We present a study done to measure the change of angle of the acetabulum or cup, due to leg length discrepancy, deformity of hip and spine on standing. In 1998 a 3-dimensional reconstruction of hip model was prepared on CAD and the change of angle of the cup was measured as Functional
Achieving the correct inclination angle for the acetabular component in total hip arthroplasty (THR) can be technically challenging. The aim of this study is to validate the use of a simple, laser-guided system to address the
In this prospective study we studied the effect
of the inclination angle of the acetabular component on polyethylene wear
and component migration in cemented acetabular sockets using radiostereometric
analysis. A total of 120 patients received either a cemented Reflection
All-Poly ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene or a cemented
Reflection All-Poly highly cross-linked polyethylene acetabular
component, combined with either cobalt–chrome or Oxinium femoral
heads. Femoral head penetration and migration of the acetabular
component were assessed with repeated radiostereometric analysis
for two years. The inclination angle was measured on a standard
post-operative anteroposterior pelvic radiograph. Linear regression
analysis was used to determine the relationship between the inclination
angle and femoral head penetration and migration of the acetabular component. We found no relationship between the inclination angle and penetration
of the femoral head at two years’ follow-up (p = 0.9). Similarly,
our data failed to reveal any statistically significant correlation
between inclination angle and migration of these cemented acetabular
components (p = 0.07 to p = 0.9).
Background. There is much research on metal on metal hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA) but few studies have reported the outcome with respect to implant characteristics from non-specialist centres. Aim. To report the survival, clinical and radiological outcomes of a single surgeon series of HRA with an average follow-up of 5 years. Methods. All consecutive HRAs performed by a single surgeon between 2002–2010 at a district general hospital were examined clinically and radiologically. The median follow-up was 61 months (12–102). Clinical assessment included the Oxford Hip Score (OHS) and University of Los Angeles (UCLA) Activity Score. Radiological assessment included implant position and various bony changes. Survival was defined as a need for revision of either component. Results. There were 75 HRA procedures (59 patients): 70 Birmingham, 2 Conserve, 2 Adept and 1 ASR. The median age was 58 years (25–75) with 46.7% (35) male and 53.3% (40) female. 4.2% (3) patients were lost to follow-up. The mean acetabular and femoral implant sizes were 54.8mm (48–64) and 48.2mm (42–58) respectively. The mean acetabular and femoral inclination angle was 45.4° (20.8–75.2°) and 138° (133–149.5°) respectively. Survival rate was 92% with 6 revisions due to aseptic loosening (3) and fracture (3). These failures were all predominantly female (5) with significantly smaller mean acetabular (50mm, p=0.036) and femoral (43.3mm, p=0.038) implant sizes. Moreover, they had a higher mean
Hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA) is a bone conserving alternative to total hip arthroplasty. We present the early 2-year clinical and radiographic follow-up of a novel ceramic-on-ceramic (CoC) HRA in an international multi-centric cohort. Patients undergoing HRA between September 2018 and January 2021 were prospectively included. Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMS) in the form of the Forgotten Joint Score (FJS), HOOS Jr, WOMAC, Oxford Hip Score (OHS) and UCLA Activity Score were collected preoperatively and at 1- and 2-years post-operation. Serial radiographs were assessed for migration, component alignment, evidence of osteolysis/loosening and heterotopic ossification formation. 200 patients were identified to have reached 2-year follow-up. Of these, 185 completed PROMS follow-up at 2 years. There was significant improvement in HOOS (p< 0.001) and OHS (p< 0.001) and FJS (p< 0.001) between the pre-operative and 2-year outcomes. Patients reported improved pain (p<0.001), function (p<0.001) and reduced stiffness (p<0.001) as measured by the WOMAC score. Patients had improved activity scores on the UCLA Active Score (P<0.001) with 53% reporting return to impact activity at 2 years. There was no osteolysis and the mean
The problem associated with ceramic on ceramic total hip replacement (THR) is audible noise. Squeaking is the most frequently documented sound. The incidence of squeaking has been reported to wide range from 0.7 to 20.9%. Nevertheless there is no study to investigate on incidence of noise in computer assisted THR with ceramic on ceramic bearing. The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence and risks factors associated with noise. We retrospectively reviewed 200 patients (202 hips) whom performed computer assisted THR (Orthopilot, B. Braun, Tuttlingen, Germany) with ceramic on ceramic bearing between March 2009 and August 2012. All procedures underwent uncemented THR with posterior approach by single surgeon. All hips implanted with PLASMACUP and EXIA femoral stem (B. Braun, Tuttlingen, Germany). All cases used BIOLOX DELTA (Ceramtec, AG, Plochingen, Germany) ceramic liner and head. The incidence and type of noise were interviewed by telephone using set of questionnaire. Patient's age, weight, height, body mass index, acetabular cup size, femoral offset size determined from medical record for comparing between silent hips and noisy hips. The
Hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA) is a bone conserving alternative to total hip arthroplasty. We present the early 1 and 2-year clinical and radiographical follow-up of a novel ceramic-on-ceramic (CoC) HRA in a multi-centric Australian cohort. Patient undergoing HRA between September 2018 and April 2021 were prospectively included. Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMS) in the form of the Forgotten Joint Score (FJS), HOOS Jr, WOMAC, Oxford Hip Score (OHS) and UCLA Activity Score were collected preoperatively and at 1- and 2-years post-operation. Serial radiographs were assessed for migration, component alignment, evidence of osteolysis/loosening and heterotopic ossification formation. 209 patients were identified of which 106 reached 2-year follow-up. Of these, 187 completed PROMS at 1 year and 90 at 2 years. There was significant improvement in HOOS (p< 0.001) and OHS (p< 0.001) between the pre-operative, 1-year and 2-years outcomes. Patients also reported improved pain (p<0.001), function (p<0.001) and reduced stiffness (p<0.001) as measured by the WOMAC score. Patients had improved activity scores on the UCLA Active Score (p<0.001) with 53% reporting return to impact activity at 2 years. FJS at 1 and 2-years were not significantly different (p=0.38). There was no migration, osteolysis or loosening of any of the implants. The mean
Background:. Metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty (THA) implants have been widely debated due to the adverse wear issue related to the bearing surfacing. However, more recent studies have shown that the high metal ion problems that occur after surgery with this type of implant may not be exclusively related to the all metal bearing surfaces, but mainly due to the recently modified connecting tapers. Biomet is one of few companies who have not changed their original taper design for their THA implants. The purpose of this study was to present our up to eight-year clinical results. Method:. Between November 2004 and April 2011, all of the 196 cases in 167 patients (77 male vs. 89 female) performed by a single surgeon were included in this study. The Biomet Magnum/Jumbo metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty implants were utilized for all of the cases. The average age was 59 ± 11 years at the time of surgery. Thirteen patients deceased from causes unrelated to THA. The primary diagnosis was OA in 124 cases; followed by AVN in 41 cases, dysplasia in 12 cases and other causes in the remaining 19 cases. The average acetabular component sizes were 54 ± 4 mm. Clinical and radiographic examinations were performed prospectively, and the results were analyzed. Results:. The mean duration of follow-up was 5 ± 2 years. There were four revisions: 1) one was due to an adverse wear issue with a cobalt level of 109 μg/l and a chromium level of 77 μg/l. The primary diagnosis was OA for this case. The
Background: Metal-on-metal bearing hip replacements release between three and nine times more cobalt and chromium ions than a metal on polyethylene bearing hip replacement. We do not fully understand the cause for the variability of ion levels after metal on metal hip replacement. The factors that determine an individual’s levels of metal ions include: firstly, patient factors (renal failure, patient weight, high activity); secondly, manufacture factors (head size (and fluid film lubrication), carbide density, surface finish) and lastly study factors (bilateral implants, time from operation). Biomechanical studies suggest that component position, in particular acetabular inclination, is important for wear rate but there is no published correlation from clinical studies. Aim: To investigate the relationship between
We measured the orientation of the acetabular and femoral components in 45 patients (33 men, 12 women) with a mean age of 53.4 years (30 to 74) who had undergone revision of metal-on-metal hip resurfacings. Three-dimensional CT was used to measure the inclination and version of the acetabular component, femoral version and the horizontal femoral offset, and the linear wear of the removed acetabular components was measured using a roundness machine. We found that acetabular version and combined version of the acetabular and femoral components were weakly positively correlated with the rate of wear. The
The aim of this study was to characterise noise associated with ceramic-on-ceramic total hip arthroplasty (THA). A questionnaire was constructed to assess noise associated with THA. 116 patients responded. All had ceramic-on-ceramic hybrid THA at Glasgow Royal Infirmary between 2005 and 2007 using a Trident prosthesis and Exeter stem. Oxford Hip Questionnaires (OHS) were also completed by the patients. 16.4% of respondents reported noise associated with their ceramic hip. The vast majority reported onset at least 1 year after implantation. The most common noise types were ‘clicking’ (47%) or ‘grinding’ (42%), while ‘squeaking’ was least frequently reported (11%). Noise was most commonly brought on by bending and during sit to stand movements. No correlation was identified between the incidence of noise and any patient specific factor or demographic variable. The mean OHS at questionnaire follow-up was 39 and there was no significant difference in OHS when comparing noisy and silent hips (p=0.65). Only 1 patient limited social or recreational activities and overall patients felt the noise had minimal effect on their quality of life.
Background. The position of the hip-joint centre of rotation (HJC) within the pelvis is known to influence functional outcome of total hip replacement (THR). Superior, lateral and posterior relocations of the HJC from anatomical position have been shown to be associated with greater joint reaction forces and a higher incidence of aseptic loosening. In biomechanical models, the maximum force, moment-generating capacity and the range of motion of the major hip muscle groups have been shown to be sensitive to HJC displacement. This clinical study investigated the effect of HJC displacement and
Protrusio acetabuli can be either primary or secondary. Primary or idiopathic protrusio is a rare condition of unknown etiology. Secondary protrusio may be associated with rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, osteoarthritis, osteomalacia, trauma and Paget's disease. Challenges in surgery include: lack of bone stock, deficient medial support to the cup, difficulty in dislocating the femoral head, and medialization of the hip joint center. Several surgical techniques have been described: use of cement alone without bone graft; morselised impacted autograft or allograft with a cemented cup; metal cages, reinforcement rings, and solid grafts. We describe our technique of impaction grafting using autologous bone and a cementless porous-coated hemispherical cup without the use of acetabular rings or cages in patients with an average age of 46 years. Protrusion was graded depending on distance of medial wall from Kohler's line as mild (1–5 mm medial), moderate (6–15 mm medial) and severe if it was more than 15 mm medial to the Kohler's line. All patients were operated in the lateral position using a modified Hardinge's anterolateral approach. Adductor tenotomy may be required in cases of severely stiff hips. After careful dislocation of the femoral head, it was sectioned in situ into slivers to facilitate obtaining the graft. The periphery was reamed and care was taken to preserve the membrane lining the floor of the defect. Morselised graft was impacted with hemispherical impactors and the trial cup 1–2 mm larger than the last reamer placed in the desired position. The final socket was then inserted. Femoral preparation was performed in routine fashion. The mean pre-operative Harris Hip Score of 52 improved to 85 points at a mean follow up of 4 years. The average
INTRODUCTION. Traditionally, acetabular component insertion in direct anterior approach (DAA) total hip arthroplasty (THA) has been performed using fluoroscopic guidance. Handheld navigation systems can be used to address issues of alignment, cup placement and accuracy of measurements. Previous navigation systems have been used successfully in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and has now been introduced in THA. We investigated the use of a new accelerometer-based, handheld navigation system during DAA THA to compare it to traditional means. This study aims to determine accuracy of acetabular cup placement as well as fluoroscopy times between two groups of patients. METHODS. Data was prospectively collected for a group of consecutive DAA THA procedures using a handheld navigation system (n=45) by a single surgeon. This was compared to data retrospectively collected for a group that underwent the same procedure without use of the navigation system(n=50). The time for use of the navigation system, including insertion of pins/registration, guiding cup position, and removal of pins, was recorded intraoperatively. Postoperative anteroposterior and cross-table lateral radiographs were used to measure acetabular inclination and anteversion angles. Targeted angles for all cases were 40° ±5 for inclination and 20° ±5 for anteversion. Intraoperative fluoroscopy exposure times were obtained from post-anesthesia care unit radiographs. RESULTS. Mean time of pin insertion/registration, cup positioning and removal was 180.5 seconds, 127.7 seconds and 26 seconds, giving a mean total time of 5.6 minutes. There were no significant differences in mean postoperative
Medical and Health care products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) released an alert in 2010 regarding metal on metal (MoM) bearings in hip arthroplasty owing to soft tissue reactions to Metal debris. Following this, we adopted a targeted screening protocol to review patients with this bearing couple. 218 Patients (252 hips), mean age 53.2 (25–71) years were assessed clinically using Oxford hip score (OHS) and X-ray examination. The mean follow up was 44.5 (12–71) months. Patients were considered at higher risk (118 patients/133 hips) if they had deterioration of OHS (50 hips), Small sized heads <50mm (114 hips), acetabular inclination >500 (37 hips), neck thinning (17 hips). These patients (107/118), (120/133 hips) were further investigated through measuring metal ion levels and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The mean blood levels of cobalt and chromium in this group were 6.7, 8.62 ug/L respectively. Metal ions increased significantly with high
Introduction. Studies of metal-on-metal (MoM) hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA) have reported high complication and failure rates due to elevated metal ion levels. These rates were shown to be especially high for the Articular Surface Replacement (ASR) HRA, possibly due to its unique design. Associations between metal ion concentrations and various biological and mechanical factors have been reported. Component positioning as measured by acetabular inclination has been shown to be of especially strong consequence in metal ion production in ASR HRA patients, but few studies have evaluated acetabular anteversion as an independent variable. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the associations between component orientation, quantified by acetabular inclination and anteversion, and blood metal ions. Secondly, we sought to report whether conventional safe zones apply to MoM HRA implants or if these implants require their own positioning standards. Methods. We conducted a multi-center, prospective study of 512 unilateral ASR HRA patients enrolled from September 2012 to June 2015. At time of enrollment our patients were a mean of 7 (3–11.5) years from surgery. The mean age at surgery was 56 years and 24% were female. All subjects had complete demographic and surgical information and blood metal ions. In addition, each patient had valid AP pelvis and shoot-though lateral radiographs read by 5 validated readers measuring acetabular abduction and anteversion, and femoral offset. A multivariate logistic regression was used with high cobalt or chromium (greater than or equal to 7ppb) as the dependent variable. The independent variables were: female gender, UCLA activity score, age at surgery, femoral head size, time from surgery, femoral offset, acetabular abduction, and acetabular anteversion. Results. The average
A review of the first two hundred and ten patients undergoing Birmingham hip re-surfacing between January 2003 and June 2005 was performed. All surgeries were performed by a single consultant orthopaedic surgeon. All resurfacings were carried out utilising the antero-lateral approach to the hip. Mean review post-operatively was at six weeks. The following clinical parameters were evaluated: length of in-hospital patient stay, intra-operative blood loss and post-operative range of joint movement. In addition, the following radiological measurements were made: the
The link between squeaking and ceramic on ceramic (CoC) bearings has been widely reported in orthopaedic literature and is described as a hard bearing phenomenon. We aim to look at the incidence of noise in CoC bearings compared to Metal on Polyethylene (MoP) bearing, which have yet to be linked to squeaking. We developed a noise characterizing hip questionnaire and sent that along with the Oxford Hip Score (OHS) to 1000 patients; 3:2 ratio of CoC to MoP. 282 CoC patients and 227 MoP patients returned the questions: 509 patients in total. Our patient database provided details on femoral head size and the
Protrusio acetabuli can be either primary or secondary. Primary or idiopathic protrusio is a rare condition of unknown etiology. Secondary protrusio may be associated with rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, osteoarthritis, osteomalacia, trauma and Paget's disease. Challenges in surgery include lack of bone stock, deficient medial support to the cup, difficulty in dislocating the femoral head, and medialisation of the hip joint center. Several surgical techniques have been described: use of cement alone without bone graft; morsellised impacted autograft or allograft with a cemented cup; metal cages, reinforcement rings, and solid grafts. We describe our technique of impaction grafting using autologous bone and a cementless porous-coated hemispherical cup without the use of acetabular rings or cages in patients with an average age of 46 years. Protrusion was graded depending on distance of medial wall from Kohler's line as mild (1–5mm medial), moderate (6–15mm medial) and severe if it was more than 15mm medial to the Kohler's line. All patients were operated in the lateral position using a modified Hardinge's anterolateral approach. Adductor tenotomy may be required in cases of severely stiff hips. After careful dislocation of the femoral head, it was sectioned in situ into slivers to facilitate obtaining the graft. The periphery was reamed and care was taken to preserve the membrane lining the floor of the defect. Morsellised graft was impacted with hemispherical impactors and the trial cup 1–2mm larger than the last reamer placed in the desired position. The final socket was then inserted. Femoral preparation was performed in routine fashion. The mean preoperative Harris hip score of 52 improved to 85 points at a mean follow up of 4 years. The average
Background. High cup abduction angles generate increased contact stresses, higher wear rates and increased revision rates. However, there is no reported study about the influence of cup abduction on stresses under head lateralisation conditions for ceramic-on-Ceramic THA. Material and method. A finite elements model of a ceramic-on-ceramic THA was developed in order to predict the contact area and the contact pressure, first under an ideal regime and then under lateralised conditions. A 32 mm head diameter with a 30 microns radial clearance was used. The cup was positioned with a 0°anteversion angle and the abduction angle was varied from 45° to 90°. The medial-lateral lateralisation was varied from 0 to 500 microns. A load of 2500 N was applied through the head center. Results. For 45° abduction angle, edge loading appeared above a medial-lateral separation of 30 μm. Complete edge loading was obtained above 60 μm medial-lateral separation. For 45 degrees inclination angle, as the lateralisation increased, the maximal contact pressure increased from 66 MPa and converged to an asymptotic value of 205 MPa. A higher inclination angle resulted in a higher maximum contact pressure. However, this increase in contact pressure induced by higher inclination angle, became negligible as the lateral separation increased. Discussion Both inclination angle and lateral displacement induced a large increase in the stresses in Ceramic-on-Ceramic THA. Edge loading appeared for a small lateralisation. The influence of