The purpose of this study was to compare the
amount of acetabular bone removed during hip resurfacing (HR) and cementless
total hip replacement (THR), after controlling for the diameter
of the patient’s native femoral head. Based on a power analysis,
64 consecutive patients (68 hips) undergoing HR or THR were prospectively
enrolled in the study. The following data were recorded intra-operatively:
the diameter of the native femoral head, the largest reamer used,
the final size of the acetabular component, the size of the prosthetic
femoral head and whether a decision was made to increase the size
of the acetabular component in order to accommodate a larger prosthetic femoral
head. Results were compared using two-sided, independent samples
Student’s t-tests. A statistically significant
difference was seen in the mean ratio of the size of the acetabular
component to the diameter of the native femoral head (HR: 1.05 (sd 0.04) versus THR:
1.09 (sd 0.05); p <
0.001) and largest acetabular reamer
used to the diameter of the native femoral head (HR: 1.03 (sd 0.04) versus THR:
1.09 (sd 0.05); p <
0.001). The ratios varied minimally
when the groups were subdivided by gender, age and obesity. The
decision to increase the size of the acetabular component to accommodate
a larger femoral head occurred more often in the THR group (27% versus 9%).
Despite the emphasis on avoiding damage to the femoral neck during
HR, the ratio of the size of the acetabular component to the diameter
of the native femoral head was larger in cementless THR than in
HR.