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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 76 - 76
1 May 2017
De Pasquale D Beraudi A Stea S Baleani M Guerra G Toni A
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Modular femoral stems for total hip arthroplasty (THA) were introduced to allow additional options for surgeons in controlling leg lengths, offset, and implant stability. This option is widely used in Region Emilia Romagna, Italy, where the study was conducted, having a modular neck stem nearly 35% of primary THA in 2013. Great majority of modular neck is made of Titanium alloy.

The study was designed as a retrospective descriptive case series of 67 hips in patients who underwent revision of a THA. All had a Titanium modular neck. In 44 cases revision was due to breakage of the neck, in the remaining 23 it was due to different reasons unrelated to modular neck such as bone fracture, breakage of a ceramic component, cup loosening.

Mean follow up was 3.5 yrs. For all patients excised capsule and surrounding tissue were graded for presence of necrosis, inflammatory exudate, lymphocytes, and wear particles using light microscopy of routine paraffin sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin. The retrieved modular neck-body and head-neck junctions were examined for evidence of fretting and corrosion. For some patient dosage of circulating Titanium was obtained. Approval was obtained from institutional review board.

It resulted that a variable amount of wear was observed in the first group of patients, with no evidence of lymphocytic reaction, but with variable notes of necrosis. Broken necks showed different patterns of damage, with different degree of corrosion, beside the fatigue fracture. In the second group wear was less evident or absent and negativity of lymphocyte reaction was substantially confirmed. Circulating Titanium ions were one order of magnitude higher in first group (mean 35 micrograms /litre).

It can be concluded that fracture of Titanium modular necks occurs progressively, wear does not induce lymphocytic reaction and circulating ions increase.

Level of Evidence

III retrospective, comparative study

Acknowledgments

The research was funded by Ministry of Health, grant ‘Early diagnosis of pending failure…’RF 20091472961


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 66 - 66
1 Jan 2017
Baruffaldi F Mecca R Stea S Beraudi A Bordini B Amabile M Sudanese A Toni A
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Ceramic-on-ceramic (CoC) total hip arthroplasty (THA) can produce articular noise during the normal activities, generating discomfort to the patient. THA noise has to be investigated also as a potential predictor and a clinical sign of prosthetic failure.

An observational study has been carried out to characterize the noise in CoC cementless THA, and to analyze the related factors. A total of 46 patients with noisy hip have been enrolled in 38 months, within the follow-up protocol normally applied for the early diagnosis of ceramic liner fracture [1]. Noise recording was based on a high-quality audible recorder (mod. LS 3, Olympus, Japan) and a portable ultrasonic transducer (mod USB AE 1ch, PAC, USA). The sensors for noise recording were applied to the hip of the patient during a sequence of repeatable motorial activities (forward and backward walking, squat, sit in a chair, flexion and extension of the leg). Sessions were also video-recorded to associate the noise emission to the specific movements.

Each noise event was initially identified by the operator and therefore classified by comparison to the spectral characteristics (duration, intensity and frequency) of the main noise types. Number and spectral characteristics of noise events were obtained and correlated to the factors describing the clinical status of the patient, the surgical approach, the prosthetic device implanted. The study investigated also the noise as a sign of implant failure, by comparison with the total number of implants failed in the cohort during the study.

We observed three types of noise with the main spectral characteristics in agreement to the literature: clicking, squeaking and popping. Among the identified types of noise, squeaking showed the longest duration and the highest amplitude. The 63% of hip presented the emission of just one type of noise, while the remaining a mix of types. The movement with the highest presence of noise was walking, followed by squat. Correlation was found between the noise type and the dimension of the ceramic head (p<0.001), with the sizes of 32 mm more affected by squeaking that the smaller one. Squeaking appeared before during the follow-up than the other types of noise. The 35% (16/46) of the noisy hips were revised during the study. Among the revised hips, the 81% (13/16) were affected by impingement and/or severe damage of the prosthetic components. The antiversion of the cup (p=0.008), the presence of debris in the synovial fluid (p=0.021) and the average frequency of squeaking (p=0.006) were significant predictors for the revision, but it has to be mentioned that the squeaking data was obtained on a small subset of revised patients. Ultrasonic analysis did not show significant correlations.

The study presented and validated an experimental procedure to analyze noisy hips in clinical trials. Noise is confirmed to be a significant parameter in the follow-up evaluation of ceramic THA.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 73 - 73
1 Jul 2014
Taddei F Palmadori I Schileo E Heller M Taylor W Toni A
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Summary Statement

A population based finite element study that accounts for subject-specific morphology, density and load variations, suggests that osteoporosis does not markedly lower the mechanical compliance of the proximal femur to routine loads.

Introduction

Osteoporosis (OP) is a bone disease defined by low bone density and micro-architectural deterioration. This deterioration is neither uniform nor symmetric at the proximal femur. Evidence from analyses performed at the tissue level suggests that the cortical shell at the femoral neck is thinner in OP patients, especially in the superior regions, but not in the infero-anterior ones [Poole, Rubinacci]. Analogously, OP femurs show a higher anisotropy of the trabecular bone than controls [Ciarelli], suggesting a preservation of load bearing capacity in the principal loading direction vs. the transverse one. There is general consensus that the regions subjected to higher loads during walking, which is the predominant motor activity in the elderly, are mostly preserved. All these findings suggest that the OP femur should exhibit an almost normal mechanical competence during daily activities. This would be in accordance with the very low incidence of spontaneous fractures [Parker] and with the moderate fracture predictivity of BMD. Although reasonable, this hypothesis has never been tested at the organ level. Aim of the present study was to verify it with a population-based finite element (FE) study.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 186 - 186
1 Jul 2014
Falcinelli C Schileo E Balistreri L Baruffaldi F Toni A Albisinni U Ceccarelli F Milandri L Viceconti M Taddei F
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Summary Statement

In a retrospective study, FE-based bone strength from CT data showed a greater ability than aBMD to discriminate proximal femur fractures versus controls.

Introduction

Personalised Finite Element (FE) models from Computed Tomography (CT) data are superior to bone mineral density (BMD) in predicting proximal femoral strength in vitro [Cody, 1999]. However, results similar to BMD were obtained in vivo, in retrospective classification of generic prevalent fractures [Amin, 2011] and in prospective classification of femoral fractures [Orwoll, 2009]. The aim of this work is to test, in a case-control retrospective study, the ability of a different, validated FE modelling procedure [Schileo, 2008] to: (i) discriminate between groups of proximal femoral fractures and controls; (ii) individually classify fractures and controls.