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Revision of failed total hip arthroplasty with a proximal femoral modular cemented stem

S. A. Crawford, FRACS, Clinical Research Fellow; P. D. Siney, BA, Senior Research Fellow; and B. M. Wroblewski, FRCS, Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon, Professor of Orthopaedic Biomechanics

The John Charnley Research Institute, Wrightington Hospital for Joint Disease, Hall Lane, Appley Bridge, Wigan, Lancashire WN6 9EP, UK.

Correspondence should be sent to Professor B. M. Wroblewski.

We have designed a modular cemented femoral component for revision of failed total hip arthroplasty in which deficiency of the proximal femur is such as to require a variable extrafemoral portion of the stem. We present the results of the first 74 operations in 72 patients; 56 of the patients had grade-3 or grade-4 femoral deficiency as defined by Gustilo and Pasternak and 24 had fractures of the proximal femur, of which 22 were periprosthetic. There was or had been infection in 19 hips.

At a mean follow-up of 5 years 9 months (1 to 12 years) nine stems were radiologically loose of which three had been revised. There were no failures in 45 cases in which there was fixation of the distal stem of 10 cm or more. Dislocation occurred in nine patients and there were four cases of infection in the 19 which were, or had been, infected previously. There were no neurovascular complications and no intraoperative femoral fractures.

The femoral bone stock improved radiologically in 45 hips of which 29 showed considerable reformation of the proximal femur; 27 remained unchanged and two showed increasing osteoporosis.




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B. M. Wroblewski, P. D. Siney, and P. A. Fleming
The angle-bore acetabular component and dislocation after revision of a failed total hip replacement
J Bone Joint Surg Br, February 1, 2006; 88-B(2): 184 - 187.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



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Hip, Knee, Trauma, Upper limb, Foot & Ankle, Paediatrics, Oncology, Spine, Arthroplasty, General