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1.
We evaluated the results twenty to twenty-five years after ninety-three consecutive, nonselected Charnley total hip arthroplasties performed with cement by the senior one of us in sixty-nine patients who were less than fifty years old at the time of the procedure. Seventy of the seventy-two hips in the living patients were followed radiographically for at least twenty years. Twenty-seven hips (29 per cent) had a revision or a resection of the prosthesis during the follow-up period. The revision or the resection was performed because of aseptic loosening in twenty-one hips (23 per cent), infection in four (4 per cent), dislocation in one (1 per cent), and fracture of the femur in one. Eighteen acetabular components (19 per cent) and five femoral components (5 per cent) were revised because of aseptic loosening, and an additional fourteen acetabular components (15 per cent) and seven femoral components (8 per cent) demonstrated definite or probable radiographic loosening. The present study demonstrates the long-term durability of total hip arthroplasty performed with cement in an active population of patients. The fixation of the femoral component was found to perform better than that of the acetabular component at twenty to twenty-five years after the procedure.  相似文献   

2.
We analyzed the progression of radiolucent lines around the acetabular cup after 452 Charnley low-friction arthroplasties that had been performed in 392 patients between 1971 and 1976. The average duration of follow-up was twenty years (range, eleven to twenty-five years) for the 442 hips (382 patients) that had the original component in place at ten years. The demarcation of the bone-cement interface was classified according to the system of Hodgkinson et al. We sought to determine if there was a relationship between the progression of the radiolucent line and the age, gender, and weight of the patient; the level of activity; the preoperative diagnosis; or the amount of wear of the acetabular cup. The demarcation increased over time in 138 (31 per cent) of the 452 hips. Radiographs made at the time of the latest follow-up showed migration of eleven (5 per cent) of the 233 acetabular cups with no demarcation on the initial postoperative radiograph, eighteen (11 per cent) of the 167 cups with type-1 demarcation, twelve (35 per cent) of the thirty-four cups with type-2 demarcation, and thirteen of the eighteen cups with type-3 demarcation. Preoperative acetabular protrusion, inflammatory arthritis, and severe acetabular dysplasia as well as a previous operation were associated with the extent of the radiolucent line on the most recent radiograph (p < or = 0.05 for all). A high level of activity and more than two millimeters of wear of the acetabular cup also were related to the progression of the radiolucent line (p = 0.0004 and p < 0.0001, respectively). Kaplan-Meier survivorship analysis demonstrated that the greater the demarcation on the initial postoperative radiograph, the greater the risk of migration (p < 0.0001, Mantel-Cox test). Our data suggest that, after a Charnley low-friction arthroplasty, any cemented cup, even one with the least amount of demarcation (types 0 and 1), can migrate. As the type of the initial postoperative demarcation increases, so does the risk of migration of the cup, particularly when there is loss of the acetabular bone stock.  相似文献   

3.
Seventy-four total hip arthroplasties in sixty-six patients were performed, between 1983 and 1986, with use of a Tri-Lock femoral component inserted without cement. This tapered cobalt-chromium component has a fixed head and a circumferential proximal porous coating. Follow-up was conducted with use of a questionnaire, physical examination, and radiographic analysis. At the time of the latest follow-up, fifteen patients (eighteen hips) had died, three patients (four hips) had been lost to follow-up, and one patient (one hip) had refused to participate in the follow-up study; however, the status of fifteen hips at the time of death could be verified. Thus, clinical follow-up data were available for sixty-six of the original seventy-four hips. The average age at the time of the operation was sixty-two years (range, seventeen to eighty-four years), and the average interval between the operation and the latest follow-up evaluation was 10.0 years (range, 8.3 to 11.6 years). The Harris hip score was determined for forty-three hips (forty-one patients) in which the prosthesis was in situ at the time of the latest follow-up. The score was good for thirteen hips and excellent for twenty-eight, so the rate of clinical success was 95 per cent. Two patients had a fair result. One of them had persistent pain and the other had limited motion, but neither had radiographic evidence of loosening of the femoral or acetabular component. All forty-one patients were satisfied with the result. The probability (with standard error) of survival of the femoral component at ten years, with revision as the end point, was 0.95 +/- 0.03. The rate of revision of the femoral component because of aseptic loosening was one (2 per cent) of sixty-six. The overall rate of aseptic loosening of the femoral component in the hips that were followed radiographically was two (4 per cent) of forty-seven. Only one (2 per cent) of the forty-seven acetabular cups had evidence of aseptic loosening. There was no radiographic evidence of distal osteolysis around the prostheses that were well fixed. Proximal osteolysis was present in five (11 per cent) of forty-seven hips, but none of the lesions compromised the stability of the prosthesis or the bone and there were no associated fractures. At an average of ten years postoperatively, the Tri-Lock femoral component functioned well overall and patient satisfaction was high.  相似文献   

4.
During the years 1991-1994, the Norwegian Arthroplasty Register recorded 1,324 primary hip arthroplasties implanted with the Boneloc cement. We have compared the survival until revision due to aseptic loosening for charnley (n 955) and Exeter (n 172) prostheses. The Boneloc cemented hips were also compared with high viscosity cemented hips implanted during the same period. In the Boneloc cemented group, the estimated probability of survival at 4.5 years of a Charnley femoral component was 74% and for an Exeter femoral component 97% (p < 0.0001). Using a Cox regression model with adjustment for age, gender, type of cement, systemic antibiotic and stratified for diagnosis, an 8 times higher risk of revision was found in Boneloc cemented Charnley femoral components than in Exeter femoral components (p < 0.0001). For the acetabular components, the difference between the Charnley and Exeter components with Boneloc cement was not statistically significant. In both the Charnley and the Exeter prostheses, the high viscosity cemented components had significantly better survival than the Boneloc cemented components. The Cox regression model showed that a Boneloc cemented Charnley femoral component had a 14 times higher risk of revision than a high viscosity cemented component (p < 0.0001), and for Exeter femoral components a 7 times higher revision risk was found in the Boneloc cemented components (p = 0.003). Our results confirm the previously reported inferior results of Charnley prostheses implanted with Boneloc cement and inferior results of Boneloc cemented Exeter prostheses as well, but less pronounced than for Charnley prostheses.  相似文献   

5.
One hundred and six consecutive total hip arthroplasties with cement were performed by one surgeon, at least ten years before the time of the present clinical and radiographic review, in seventy-five patients who had adult-onset rheumatoid arthritis. Two patients (three hips) were lost to follow-up. Seven (7 per cent) of the remaining 103 hips were revised. The revisions were performed because of infection (three hips), dislocation (two hips), or aseptic loosening (two hips). Of the ninety-eight hips that were not lost to follow-up or revised because of infection or dislocation, eight (8 per cent) had radiographic loosening of the acetabular component and two (2 per cent) had radiographic loosening of the femoral component. Although the prevalence of radiographic loosening of the acetabular component was four times greater than the prevalence of radiographic loosening of the femoral component, the prevalence of revision because of aseptic loosening of the acetabular component was identical to that for the femoral component (one component each). These results compared favorably with those of total hip arthroplasty with cement, performed by the same surgeon, for the treatment of other diagnoses. Loosening of the acetabular component was significantly associated with a younger age at the time of the index operation (p = 0.03) and with acetabular osteolysis (p = 0.0006). Of forty-eight hips in thirty-two patients who survived for at least ten years, 96 per cent (forty-six hips) were considered by the patients to have a satisfactory result. At the time of the latest follow-up, twenty-four (75 per cent) of the patients had no pain in the hip. Although eighteen patients (56 per cent) could walk without support at a minimum of ten years after the operation, we found that the functional results for patients who had rheumatoid arthritis were inferior to those observed for patients who had had a total hip arthroplasty with cement, performed by the same surgeon, for the treatment of other diagnoses.  相似文献   

6.
The clinical results of eighty-four total hip arthroplasties performed through a transtrochanteric approach in sixty-seven patients who had a high dislocation of the hip (the femoral head completely out of the acetabulum), from 1976 to 1994, were reviewed. The acetabular component was placed in the true acetabulum and the femur was shortened at the level of the femoral neck, along with release of the psoas tendon and the small external rotators, in order to facilitate reduction of the components and to avoid neurovascular complications. Eleven hip prostheses (13 per cent) failed at a mean of 6.4 years (range, two months to sixteen years) postoperatively; the failure was due to aseptic loosening of both components in four hips, aseptic loosening of the stem only in three, late infection in three, and malpositioning of the acetabular component that caused recurrent dislocations in one. The other seventy-three hips were functioning well at the latest follow-up examination, two to twenty years (mean, 7.1 years) postoperatively. The overall cumulative rate of success was 92.4 per cent (95 per cent confidence interval, 89.5 to 95.3 per cent) at five years and 88.0 per cent (95 per cent confidence interval, 82.2 to 93.8 per cent) at ten years. We believe that this operative technique of total hip arthroplasty is effective for the treatment of the difficult condition of high dislocation of the hip.  相似文献   

7.
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 years (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.  相似文献   

8.
The results of 136 consecutive primary total hip arthroplasties performed by one surgeon with the Harris-Galante-I porous-coated acetabular component were reviewed at a mean of seven years (range, five to ten years). In all hips, the outer diameter of the acetabular component was the same as the diameter of the final reamer used in the preparation of the acetabulum. However, this reamer was used only briefly at the rim of the acetabulum, and therefore the components had so-called press-fit stability. A mean of four screws (range, three to six screws) were used for additional fixation of the component. The clinical evaluation was performed with use of the Harris hip score. Standardized anteroposterior radiographs of the pelvis were assessed for migration of the component, radiolucent and radiodense lines, linear wear of the polyethylene, and osteolysis. No acetabular component had been revised for loosening and none were radiographically loose at the time of the most recent follow-up evaluation. There were no complications related to the use of the screws, and no screw had bent or broken. A non-progressive radiolucent line was seen in one acetabular zone in thirty-four hips (25 per cent) and in two acetabular zones in six hips (4 per cent). No hip had a radiolucent line in all three acetabular zones. The mean rate of linear wear of the polyethylene was 0.1 millimeter per year. There was no dissociation of the acetabular liner from the metal shell. Two hips (1 per cent) had asymptomatic osteolysis in the ischium and adjacent to the rim of the acetabular component; this was treated with grafting at the site of the lesion and exchange of the femoral head and the worn polyethylene liner. Five femoral components inserted without cement and one inserted with cement were revised because of loosening. The data suggest that, at a mean of seven years, fixation of this porous-coated component was uniformly excellent. The low prevalence of radiolucent lines and the absence of loosening are probably related, in part, to the technique of implantation. The low prevalence of polyethylene wear and pelvic osteolysis is a notable improvement compared with the results of arthroplasty with other porous-coated acetabular components. Although the results of the present study are encouraging, longer follow-up is necessary to determine the prevalence of late loosening and osteolysis.  相似文献   

9.
The results of isolated acetabular revision performed in 31 patients (32 hips) were monitored for between 3 and 9 years. All femoral components were well fixed and not removed or revised at the time of index surgery. There were 4 hips with little or no acetabular bony defect, 2 hips with pure segmental defects (type I), 10 hips with cavitary defects (type II), 15 with combined segmental cavitary defects (type III), and I with pelvic discontinuity (type IV). All revision acetabular implants were cementless, using a porous-coated hemispheric cup with or without bone-graft. There were four grade I reconstructions, 16 grade II reconstructions, and 12 grade III reconstructions. At final follow-up evaluation 94% of the cups were judged to be stable. Two hips required a second revision acetabuloplasty because of loss of fixation of the cup. The 2 repeat revisions were also done without removal of the femoral component. One acetabular component had evidence of rotational migration, which stabilized and remained nonprogressive. There were no cases of femoral component radiographic or clinical failure. The mean pre and postoperative hip scores were 44 and 83, respectively. The pre- and postoperative pain scores were 12 and 42, respectively. The findings of this study suggest that isolated acetabular revision, using a cementless porous-coated hemispheric cup, can be successfully performed without removing or revising a well-fixed femoral stem and not compromise the final outcome.  相似文献   

10.
The results were reviewed for 259 patients who had open reduction and internal fixation of 262 displaced acetabular fractures within twenty-one days after the injury. Two hundred and fifty-five hips were followed for a mean of six years (range, two to fourteen years) after the injury; the remaining seven, which clearly had a poor result, were followed for less than two years. According to the classification of Letournel and Judet, associated fracture types accounted for 208 (79 per cent) of the fractures, with both-column fractures being the most common type (ninety-two hips; 35 per cent). Two hundred and fifty-eight hips were operated on with a single operative approach (Kocher-Langenbeck, ilioinguinal, or extended iliofemoral). The four remaining hips were operated on with a Kocher-Langenbeck as well as an ilioinguinal approach. The reduction was graded as anatomical in 185 hips (71 per cent). The rate of anatomical reduction decreased with increases in the complexity of the fracture, the age of the patient, and the interval between the injury and the reduction. The over-all clinical result was excellent for 104 hips (40 per cent), good for ninety-five (36 per cent), fair for twenty-one (8 per cent), and poor for forty-two (16 per cent). The clinical result was related closely to the radiographic result. The clinical result was adversely affected by associated injuries of the femoral head, an older age of the patient, and operative complications. It was positively affected by an anatomical reduction and postoperative congruity between the femoral head and the acetabular roof. Osteonecrosis of the femoral head was noted in eight hips (3 per cent), and progressive wear of the femoral head was seen in thirteen (5 per cent). Subsequent operations included a total replacement of seventeen hips (6 per cent), an arthrodesis in four (2 per cent), and excision of ectopic bone in twelve (5 per cent). These findings indicate that in many patients who have a complex acetabular fracture the hip joint can be preserved and post-traumatic osteoarthrosis can be avoided if an anatomical reduction is achieved. An increase in the rate of anatomical reduction and a decrease in the rate of operative complications should be the goals of surgeons who treat these fractures.  相似文献   

11.
We prospectively studied the results of 411 consecutive total hip arthroplasties with a Mecring screw-ring acetabular component inserted without cement combined with a Stanmore femoral stem inserted with cement. The duration of follow-up ranged from three to seven years (mean, four years and six months). Three hundred and thirty-one patients (378 hips) were available for physical examination and had a complete set of radiographs. The clinical result was good or excellent for 82 per cent (309) of the 378 hips. However, the rate of radiographic loosening of the acetabular component, as evidenced by migration at the most recent follow-up examination, was alarmingly high: 25 per cent (ninety-five) of the 378 hips. In general, these patients did not have serious clinical symptoms. The cups in women migrated significantly more often (p = 0.003) than those in men. Migration was also more frequent in patients who were less than fifty-one years old and in patients in whom the index procedure was a revision arthroplasty, but these differences were not significant. Twenty-one (6 per cent) of the acetabular cups were revised for aseptic loosening. The high rate of radiographic loosening has led us to abandon the use of the Mecring screw-ring acetabular component.  相似文献   

12.
A review of sixty patients who had undergone ankle fusion for post-traumatic arthritis revealed that thirty-five (58 per cent) had the procedure performed within the first year after injury. A total of forty-eight complications occurred in twenty-nine (48 per cent) of the patients. Frequent complication were infection (23 per cent), non-union (23 per cent), inadequate surgical alignment or early loss of position (15 per cent), malunion (12 per cent), and delayed union (7 per cent). The lateral transfibular approach had the highest incidence of complications, and a two-incision approach using the Charnley compression apparatus was the procedure with the fewest complications. Forty-one patients were followed for an average of 7.5 years after operation. Of these, thirty-four (83 per cent) were satisfied with the procedure. Examination of thirty of the forty-one patients at an average of 7.3 years after surgery revealed virtually no subtalar motion but motion of 13 degrees at Chopart's joint. With shoes, patients had a near-normal gait. The roentgenograms revealed a minimum amount of degenerative arthritis at Chopart's joint, which may worsen with time. Varus or valgus angulation of the hind part of the foot was associated with a greater degree of symptoms in the subtalar area as well as the middle of the foot. The neutral position in varus-valgus angulation as well as dorsiflexion-plantar flexion was the optimum position for both men and women. The results of the procedure did not deteriorate with time.  相似文献   

13.
One hundred and thirty-three patients (152 hips) who were an average of thirty-nine years old (range, sixteen to forty-nine years old) received a proximally hydroxyapatite-coated femoral prosthesis as part of a total hip arthroplasty and were followed for a minimum of five years (average, 6.4 years; range, five to 8.3 years) or until revision. The average Harris hip score was 47 points (range, 22 to 77 points) preoperatively and 93 points (range, 49 to 100 points) at the time of the latest clinical evaluation. Two patients who had a well fixed femoral implant had activity-limiting pain in the thigh at the time of the most recent examination. Radiographic changes consistent with bone-remodeling (cortical hypertrophy and bone condensation) typically were seen around the mid-part of the shaft of the prosthesis. Forty-eight (32 per cent) of the 148 hips that were included in the radiographic analysis demonstrated a small amount of erosive scalloping in either zone 1 or zone 7 of Gruen et al., and intramedullary osteolysis was suspected in only one hip. All stems were radiographically osseointegrated according to a modification of the criteria described by Engh et al. Four stems were revised, but none of the revisions were performed because of mechanical failure (two stems were revised in conjunction with a revision of the cup because of pain; one, because of an infection; and one, after a traumatic femoral fracture that occurred six years postoperatively). Thus, the rates of aseptic and mechanical failure were both 0 per cent. The combined rate of failure, which included the two stems that were revised because of pain and the two stems that were associated with pain that limited activity, was 2.6 per cent (four of 152 stems). The over-all clinical results associated with hydroxyapatite-coated femoral components were excellent in this group of young patients after intermediate-term follow-up. A review of serial radiographs showed mechanically stable implants with osseous ingrowth, evidence of stress transmission at the middle part of the stem, and minimum endosteal osteolysis.  相似文献   

14.
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: From 1983 to 1986, 156 alumina/polyethylene combination hip arthroplasties (131 patients) were performed at the Henri Mondor Hospital. Before 1983, the stainless-steel/polyethylene combination was performed. In this follow-up study, the outcome of the first 156 consecutive alumine-polyethylene combination hip arthroplasties were analyzed with clinical and radiological features. The comparison of the two combinations was analyzed. A survival analysis was performed over a ten years interval. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The femoral component of the prosthesis was made of Titanium alloy (TiA16V4). The femoral head was made of dense alumina (A1203). The head diameter was 32 mm. The socket was made of ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE). Fixation of head to stem was obtained through conical sleeving. We used a posterolateral approach, and a cemented THA without pressurization. At last follow-up evaluation, 90 patients were reviewed, 9 patients were interviewed by phone. Three patients were dead and 20 patients were lost for follow-up evaluation, in the first year. Nine failures were reoperated. The major cause of failure was septic complication of the THA (8). The average age of patients at arthroplasty was 58.1 year. The clinical evaluation was performed with the Merle d'Aubigné, Postel scoring system. The radiographs of 117 hips out of the 156 were available for this evaluation. Radiolucents, failures and wear were analyzed. RESULTS: There was a 5 per cent rate (8 hips) of deep infection due for two hips to the underlying pathology. Ten (6.5 per cent) of the 156 hips had had an episode of dislocation at last follow-up. Eighty-nine per cent of the hips were rated excellent, very good, and good; 9.3 per cent were rated fair: and 1.7 per cent were rated poor. The radiographs of the socket revealed 54 per cent of bone-cement radiolucent and three failures at last follow-up. The radiographs of the stem revealed 29 per cent of bone-cement radiolucent and one failure at last follow-up. There was no revision of the femoral stem. Survival analysis (aseptic failures) depicted 93.45 per cent durability of the arthroplasty at 10 years. The survival analysis for the socket alone, using the same criteria for failure, demonstrated 94.53 per cent survival success at 10 years, and 98.91 per cent for the stem component. The comparison of the two combinations gave us a survival analysis for the socket alone, using aseptic failure as criteria, 79.84 per cent for stainless-steel/polyethylene combination at 8 years, and 97.63 per cent for alumina/polyethylene at the same time. CONCLUSION: The alumina/polyethylene combination with a 32 mm head diameter gave better results than the stainless-steel/polyethylene combinations. The improvement was noted on the acetabular component.  相似文献   

15.
Fifty-seven revision total hip arthroplasties in fifty-six patients were performed with a Harris-Galante porous-coated acetabular component by one surgeon, and the patients were followed prospectively for a mean of seven years (range, five to twelve years). A trochanteric osteotomy was performed in forty hips, and a posterior approach with an extended anterior capsulectomy was used in the other seventeen. The acetabular defect was classified as segmental in seven hips, cavitary in twenty-three, and combined in twenty-one; six hips had no notable defect. A bulk allograft was used in eleven hips, and morseled cancellous-bone allograft or autogenous graft was used in thirty-four hips; twelve hips did not have bone-grafting. Both the femoral and the acetabular component were revised in forty-five hips, and only the acetabular component was revised in twelve. Thirty-nine hips (68 per cent) had a good or excellent clinical result according to the Harris hip score. The acetabular component was well fixed in the fourteen hips that had a fair result and the four hips that had a poor result. The acetabular component was considered to have migrated if there was a change in the angle of the cup of 5 degrees or more or a change in the horizontal or vertical position of the cup of more than three millimeters. Despite varying degrees of bone loss, no acetabular component had radiographic evidence of loosening at the latest follow-up examination. No component was revised and no revisions were scheduled. One hip was debrided for a late metastatic infection, but the component was well fixed and was not revised. There were no complications related to the use of screws for fixation. These mid-term results confirm the early success of acetabular revisions performed with fixation of a titanium fiber-metal-coated hemispherical component with multiple screws and no cement.  相似文献   

16.
A prospective study was done of the intermediate-term clinical and radiographic results of 121 total hip arthroplasties in which a Harris-Galante porous titanium-fiber-coated prosthesis was inserted without cement in 110 patients. The average age at the time of the operation was forty-nine years (range, twenty to seventy years). The average duration of follow-up was sixty-seven months (range, fifty-five to seventy-nine months). The average preoperative Harris hip score was 55 points, and the average postoperative score was 93 points. One acetabular component was revised due to recurrent dislocation. Eleven femoral implants were unstable, and of these, four were revised. Cortical erosion was present around the distal part of the femoral stem in nine patients (8 per cent) who had stable implants, and one of these femoral implants was revised because the erosion was extensive. Survivorship analysis at five years revealed a 97 per cent chance of survival (95 per cent confidence limit, 0.937 to 1.0) of the Harris-Galante femoral-stem implant inserted without cement.  相似文献   

17.
We report the outcome of 177 consecutive primary Charnley total hip arthroplasties inserted with Boneloc cement between November 1991 and November 1993. There were 107 women and 70 men. The mean age at the time of the operation was 71 years. 11 patients (13 hips) died during the follow-up period and 3 patients were too weak to attend a follow-up examination. Of the 161 remaining hips, 4 had been revised because of deep infection. The mean follow-up time for the remaining 157 hips was 2 (0.5-3) years. 24 hips had been revised and 6 are waiting for revision because of stem loosening. Of the remaining 127 hips, 72 showed radiographic signs of stem loosening and 2 hips were probably loose. Osteolysis was seen around the femoral component in 56 hips.  相似文献   

18.
We analyzed the clinical results of 195 Harris Design-2 total hip replacements performed with so-called second-generation cementing techniques in 166 consecutive patients who had osteoarthrosis. The mean age of the patients at the time of the replacement was sixty-seven years and nine months (range, thirty-one to eighty-nine years). Forty-eight patients (fifty-four hips) died before the time of the latest follow-up, but the implants were apparently functioning well at the time of death. Three patients (four hips) were lost to follow-up. Five patients (five hips; 3 percent) had a revision because of aseptic loosening of the acetabular or femoral component, or both, that was related to wear-induced osteolysis. The mean Harris hip score for the 131 hips that were available at the latest follow-up examination at a mean of twelve years (range, ten to fifteen years) after the operation was 89 +/- 10 points. On the basis of the Harris hip score, seventy-six hips had an excellent result, thirty-four had a good result, fifteen had a fair result, and six had a poor result at the latest follow-up examination. Radiographically, twelve (9 percent) of the 131 acetabular components and three (2 percent) of the 131 femoral components were probably or definitely loose. At a mean of twelve years, 186 (97 percent) of 191 Harris Design-2 implants were in situ or had been in situ at the time of the patient's death.  相似文献   

19.
Although an acetabular component with an elevated rim is thought to improve the postoperative stability of a total hip prosthesis, the actual clinical value has not yet been demonstrated. To address this question, we reviewed the results of 5167 total hip arthroplasties that had been performed at our institution from April 1, 1985, through December 31, 1991. The prostheses included 2469 acetabular components with an elevated-rim liner (10 degrees of elevation) and 2698 with a standard liner. The cumulative probability of dislocation was estimated as a function of time since the operation with use of the Kaplan-Meier survivorship method. Forty-eight of the 2469 hips that had the elevated-rim acetabular liner dislocated within two years, compared with 101 of the 2698 hips that had the standard acetabular liner. The two-year probability of dislocation was 2.19 per cent for the hips with the elevated-rim liner and 3.85 per cent for those with the standard liner (p = 0.001). A similar trend was seen at five years; however, because of a smaller sample the difference was not significant. Increased stability at two years was also demonstrated for the hips with the elevated-rim liner when the hips were analyzed according to the operative approach, the mode of fixation, the sex of the patient, and the type of total hip arthroplasty (primary or revision). Although these data demonstrate improved stability after total hip arthroplasty when an elevated liner is used, particularly in hips that are at greater risk for dislocation of the prosthesis, the long-term effect of this elevated liner on wear and loosening remains unknown but is of considerable concern. The elevated liner deserves additional study to clarify its effect on wear and loosening.  相似文献   

20.
Total hip arthroplasty in patients younger than 51 years of age remains controversial. The authors report results in 47 hips in 40 patients at an average followup of 15 years. Second generation femoral cementing techniques were used. Special attention was given to studying the differences between the outcome of acetabular versus femoral fixation. The patient group included 11 in whom custom components were used and 13 who had structural autografts for severe acetabular dysplasia. One femoral component and 10 acetabular components were revised for aseptic loosening. After 15 years, improved cementing techniques produced a marked reduction in the rate of femoral aseptic loosening. Loss of fixation of cemented acetabular components was common.  相似文献   

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