Total hip arthroplasty with use of second-generation cementing techniques - An eighteen-year-average follow-up study

被引:54
|
作者
Smith, SW
Estok, DM
Harris, WH
机构
[1] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Orthopaed Biomech Lab, Boston, MA 02114 USA
[2] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Hip & Implant Unit, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Boston, MA 02114 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME | 1998年 / 80A卷 / 11期
关键词
D O I
10.2106/00004623-199811000-00010
中图分类号
R826.8 [整形外科学]; R782.2 [口腔颌面部整形外科学]; R726.2 [小儿整形外科学]; R62 [整形外科学(修复外科学)];
学科分类号
摘要
In this report, we present the results of a further follow-up of a series of 140 consecutive patients (161 hips) who had had a primary total hip arthroplasty with insertion of a bead-blasted monoblock femoral component with use of so called second-generation cementing techniques. The average age of the patients at the time of the arthroplasty was sixty-one Sears (range, twenty-one to eighty-five years), Sixty-seven patients (seventy-seven hips) died less than seventeen years after the index operation. The remaining seventy-three patients (eighty-four hips) were followed for an average of eighteen years (range, seventeen to twenty years), No patient was lost to follow-up, In the entire group of 161 hips, over the twenty-year span of the study eight femoral components (5 percent) and twenty-eight acetabular components (17 percent) had been revised because of aseptic loosening, Of the seventy-seven hips in the sixty-seven patients who died, four had been revised because of aseptic loosening of the acetabular component only; one, because of aseptic loosening of the femoral component only; and one, because of aseptic loosening of both components. Of the eighty-four hips in the seventy-three patients who were alive at least seventeen years after the index arthroplasty, twenty-four hips (29 percent) in twenty-one patients had had revision of one or both components for any reason, Twenty-three acetabular components (27 percent) and six femoral components (7 percent) had been revised because of aseptic loosening, An additional two hips (2 percent) in two patients were loose according to radiographic criteria but had not been revised, Of the sixty-five all-polyethylene acetabular components that had been inserted with cement and were in patients who were alive at least seventeen years postoperatively, fifteen (23 percent) had been revised because of aseptic loosening. An additional seventeen cups (26 percent) were loose according to radiographic criteria. Thus, a total of thirty-two cups (49 percent) had been revised because of loosening or were loose but had not been revised at the time of the latest follow-up. The femoral components that had been inserted with use of second-generation cementing techniques fared better than did the acetabular components that had been inserted with these techniques during the same time-period. We found that assessment of all postoperative radiographs rather than only those that had been made immediately postoperatively increased the accuracy of the grading of the cement around the femoral component, Subsequent radiographs frequently had been made at different projections, which revealed new findings, consisting primarily of previously undetected voids, areas of thin cement, and; defects in the cement mantle, Thus, we now use all available radiographs to determine the grade of the cement.
引用
收藏
页码:1632 / 1640
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Results of a Second-generation Constrained Condylar Prosthesis in Complex Primary and Revision Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Mean 5.5-Year Follow-up
    Ye, Chen-Yi
    Xue, De-Ting
    Jiang, Shuai
    He, Rong-Xin
    CHINESE MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2016, 129 (11) : 1334 - 1339
  • [32] Letter to the Editor on "Eighteen-Year Follow-Up Study of 2 Alternative Bearing Surfaces Used in Total Hip Arthroplasty in the Same Young Patients"
    Solarino, Giuseppe
    Moretti, Biagio
    JOURNAL OF ARTHROPLASTY, 2020, 35 (07): : 1956 - 1957
  • [33] Revision total hip arthroplasty with the use of structural acetabular allograft and reconstruction ring - A case series with a 10-year average follow-up
    Saleh, KJ
    Jaroszynski, G
    Woodgate, I
    Saleh, L
    Gross, AE
    JOURNAL OF ARTHROPLASTY, 2000, 15 (08): : 951 - 958
  • [34] Charnley total hip arthroplasty with use of improved techniques of cementing, the results after a minimum of fifteen years of follow-up (vol 79, pg 53, 1997)
    Madey
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 1997, 79A (04): : 635 - 635
  • [35] Third-Generation Alumina-on-Alumina Total Hip Arthroplasty: 14 to 16-Year Follow-Up Study
    Kang, Bun-Jung
    Ha, Yong-Chan
    Ham, Dae-Woong
    Hwang, Sun-Chul
    Lee, Young-Kyun
    Koo, Kyung-Hoi
    JOURNAL OF ARTHROPLASTY, 2015, 30 (03): : 411 - 415
  • [36] Clinical experience with a proximally porous-coated second-generation cementless total hip prosthesis - Minimum 5-year follow-up
    Mont, MA
    Yoon, TR
    Krackow, KA
    Hungerford, DS
    JOURNAL OF ARTHROPLASTY, 1999, 14 (08): : 930 - 939
  • [37] Results of Charnley total hip arthroplasty with use of improved femoral cementing techniques - A concise follow-up, at a minimum of twenty-five years, of a previous report
    Buckwalter, Andrea E.
    Callaghan, John J.
    Liu, Steve S.
    Pedersen, Douglas R.
    Goetz, Devon D.
    Sullivan, Patrick M.
    Leinen, Jessica A.
    Johnston, Richard C.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 2006, 88A (07): : 1481 - 1485
  • [38] Bilateral Total Hip and Knee Arthroplasties: Average 10-Year Follow-Up
    Meding, John B.
    Faris, Philip M.
    Davis, Ken E.
    JOURNAL OF ARTHROPLASTY, 2017, 32 (11): : 3328 - 3332
  • [39] Total Hip Arthroplasty for Failed Treatment of Acetabular Fractures A 5-Year Follow-Up Study
    Zhang, Liang
    Zhou, Yixin
    Li, Yujun
    Xu, Hui
    Guo, Xiaozhong
    Zhou, Yixiong
    JOURNAL OF ARTHROPLASTY, 2011, 26 (08): : 1189 - 1193
  • [40] Patient expectation fulfilment following total hip arthroplasty: a 10-year follow-up study
    Liam Z. Yapp
    Nicholas D. Clement
    Deborah J. Macdonald
    Colin R. Howie
    Chloe E. H. Scott
    Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, 2020, 140 : 963 - 971