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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 59-B, Issue 4 | Pages 393 - 397
1 Nov 1977
Williams E Taylor A Arden G Edwards D

In fifty-six patients with ankylosing spondylitis three types of arthroplasty had been performed in ninety-nine hips. Forty-one of the patients were men and fifteen were women, their average age at operation being forty-two years. Primary pseudarthrosis produced well-satisfied patients, but only a fair result in five hips, whereas cup arthroplasty resulted in a poor outcome for eight hips, all of which needed revision. Total replacement of eighty-six hips, however, led to 73 per cent being graded as good or excellent up to ten years later. The main complications were deep infection of five hips, para-articular ossification around nine hips (six leading to bony ankylosis), and fibrous ankylosis of six hips


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 32-B, Issue 2 | Pages 166 - 173
1 May 1950
Judet J Judet R

We have endeavoured to make known the results of a simple type of arthroplasty of the hip which is well tolerated even by elderly patients. It has not been the purpose of this article to compare former operations with our own, a newcomer in the field of surgery of the hip. In particular we do not wish to compare our comparatively recent results with Smith-Petersen's well-established method of cup arthroplasty—a magnificent contribution to the surgery of the region. The results we have already obtained, however, appear sufficiently favourable to merit further study and development of the method. If the future confirms the value of our early results, we shall perhaps be able to suggest operation to patients who suffer more from loss of function than from pain


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 4 | Pages 458 - 462
1 Apr 2005
Walton NP Darrah C Shepstone L Donell ST Phillips H

We prospectively studied 217 patients who underwent 234 Elite Plus total hip arthroplasties. At a mean of 6.4 (SD 0.7) years post-operatively, 39 patients had died and 22 were either lost to follow-up or had no radiographs available. Clinical (Oxford hip score) and radiological assessments were performed on 156 patients (168 hip arthroplasties) who had a mean age of 67.7 (SD 9.7) years at operation. In the assessed group, 26 of 159 (16.4%) of femoral stems which had not already been revised and 19 of 159 (11.9%) of acetabular cups were definitely loose. In total, 52 of 168 (31%) of hips had either been revised or had definite evidence of loosening of a component. We could not establish any relationship between clinical and radiological outcomes. Despite the fact that the clinical outcome and rate of revision for the Elite Plus appeared to meet international standards, our findings give us cause for concern. We believe that joint registries should include radiological surveillance in order to provide reliable information about medium-term outcomes for hip prostheses


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 1 | Pages 45 - 48
1 Jan 1988
van der Schaaf D Deutman R Mulder T

Between February 1975 and August 1976, 195 total hip replacements using Stanmore components were performed; of these, 146 were in 135 patients who had not had previous hip surgery. At review 52 had died, but none of the others was lost to follow-up. Of the 52, two had had a second operation, one for infection and one for recurrent dislocation. In the remaining 83 patients (92 hips) five revisions were necessary: four for aseptic loosening, and one for stem fracture. The remaining 78 patients had little or no pain and little restriction of activity. After a follow-up period of at least nine years, the survival rate of the prosthesis was 95%. There had been migration of the femoral component in five cases and migration of the acetabular cup in one case, but no wear of the acetabular component could be demonstrated


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1157 - 1161
1 Sep 2018
Brown TS Fehring KA Ollivier M Mabry TM Hanssen AD Abdel MP

Aims

Recurrent infection following two-stage revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) for prosthetic joint infection (PJI) is a devastating complication. The purpose of this study was to report the survival of repeat two-stage revision hip arthroplasty, describe complications, and identify risk factors for failure.

Patients and Methods

We retrospectively identified 19 hips (19 patients) that had undergone repeat two-stage revision THA for infection between 2000 to 2013. There were seven female patients (37%) and the mean age was 60 years (30 to 85). Survival free from revision was assessed via Kaplan–Meier analysis. The patients were classified according to the Musculoskeletal Infection Society (MSIS) system, and risk factors for failure were identified. Mean follow-up was four years (2 to 11).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 3 | Pages 408 - 413
1 Apr 2001
Delaunay C Kapandji AI

Although about 200 000 cementless Zweymüller-Alloclassic total hip arthroplasties (THAs) were carried out worldwide in the last decade, the survival analysis of these prostheses was not available in the 2000 report of the Swedish national hip arthroplasty registry. We report a prospective survivorship analysis of 200 consecutive grit-blasted cementless Alloclassic primary THAs carried out since 1988. Using surgical, clinical and radiological endpoints for the stem and the threaded cup the ten-year survivorship was 91.5% for reoperation for any cause, 96.4% for hip pain (Merle d’Aubigné score < 5 points, clinical failure), 99.4% for definite aseptic loosening (radiological failure) and 99.3% for revision for aseptic loosening. Using the Swedish registry criteria of primary osteoarthritis and revision for aseptic loosening as the endpoint, the survival rate of 99.1% at ten years for the subgroup of 157 Alloclassic THAs in osteoarthritis compares favourably with that of the best modern cemented hip replacements reported in the Swedish arthroplasty registry


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 2 | Pages 236 - 244
1 May 1966
Heywood-Waddington MB

1. The early results of thirty Austin Moore arthroplasty operations with acetabular reaming in twenty-five patients with advanced osteoarthritis of the hip have been investigated. 2. The radiological changes after insertion of a prosthesis have been studied. 3. There was a variable degree of improvement in all patients. There was a worth-while improvement in function and relief of pain. Stability, however, was disappointing in more than half (and in all the bilateral cases). An average of three-quarters of an inch of shortening was found in the unilateral cases. 4. In such advanced cases the results of Austin Moore arthroplasty are probably of the same order as for cup arthroplasty, and in many cases they show no more than marginal improvement over pseudarthrosis. 5. It is concluded that at the present stage of progress in the development of arthroplasty the use of the Austin Moore prosthesis with acetabular reaming has very limited indications


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 54-B, Issue 1 | Pages 77 - 87
1 Feb 1972
Dupont JA Charnley J

1. Two hundred and seventeen low-friction arthroplasties performed between November 1962 and April 1969 in 203 patients with failed previous operations have been analysed. 2. The technical details of operation in relation to these conversion problems have been outlined. 3. The quality of the results in relation to pain, mobility and ability to walk has been assessed before operation and one year afterwards, with small numbers at three and five years. 4. Pain was completely relieved or was minimal in 96·3 per cent of the patients, and in no case was the pain worse. 5. The total range of movement was 100 degrees or more in 98·5 per cent. No hip lost movement after conversion. 6. The failures were principally due to infection and to technical difficulties. There were no mechanical failures without a technical or radiological explanation. 7. Low-friction arthroplasty is an excellent salvage procedure, especially for failed cup arthroplasty


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 1 | Pages 87 - 92
1 Jan 1997
Oonishi H Iwaki Y Kin N Kushitani S Murata N Wakitani S Imoto K

Hydroxyapatite (HA) granules of 100 to 300 μm, 0.9 to 1.2 mm and 3.0 to 5.0 mm were mixed in a ratio of 10:45:45 and packed into massive bone deficiencies in revision operations for total hip arthroplasty. We did not use additional graft or cup support for deficiencies of the lateral and medial wall. The procedure was carried out in 40 hips between 1986 and 1992. The radiographic spaces seen at the interface between HA and bone immediately after surgery disappeared within three months. Some spaces appeared between HA granules near the bone in the lateral part of two joints, and three sockets migrated in patients with severe segmental and cavitary deficiencies. Direct bonding of HA to bone was observed radiologically without morphological changes, except in the three joints with migration. All patients could walk without pain but the three with definite loosening needed crutches


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 6 | Pages 982 - 986
1 Nov 1999
Ritter MA Zhou H Keating CM Keating EM Faris PM Meding JB Berend ME

We have made a retrospective review of 185 cemented Charnley total hip arthroplasties performed between 1970 and 1974 to determine the relationships between radiological variables and failure of the femoral and acetabular components. We measured the acetabular wear, the orientation of the cup, the thickness and consistency of acetabular and femoral cement mantles, radiolucency and femoral alignment. The mean follow-up was for 11.7 years. Femoral loosening was demonstrable radiologically in 15 hips (8.1%), ten (5.4%) of which were revised during the period of follow-up. Only when the first postoperative radiograph showed a thin cement mantle in Gruen zone 5 was there a significant association with failure of the femoral component. There were 12 loose acetabular components (6.5%), nine (4.8%) of which were revised. When the initial radiograph after operation showed radiolucency in DeLee and Charnley zone 1, the incidence of acetabular loosening was 28.21%. If such radiolucency was not present, the incidence of acetabular loosening was only 0.69%. Our findings emphasise the importance of careful cementing


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 6 | Pages 869 - 871
1 Nov 1993
Lieberman Moeckel B Evans B Salvati E Ranawat C

We reviewed 19 revision hip arthroplasties in which the new femoral component had been recemented into the old, intact cement mantle. The mean time from the first operation to revision was 64 months and the average follow-up was 59 months. There were 7 excellent, 11 good, and one fair result. No femoral component had been revised for loosening and all the stems appeared radiographically stable. Complications included intraoperative perforation of the femur on two occasions and one dislocation. The use of the cement-within-cement technique requires that the old cement surface be dry and roughened to increase the surface area and that the cement be injected in the liquid phase to prevent lamination. The indications for this technique include a broken stem with an intact distal cement mantle, the removal of a femoral component for revision of a loose cup to improve exposure and/or increase offset, recurrent dislocation secondary to component malposition, and debonding of the femoral component within an intact cement mantle


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 2 | Pages 209 - 214
1 Mar 2003
Aldinger PR Breusch SJ Lukoschek M Mau H Ewerbeck V Thomsen M

We followed the first 354 consecutive implantations of a cementless, double-tapered straight femoral stem in 326 patients. Follow-up was at a mean of 12 years (10 to 15). The mean age of the patients was 57 years (13 to 81). At follow-up, 56 patients (59 hips) had died, and eight (eight hips) had been lost to follow-up. Twenty-five hips underwent femoral revision, eight for infection, three for periprosthetic fracture and 14 for aseptic loosening. The overall survival was 92% at 12 years (95% CI 88 to 95). Survival with femoral revision for aseptic loosening as an endpoint was 95% (95% CI 92 to 98). The median Harris hip score at follow-up was 84 points (23 to 100). Radiolucent lines (< 2 mm) in Gruen zones 1 and 7 were present in 38 (16%) and 34 hips (14%), respectively. Radiolucencies in zones 2 to 6 were found in five hips (2%). The results for mid- to long-term survival with this femoral component are encouraging and compare with those achieved in primary cemented total hip arthroplasty. The high rate of loosening of the cup and the high rate of pain are, however, a source of concern


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 3 | Pages 352 - 357
1 Apr 2000
Milošev L Antolič V Minovič A Cör A Herman S Pavlovčič V Campbell P

We describe three prostheses with cemented titanium-alloy stems and Al. 2. O. 3. ceramic femoral heads which had to be revised after a mean period of implantation of 78 months. In each case, the neck of the prosthesis had been so severely worn that the profile was elliptical rather than circular. There was severe metallosis of the periprosthetic tissues. Metal particles isolated from the tissues were approximately one nanometre in size and the ratios of titanium, aluminium and vanadium in the particles were the same as in the original alloy. Histologically, the high concentration of metal particles masked the presence of high-density polyethylene (HDP) debris, but again particles about one nanometre in size were isolated from the tissues. The severe necrobiosis and necrosis noted were consistent with other reports of the presence of extensive wear particles in periprosthetic tissues. Wear is presumed to have occurred as a result of mismatch between the shape or size of the taper cone and the femoral head, or to changes in the geometry of loading due to migration of the cup. To facilitate early intervention, patients with this design of prosthesis should be monitored radiologically


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 5 | Pages 680 - 685
1 Jul 2001
Bowditch M Villar R

Early failures have seen titanium fall from favour as a material for cemented femoral stems. Between 1989 and 1994, we performed a prospective review of a consecutive series of 122 cemented total hip replacements using the Ultima straight textured titanium stem, and report the five- to ten-year clinical and radiological outcomes. There were no revisions for loosening of the femoral stem. Revision surgery was undertaken for other reasons such as dislocation, infection and loosening of the cup in 7.3%. Of those patients without revision all but two were satisfied with their hip, with 74% graded good or excellent using a modified Harris hip score. Radiological assessment revealed probable loosening in two. Although slight vertical subsidence was found in one-third of patients it had not progressed to loosening. It is not clear whether this represents debonding. Non-progressive radiolucent lines (1 to 2 mm) were present in zone 1 at the cement-prosthesis interface in 14.7%. Calcar resorption and hypertrophy around the distal stem were not often seen. With 97% survival at a mean of 7.5 years, the medium-term results of this specific cemented titanium stem are reassuring so far, but we are concerned about debonding and future failure


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 3 | Pages 423 - 430
1 May 1990
Wilson-MacDonald J Morscher E Masar Z

We reviewed the results of 545 consecutive total hip replacements using a cementless non-coated high-density polyethylene acetabular component combined with a cemented Muller stem at five to 10 years. In all, 421 patients (445 hips) were available for review, 118 by questionnaire and 303 by examination and radiography. Of these, 86% had a good or excellent result. We found a high rate of radiological loosening of the cup after the sixth year, and a high rate of clinical loosening after the eighth year. Loosening was commoner in women, in younger patients and where a smaller size of acetabulum had been used. Calcar resorption was significantly related to loosening of the acetabulum. Loosening appeared to be mainly due to polyethylene debris produced by micro-movement of the acetabulum against the bone, which had resulted in a giant cell foreign body reaction and subsequent bone erosion. We have abandoned the use of this prosthesis and suggest that direct contact between bone and polyethylene should be prevented by a coating of metal or some other material


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 5 | Pages 894 - 899
1 Sep 1998
Minakawa H Stone MH Wroblewski BM Lancaster JG Ingham E Fisher J

We examined stainless-steel, cobalt-chrome, titanium and alumina and zirconia ceramic femoral heads retrieved at revision surgery. All the heads had articulated against ultra-high-molecular-weight-polyethylene (UHMWPE) acetabular cups. We studied the simulation of third-body damage and the wear of UHMWPE against the various materials used for the heads. The surfaces of the retrieved heads were analysed using a two-dimensional contacting profilometer. Third-body damage was characterised by the mean height of the scratches above the mean line (R. pm. ). The alumina ceramic and zirconia ceramic retrieved heads were found to have significantly less damage. In laboratory studies the ceramics were also more resistant to simulated third-body damage than the metal alloys. We studied the wear of UHMWPE against the damaged counterfaces in simple configuration tests. The damaged ceramics produced less polyethylene wear than the damaged metal counterfaces. The wear factor of UHMWPE against the damaged materials was dependent on the amount of damage to the counterface (R. p. ). Our study has shown the benefit of using the harder and more damage-resistant ceramic materials for femoral heads


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 2 | Pages 214 - 218
1 May 1981
Ali Khan M Brakenbury P Reynolds I

An analysis of 142 dislocations from a multicentre study of 6774 total hip replacements is reported. The incidence of dislocation was 2.1 per cent. Patients with neuromuscular disorder, those in a confused mental state, and those undergoing revision operations are at special risk. The commonest surgical error, present in nearly half the patients, was placing the acetabular cup too vertically or too anteverted. A less common fault was placing the femoral component too anteverted. Neither the original pathology nor the approach to the hip appeared to affect the likelihood of dislocation. The dislocations were divided into early and late, single and recurrent, and the success rate of treatment is described in these groups. One hundred and eleven patients (78.2 per cent) eventually obtained stability. Of those with a single dislocation, 62 per cent remained stable after a single manipulation. Thirty-four per cent of the patients required an open operation to achieve stability and it is suggested that, in many cases, open reduction alone is not enough; the mechanical fault needs to be corrected


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 3 | Pages 366 - 370
1 May 1997
Simank H Brocai DRC Reiser D Thomsen M Sabo D Lukoschek M

We report our results using three different threaded acetabular components (Mecring A, Mecring B and Weill) in 715 hips with a follow-up of between one and ten years (median: 99.1, 56.5, 38.3 months, respectively). All cups were implanted with one type of cementless stem. The clinical results were good or acceptable in about 70% of the hips, but signs of loosening with radiolucency and/or migration were found in 10.1%. Radiological evidence of loosening did not correlate significantly with the clinical outcome. Pain was not a reliable indicator of loosening and its absence sometimes allowed severe osteolysis to develop. Twenty-five hips were revised (3.5%) for aseptic loosening of the acetabular component. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the cumulative rate of failure showed a rapid increase five years after the initial operation, but no significant correlation with gender, age or weight. The high rate of failure indicates that further use of these acetabular components cannot be recommended. Annual radiographs are required to assess osteolysis even if the patients are free from pain


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1087 - 1093
1 Aug 2018
Barenius B Inngul C Alagic Z Enocson A

Aims

The aim of this study was to compare the functional and radiological outcomes in patients with a displaced fracture of the hip who were treated with a cemented or a cementless femoral stem.

Patients and Methods

A four-year follow-up of a randomized controlled study included 141 patients who underwent surgery for a displaced femoral neck fracture. Patients were randomized to receive either a cemented (n = 67) or a cementless (n = 74) stem at hemiarthroplasty (HA; n = 83) or total hip arthroplasty (THA; n = 58).


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 7, Issue 4 | Pages 12 - 15
1 Aug 2018