The Journal of Arthroplasty, ISSN: 0883-5403, Vol: 15, Issue: 1, Page: 93-101

The anatomic basis for the concept of lateralized femoral stems: A frontal plane radiographic study of the proximal femur

Philippe Massin; Laurent Geais; Eric Astoin; Marc Simondi; François Lavaste
Hip

We determined the range of sizes for a system of monoblock femoral prostheses that would provide adequate (a term defined in the text) fill in the frontal plane and restore femoral offset and leg length. We performed an anatomic study, based on measurements in 200 anteroposterior pelvic radiographs. If diaphyseal filing implants are to be used, 9 sizes are sufficients to obtain excellent canal filling and restoration of femoral offset in >80% of cases, assuming that the level of neck osteotomy can vary over a 1-cm range. When using metaphyseal filling implants, only a limited adjustment can be obtained from the level of neck osteotomy. A system limited to 8 size approximates the anatomy of the femoral canal with satisfactory precision in 73% of cases. If such a system is provided with only a single neck shall angle for each stem size, it does not allow restoration of the biomechanical center of the hip in >67% of cases. A system of 8 sizes of 1 neck/shaft angle and a 22-mm modular head restores the anatomy in only 49% of cases. Approximating the frontal anatomy of 85% of femora with an implant filling the metaphysis requires at least 15 sizes distributed in 3 metaphyseal configurations, each supplied with 2 different neck shaft angles.


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