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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 201 - 201
1 Mar 2013
Imagama T Tokushige A Sakka A Seki K Muto M Taguchi T
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Introduction

The goal of treating artificial joint infection is to relieve the infection quickly and re-establish joint function, but many patients have underlying diseases, and treatment is often made problematic by the diversity of the causative bacteria. In this study we assessed the factor that enabled revision arthroplasty in patients with infection after artificial hip arthroplasty, including bipolar hip arthroplasty, in our hospital.

Subjectives and Methods

The subjects were the 16 patients (16 hips) with infection after hip arthroplasty who were treated in our hospital during the past 10 years. There were 7 males and 9 females, and their mean age was 69.8 years. Primary total hip arthroplasty had been performed in 6 hips, revision hip arthroplasty in 8 hips, and bipolar hip arthroplasty in 2 hips. Infected implants were removed as soon as possible and delayed reimplantations with an interval antibiotic spacer were attempted in all patients. 9 hips were successful in reimplantation (reimplantation group) and 7 hips were impossible (No reimplantation group). In this study we investigated age, complications, body mass index (BMI), body temperature, pain, rate of resistant bacteria, number of hip surgery prior to infection and clinical manifestations compared to two groups.