for tested positions were derived from literature or estimated with a biomechanical model. The hip was placed in the described positions, and if impingement was detected by the software, inspection of the impingement type was performed.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 11 | Pages 853 - 858
10 Nov 2023
Subbiah Ponniah H Logishetty K Edwards TC Singer GC

Aims

Metal-on-metal hip resurfacing (MoM-HR) has seen decreased usage due to safety and longevity concerns. Joint registries have highlighted the risks in females, smaller hips, and hip dysplasia. This study aimed to identify if reported risk factors are linked to revision in a long-term follow-up of MoM-HR performed by a non-designer surgeon.

Methods

A retrospective review of consecutive MoM hip arthroplasties (MoM-HRAs) using Birmingham Hip Resurfacing was conducted. Data on procedure side, indication, implant sizes and orientation, highest blood cobalt and chromium ion concentrations, and all-cause revision were collected from local and UK National Joint Registry records.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 9 | Pages 946 - 952
1 Sep 2023
Dhawan R Young DA Van Eemeren A Shimmin A

Aims

The Birmingham Hip Resurfacing (BHR) arthroplasty has been used as a surgical treatment of coxarthrosis since 1997. We present 20-year results of 234 consecutive BHRs performed in our unit.

Methods

Between 1999 and 2001, there were 217 patients: 142 males (65.4%), mean age 52 years (18 to 68) who had 234 implants (17 bilateral). They had patient-reported outcome measures collected, imaging (radiograph and ultrasound), and serum metal ion assessment. Survivorship analysis was performed using Kaplan-Meier estimates. Revision for any cause was considered as an endpoint for the analysis.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 3 | Pages 182 - 187
14 Mar 2023
Sheridan GA Hanlon M Welch-Phillips A Spratt K Hagan R O'Byrne JM Kenny PJ Kurmis AP Masri BA Garbuz DS Hurson CJ

Aims

Hip resurfacing remains a potentially valuable surgical procedure for appropriately-selected patients with optimised implant choices. However, concern regarding high early failure rates continues to undermine confidence in use. A large contributor to failure is adverse local tissue reactions around metal-on-metal (MoM) bearing surfaces. Such phenomena have been well-explored around MoM total hip arthroplasties, but comparable data in equivalent hip resurfacing procedures is lacking. In order to define genetic predisposition, we performed a case-control study investigating the role of human leucocyte antigen (HLA) genotype in the development of pseudotumours around MoM hip resurfacings.

Methods

A matched case-control study was performed using the prospectively-collected database at the host institution. In all, 16 MoM hip resurfacing 'cases' were identified as having symptomatic periprosthetic pseudotumours on preoperative metal artefact reduction sequence (MARS) MRI, and were subsequently histologically confirmed as high-grade aseptic lymphocyte-dominated vasculitis-associated lesions (ALVALs) at revision surgery. ‘Controls’ were matched by implant type in the absence of evidence of pseudotumour. Blood samples from all cases and controls were collected prospectively for high resolution genetic a nalysis targeting 11 separate HLA loci. Statistical significance was set at 0.10 a priori to determine the association between HLA genotype and pseudotumour formation, given the small sample size.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 6 | Pages 408 - 415
1 Jun 2023
Ramkumar PN Shaikh HJF Woo JJ Haeberle HS Pang M Brooks PJ

Aims

The aims of the study were to report for a cohort aged younger than 40 years: 1) indications for HRA; 2) patient-reported outcomes in terms of the modified Harris Hip Score (HHS); 3) dislocation rate; and 4) revision rate.

Methods

This retrospective analysis identified 267 hips from 224 patients who underwent an hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA) from a single fellowship-trained surgeon using the direct lateral approach between 2007 and 2019. Inclusion criteria was minimum two-year follow-up, and age younger than 40 years. Patients were followed using a prospectively maintained institutional database.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 7 | Pages 507 - 515
6 Jul 2023
Jørgensen PB Jakobsen SS Vainorius D Homilius M Hansen TB Stilling M

Aims

The Exeter short stem was designed for patients with Dorr type A femora and short-term results are promising. The aim of this study was to evaluate the minimum five-year stem migration pattern of Exeter short stems in comparison with Exeter standard stems.

Methods

In this case-control study, 25 patients (22 female) at mean age of 78 years (70 to 89) received cemented Exeter short stem (case group). Cases were selected based on Dorr type A femora and matched first by Dorr type A and then age to a control cohort of 21 patients (11 female) at mean age of 74 years (70 to 89) who received with cemented Exeter standard stems (control group). Preoperatively, all patients had primary hip osteoarthritis and no osteoporosis as confirmed by dual X-ray absorptiometry scanning. Patients were followed with radiostereometry for evaluation of stem migration (primary endpoint), evaluation of cement quality, and Oxford Hip Score. Measurements were taken preoperatively, and at three, 12, and 24 months and a minimum five-year follow-up.