Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research: April 2010 - Volume 468 - Issue 4 - p 1072–1081 doi: 10.1007/s11999-009-1158-2 CLINICAL RESEARCH

A Comparison between Robotic-assisted and Manual Implantation of Cementless Total Hip Arthroplasty

Nakamura, Nobuo, MD1, a; Sugano, Nobuhiko, MD2; Nishii, Takashi, MD2; Kakimoto, Akihiro, MD1; Miki, Hidenobu, MD2
Hip

Background The benefits of robotic techniques for implanting femoral components during THA are still controversial.

 

Questions/Purposes The purpose of this study was to prospectively compare the results and complications of robotic-assisted and hand-rasping stem implantation techniques.

 

Method The minimum followup was 5 years (mean, 67 months; range, 60-85 months). One hundred forty-six primary THAs on 130 patients were included in this study. Robot-assisted primary THA was performed on 75 hips and a hand-rasping technique was used on 71 hips.

 

Results At 2 and 3 years postoperatively, the Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) clinical score was slightly better in the robotic-assisted group. At 5 years followup, however, the differences were not significant. Postoperative limb lengths of the robotic-milling group had significantly less variance than the hand-rasping group. At 2 years postoperatively, there was significantly more stress shielding of the proximal femur in the hand-rasping group; this difference was more significant 5 years postoperatively.

 

Conclusions Substantially more precise implant positioning seems to have led to less variance in limb-length inequality and less stress shielding of the proximal femur 5 years postoperatively.

 

Level of Evidence Level II, therapeutic study. See Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


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