The Harris Hip Scores and Pain Scores show a significant improvement comparing preoperative with postoperative results in this series. One patient required revision of the femoral neck component for recurrent dislocation and three patients have significant rotational thigh pain due to varus implantation of the stem (the pilot has since been shortened and the diameter reduced by 1mm).
Clinical assessment, X-rays and Dexa analysis indicate satisfactory results with good incorporation of the prosthesis by the bone.
13 hips (11.8%) had mid-thigh pain, most of them mild. One hip (0.9%) showed clinical and radiographic signs of early loosening and was revised.
A femoral stem using a double threaded cone locking mechanism has been developed down under. Over 400 prostheses have been implanted as primary, revision and replacement prostheses over the last 4 years. Stem insertion is achieved by a gentle screw home mechanism and does not use the “hammer and nail” insertion principle. Design The prosthesis has two components:
A cone shaped stem The stem body externally is a slowly tapering hydroxyapatite coated cone, with a distal pilot and two differing speed external threads. The parallel threads strongly resist derotation of the prosthesis in the bone and impart rotatory stability. The cone shape imparts excellent vertical stability. A modular neck The neck component is available in various horizontal offsets and vertical height options and allows the femoral ball to accurately find the “sweet spot”, the center of the acetabulum Full four-vector adjustability is available at the end of stem preparation:
Vertical height (leg length) Horizontal offset Anteversion neck angle Neck/ball length Design Advantages The locking mechanism gains immediate and longterm vertical and torsional stability in the femur. Immediate full weight bearing is possible, especially in primary total hip replacements. The locking mechanism grips equally well in the metaphysis and proximal or distal diaphysis of the femur. Bulk structural allograft may not be necessary even in the severely deficient proximal femur. The prosthesis can be used in wide medullary canals. The early clinical experience with this prosthesis will be presented.
Osteotomy is an alternative treatment for unicompartmental disease (UCJD) of the knee with or without patellofemoral disease. Untreated, UCJD does progress. The ideal patient is young, with progressive early disease, high activity and a high pain threshold. Preoperative planning is essential and should include arthroscopy. In genu varum, the aim is to transfer the weight-bearing axis from the medial to the lateral compartment. This is best achieved by a high valgus closing wedge, which corrects close to the deformity and has a high union rate. At 5–7 years, good or excellent results vary from 75–85%. Better results are achieved with a low adduction moment, metaphyseal bowing, early disease, low body weight in younger patients; over correction to 5° is important. Complications and poor outcomes have been reported, but recent long-term follow-ups show that an incomplete osteotomy with precise jigging, compression fixation, early mobilisation, and weight-bearing eliminates many of these problems. Recent studies have shown that the outcome of post-osteotomy TKA is no worse than primary TKA that patella baja is related to postoperative immobilisation and that uni’s are more difficult to revise because of bone loss. Supracondylar osteotomy is preferred to HTO for genu valgum. Correction should be to beyond 6° of mechanical varus. A lateral opening wedge using a toothed plate is preferred, as it allows easy access to the lateral compartment through the same incision and is more precise. Osteotomy, far from being obsolete, has an increasing role in joint resurfacing procedures, is less of a gamble, and certainly deserves a “seat at the table”. It may be combined with other reconstructive procedures.