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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 287 - 287
1 Jul 2008
MESSERLI G SADRI H SCHOLLER J SONNEY F PETER R HOFFMEYER P
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Purpose of the study: This was an analysis of long-term outcome of 260 consecutive total hip arthroplasty (THA) procedures performed with a press-fit CLS-Spotorno cup. This easy-to-position cup preserves bone stock if revision should be needed.

Material and methods: From January 1990 to December 1994, 260 THA were implanted with a CLS-Spotorno cup in 221 patients. The clinical and radiological outcome was assessed with minimal ten years follow-up. Mean age at operation was 63 years (range 26–82 years). Sixty eight patients (68 hips) died before ten years follow-up. Five patients (five hips) could not be transported for review and four patients (four hips) were lost to follow-up. This study thus concerned 183 Spotorno cups (70.3%) in 144 patients (65.1%) who were reviewed clinically at 120–166 months follow-up. One hundred twenty-five patients agreed to undergo a radiological work-up. X-rays were analyzed by several independent operators. Two hundred sixty prostheses were implanted by two senior surgeons using the transgluteal approach. The Harris score and the De-Lee-Charnley radiological assessment as well as the Kaplan-Meier survival curve were determined.

Results: Seven cups were revised (3.8%): three because of aseptic loosening, two during stem revision because of polyethylene wear, and two for recurrent dislocation. Radiographically, four cups (2.2%) had migrated and there was a lucent line adjacent to the cup in at least one of the three De-Lee-Charnley zones for 23 cups (12.5%). There were no cup wing fractures. The mean Harris score for 144 patients (183 hips) was 90 points (range 37–100) at last follow-up. Outcome was considered excellent for 123 hips (67%), good for 34 (18.5%), fair for 20 and mediocre for five. The Kaplan-Meier 10-year survival with revision as the end point was 99% (CI: 94.8–99.8%).

Discussion: The 10-year survival of CLS-Spotorno cups is excellent with a low rate of revision. These results can be tempered by the radiological findings, although the lucent lines were already visible on the 12-month x-rays with no visible progression.

Conclusion: This cup provides excellent long-term results with a survival curve comparable to other press-fit cups. It is easy to position and revise.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 241 - 241
1 Jul 2008
SADRI H HOFFMEYER P
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Purpose of the study: Coxofemoral conflicts can sometimes lead to early degenerative disease in young patients. Open surgery for surgical dislocation with joint cleaning had provided promising short- and mid-term results. Arthroscopy of the hip joint is a less invasive alternative. The purpose of this work was to compare prospectively the outcome achieved with open surgical or arthroscopic treatment of coxofemoral conflicts after a minimum follow-up of two years.

Material and methods: Sixty-three patients, mean age 30 years (range 19–54) with arthroMRI-proven coxofemoral conflict were evaluated two years after treatment. Surgical dislocation was used for 31 patients and arthroscopy for 32. Clinical outcome was assessed on the basis of WOMAC scores noted preoperatively, postoperatively and at two years follow-up. Complications were noted.

Results: Results were similar in the two groups at two years: preoperative WOMAC score: 65/100 (41–95) pour open dislocation, 57/100 (15–96) for arthroscopy; postoperative WOMAC score at two years: 79/100 (41–99) for open dislocation, 84/100 (50–99) for arthroscopy. The rate of patient satisfaction was similar: (open dislocation: 75% and arthroscopy: 82%). Complications: open dislocation : 3 case of POA including 1 Brooker stage III and one 1 case of ossifying myositis of the thigh; arthroscopy: 2 case of hematoma (spontaneous resolution) and 1 case of transient irritation (48 h) of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve. Surgical revisions at two years: open dislocation: one total hip arthroplasty at 15 months and one resection of ossification (POA) at 15 months; arthroscopy: two total hip arthroplasties at 5 and 15 months.

Discussion: The results obtained with the two methods are encouraging at two years. A satisfaction rate of 80% can be expected.

Conclusion: Arthroscopy appears to be the more advantageous alternative for young patients since it is less invasive and provides similar results at two years.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 242 - 242
1 Jul 2008
SADRI H HOFFMEYER P
Full Access

Purpose of the study: Coxofemoral conflicts can sometimes lead to early degenerative disease in young patients. Hip arthroscopy is a less invasive alternative which can remove all of the coxofemoral conflicts. Like open surgery, a purely arthroscopic technique enables all the necessary corrections, even involving the rim. Arthroscopy has provides promising short- and mid-term results. The purpose of this work was to present the surgical technique, its drawbacks and complications, and present suggestions for improvement.

Material and methods: Fifty-one patients, mean age 31 years (range 15–54 years) underwent purely arthroscopic treatment of coxofemoral conflicts between February 2001 and November 2003. Prospective follow-up was at least six months. The type of conflict and the corresponding corrections were noted. The Pre- and postoperative WOMAC scores were used for clinical assessment. Complications were noted as well as means for avoiding them.

Results: The operative technique, the potential dangers, and suggestions for successful arthroscopy are presented. The clinical outcome with at least six months follow-up was: hip R/L: 21/31. Head and acetabular correction: 46 cases. Head correction alone (head/neck offset): 5 cases. Preoperative WOMAC score: 59/100 (15–99). Postoperative WOMAC score: 85/100 (49–99). Complications: spontaneously resolutive hematoma (n=2), transient (48h) irritation of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve (n=1).

Discussion: Purely arthroscopic correction of a coxofemoral conflict is as safe as the open surgical technique. The arthroscopic method provides very promising short- and mid-term results with no major complications. The lower morbidity with this technique enables ambulatory treatment with shorter recovery time.