Bone grafting in cementless total hip replacement for congenital dysplasia of the hip. International Orthopaedics SICOT 24, 260–263 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002640000133

Bone grafting in cementless total hip replacement for congenital dysplasia of the hip

Dai, X., Omori, H., Okumura, Y. et al.
Hip

We reviewed 27 cementless primary total hip replacements in patients with osteoarthrosis secondary to congenital dysplasia of the hip. Autogenous bone grafting was used as augmentation. On average the follow-up period was 9 years. Two hips were revised and three acetabular components were considered loose. In hips with loose cups the average graft coverage was significantly greater than in stable hips. The use of a cementless acetabular component is encouraging for reconstruction, although extensive grafting should be avoided. Our study suggests that cementless reconstruction in dysplastic hips yields a satisfactory outcome.


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