The removal of all prosthetic material and a
two-stage revision procedure is the established standard management of
an infected total hip replacement (THR). However, the removal of
well-fixed femoral cement is time-consuming and can result in significant
loss of bone stock and femoral shaft perforation or fracture. We
report our results of two-stage revision THR for treating infection,
with retention of the original well-fixed femoral cement mantle
in 15 patients, who were treated between 1989 and 2002. Following
partial excision arthroplasty, patients received local and systemic
antibiotics and underwent reconstruction and re-implantation at
a second-stage procedure, when the infection had resolved. The mean follow-up of these 15 patients was 82 months (60 to
192). Two patients had positive microbiology at the second stage
and were treated with six weeks of appropriate antibiotics; one
of these developed recurrent infection requiring further revision.
Successful eradication of infection was achieved in the remaining
14 patients. We conclude that when two-stage revision is used for the treatment
of
The rate of
The treatment of substantial proximal femoral
bone loss in young patients with developmental dysplasia of the
hip (DDH) is challenging. We retrospectively analysed the outcome
of 28 patients (30 hips) with DDH who underwent revision total hip
replacement (THR) in the presence of a deficient proximal femur,
which was reconstructed with an allograft prosthetic composite.
The mean follow-up was 15 years (8.5 to 25.5). The mean number of
previous THRs was three (1 to 8). The mean age at primary THR and
at the index reconstruction was 41 years (18 to 61) and 58.1 years
(32 to 72), respectively. The indication for revision included mechanical
loosening in 24 hips, infection in three and
Metal-on-metal total hip replacement has been targeted at younger patients with anticipated long-term survival, but the effect of the production of metal ions is a concern because of their possible toxicity to cells. We have reviewed the results of the use of the Ultima hybrid metal-on-metal total hip replacement, with a cemented polished tapered femoral component with a 28 mm diameter and a cobalt-chrome (CoCr) modular head, articulating with a 28 mm CoCr acetabular bearing surface secured in a titanium alloy uncemented shell. Between 1997 and 2004, 545 patients with 652 affected hips underwent replacement using this system. Up to 31 January 2008, 90 (13.8%) hips in 82 patients had been revised. Pain was the sole reason for revision in 44 hips (48.9%) of which 35 had normal plain radiographs.
This study reports the results of 38 total hip
arthroplasties (THAs) in 33 patients aged <
50 years, using the
JRI Furlong hydroxyapatite ceramic (HAC)-coated femoral component.
This represents an update of previous reports of the same cohort
at ten and 16 years, which were reported in 2004 and 2009, respectively.
We describe the survival, radiological and functional outcomes at
a mean follow-up of 21 years (17 to 25). Of the surviving 34 THAs,
one underwent femoral revision for
Using data from the Norwegian Hip Fracture Register,
8639 cemented and 2477 uncemented primary hemiarthroplasties for
displaced fractures of the femoral neck in patients aged > 70 years
were included in a prospective observational study. A total of 218
re-operations were performed after cemented and 128 after uncemented
procedures. Survival of the hemiarthroplasties was calculated using
the Kaplan-Meier method and hazard rate ratios (HRR) for revision
were calculated using Cox regression analyses. At five years the
implant survival was 97% (95% confidence interval (CI) 97 to 97)
for cemented and 91% (95% CI 87 to 94) for uncemented hemiarthroplasties.
Uncemented hemiarthroplasties had a 2.1 times increased risk of
revision compared with cemented prostheses (95% confidence interval
1.7 to 2.6, p < 0.001). The increased risk was mainly caused
by revisions for
The best method of reconstruction after resection of malignant tumours of the tibial diaphysis is unknown. In the absence of any long-term studies analysing the results of intercalary endoprosthetic replacement, we present a retrospective review of 18 patients who underwent limb salvage using a tibial diaphyseal endoprosthetic replacement following excision of a malignant bone tumour. There were ten men and eight women with a mean age of 42.5 years (16 to 76). Mean follow-up was 58.5 months (20 to 141) for all patients and 69.3 months (20 to 141) for the 12 patients still alive. Cumulative patient survival was 59% (95% confidence interval (CI) 32 to 84) at five years. Implant survival was 63% (95% CI 35 to 90) at ten years. Four patients required revision to a proximal tibial replacement at a mean follow-up of 29 months (10 to 54). Complications included metastases in five patients, aseptic loosening in four,
Revision of a cemented hemiarthroplasty of the
hip may be a hazardous procedure with high rates of intra-operative complications.
Removing well-fixed cement is time consuming and risks damaging
already weak bone or perforating the femoral shaft. The cement-in-cement
method avoids removal of intact cement and has shown good results
when used for revision total hip arthroplasty (THA). The use of
this technique for the revision of a hemiarthroplasty to THA has
not been previously reported. A total of 28 consecutive hemiarthroplasties (in 28 patients)
were revised to a THA using an Exeter stem and the cement-in-cement
technique. There were four men and 24 women; their mean age was
80 years (35 to 93). Clinical and radiographic data, as well as
operative notes, were collected prospectively and no patient was
lost to follow-up. Four patients died within two years of surgery. The mean follow
up of the remainder was 70 months (25 to 124). Intra-operatively
there was one proximal perforation, one crack of the
femoral calcar and one acetabular fracture. No femoral components
have required subsequent revision for aseptic loosening or are radiologically loose. . Four patients with late complications (14%) have since undergone
surgery (two for a
We matched 78 patients with a loose cemented Charnley Elite Plus total hip replacement (THR) by age, gender, race, prosthesis and time from surgery with 49 patients with a well-fixed stable hip replacement, to determine if poor bone quality predisposes to loosening. Clinical, radiological, biomechanical and bone mineral density indicators of bone quality were assessed. Patients with loose replacements had more pain, were more likely to have presented with atrophic arthritis and to have a history of fragility fracture, narrower femoral cortices and lower
We undertook a randomised prospective follow-up study of changes in
Two-stage exchange remains the gold standard
for treatment of
The aim of this study was to re-assess whether the use of a ‘one-knife technique’ can be considered as safe as the alternative practice of using separate skin and inside knives for elective orthopaedic surgery. A total of 609 knife blades from 203 elective orthopaedic operations, with equal numbers of skin, inside and control blades, were cultured using direct and enrichment media. We found 31 skin blades (15.3%), 22 inside blades (10.8%), and 13 control blades (6.4%) gave bacterial growth. Of the 31 contaminated skin blades only three (9.7%) had growth of the same organism as found on the corresponding inside blade. It is not known whether contamination of deeper layers in the remaining 90% was prevented by changing the knife after the skin incision. The organisms cultured were predominantly coagulase-negative staphylococci and proprionibacterium species; both are known to be the major culprits in
We undertook a retrospective review of 33 patients who underwent total femoral endoprosthetic replacement as limb salvage following excision of a malignant bone tumour. In 22 patients this was performed as a primary procedure following total femoral resection for malignant disease. Revision to a total femoral replacement was required in 11 patients following failed segmental endoprosthetic or allograft reconstruction. There were 33 patients with primary malignant tumours, and three had metastatic lesions. The mean age of the patients was 31 years (5 to 68). The mean follow-up was 4.2 years (9 months to 16.4 years). At five years the survival of the implants was 100%, with removal as the endpoint and 56% where the endpoint was another surgical intervention. At five years the patient survival was 32%. Complications included dislocation of the hip in six patients (18%), local recurrence in three (9%),
We compared the clinical and radiological outcomes
of two cementless femoral stems in the treatment of patients with
a Garden III or IV fracture of the femoral neck. A total of 70 patients (70
hips) in each group were enrolled into a prospective randomised
study. One group received a short anatomical cementless stem and
the other received a conventional cementless stem. Their mean age
was 74.9 years (50 to 94) and 76.0 years (55 to 96), respectively
(p = 0.328). The mean follow-up was 4.1 years (2 to 5) and 4.8 years
(2 to 6), respectively. Perfusion lung scans and high resolution
chest CTs were performed to detect pulmonary microemboli. At final follow-up there were no statistically significant differences
between the short anatomical and the conventional stems with regard
to the mean Harris hip score (85.7 (66 to 100) versus 86.5
(55 to 100); p = 0.791), the mean Western Ontario and McMaster Universities
Osteoarthritis Index (17 (6 to 34) versus 16 (5
to 35); p = 0.13) or the mean University of California, Los Angeles
activity score (5 (3 to 6) versus 4 (3 to 6); p
= 0.032). No patient with a short stem had thigh pain, but 11 patients
(16%) with a conventional stem had thigh pain. No patients with
a short stem had symptomatic pulmonary microemboli, but 11 patients
with a conventional stem had pulmonary microemboli (symptomatic
in three patients and asymptomatic in eight patients). One hip (1.4%)
in the short stem group and eight (11.4%) in the conventional group
had an intra-operative undisplaced fracture of the calcar. No component
was revised for aseptic loosening in either group. One acetabular
component in the short stem group and two acetabular components
in the conventional stem group were revised for recurrent dislocation. Our study demonstrated that despite the poor bone quality in
these elderly patients with a fracture of the femoral neck, osseo-integration
was obtained in all hips in both groups. However, the incidence
of thigh pain, pulmonary microemboli and
We reviewed 44 consecutive revision hip replacements in 38 patients performed using the cement-in-cement technique. All were performed for acetabular loosening in the presence of a well-fixed femoral component. The mean follow-up was 5.1 years (2 to 10.1). Radiological analysis at final follow-up indicated no loosening of the femoral component, except for one case with a continuous radiolucent line in all zones and
Revision after failed femoral components may
be technically demanding due to loss of
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a common and safe orthopaedic procedure. Zimmer Biomet's NexGen is the second most popular brand of implant used in the UK. The primary cause of revision after the first year is aseptic loosening. We present our experience of using this implant, with significant concerns around its performance with regards early aseptic loosening of the tibial component. A retrospective, single-surgeon review was carried out of all of the NexGen Legacy Posterior Stabilized (LPS) TKAs performed in this institute. The specific model used for the index procedures was the NexGen Complete Knee System (Legacy Knee-Posterior Stabilized LPS-Flex Articular Surface, LPS-Flex Femoral Component Option, and Stemmed Nonaugmentable Tibial Component Option).Aims
Methods
Objectives. To quantify and compare peri-acetabular bone mineral density
(BMD) between a monoblock acetabular component using a metal-on-metal
(MoM) bearing and a modular titanium shell with a polyethylene (PE)
insert. The secondary outcome was to measure patient-reported clinical
function. Methods. A total of 50 patients (25 per group) were randomised to MoM
or metal-on-polyethlene (MoP). There were 27 women (11 MoM) and
23 men (14 MoM) with a mean age of 61.6 years (47.7 to 73.2). Measurements
of
A total of 219 hips in 192 patients aged between
18 and 65 years were randomised to 28-mm metal-on-metal uncemented
total hip replacements (THRs, 107 hips) or hybrid hip resurfacing
(HR, 112 hips). At a mean follow-up of eight years (6.6 to 9.3)
there was no significant difference between the THR and HR groups
regarding rate of revision (4.0% (4 of 99) vs 5.8%
(6 of 104), p = 0.569) or re-operation rates without revision (5.1%
(5 of 99) vs 2.9% (3 of 104), p = 0.428). In the
THR group one recurrent dislocation, two late deep infections and
one
The aim of this study was to investigate the
possible benefit of large-head metal-on-metal bearing on a stem
for primary hip replacement compared with a 28 mm diameter conventional
metal-on-polyethylene bearing in a prospective randomised controlled
trial. We investigated cemented stem behaviour between these two
different bearings using Einzel-Bild-Röntgen-Analyse, clinical and
patient reported measures (Harris hip score, Western Ontario and
McMaster Universities osteoarthritis index, Short Form-36 and satisfaction)
and whole blood metal ion levels at two years. A power study indicated
that 50 hips were needed in each group to detect subsidence of >
5 mm at two years with a
p-value of <
0.05. . Significant improvement (p <
0.001) was found in the mean
clinical and patient reported outcomes at two years for both groups.
Comparison of outcomes between the groups at two years showed no
statistically significant difference for mean stem migration, clinical
and patient reported outcomes; except overall patient satisfaction which
was higher for metal-on-metal group (p = 0.05). Metal ion levels
were raised above the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory
Agency advised safety level (7 µg per litre) in 20% of the metal-on-metal
group and in one patient in metal-on-polyethylene group (who had
a metal-on-metal implant on the contralateral side). Two patients
in the metal-on-metal group were revised, one for pseudotumour and
one for