Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research: April 2000 - Volume 373 - Issue - p 153-163

Total Hip Arthroplasty in Young Patients: 8- to 13-Year Results Using an Uncemented Stem

McLaughlin, Jeffrey Robert MD; Lee, Kyla Renee MD
Hip

One hundred eight uncemented total hip arthroplasties were performed in 91 patients who were 50 years of age or younger using the Taperloc femoral component. The average age of the patients at time of surgery was 37 years (range, 20-50 years). The mean followup was 10.2 years (range, 8-13 years). No patient was lost to followup. Seven patients (eight hips) died before obtaining the minimum time of 8 years for inclusion in this study. All seven died with their femoral components in place. Of the remaining 100 total hip arthroplasties, no femoral component required revision for aseptic loosening. One femoral component was revised to correct a leg length discrepancy, and one well-fixed femoral component was revised for sepsis. In the 98 total hip arthroplasties that had not undergone femoral component revision, complete radiographic and clinical followup was obtained. Radiographically, 96 (98%) femoral components were determined to have fixation by bone ingrowth, two (2%) femoral components showed stable fibrous ingrowth, and no femoral component was unstable. Femoral cortical osteolysis occurred in seven (7%) hips; major lysis was present in only one (1%). Clinically, 91 (93%) total hip arthroplasties were rated good or excellent; six (6%) were rated fair, and one (1%) was rated poor. Thirty-nine patients with 47 total hip arthroplasties (48%) were engaged in moderate to strenuous manual labor. These results indicate that excellent fixation and minimal lysis can be achieved with an uncemented femoral component in young and active patients at 10 years.


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