Patients With Shorter Stature Exhibit Minimal Hammering Sound Changes During Cementless Stem Insertion in Total Hip Arthroplasty
Yasuhiro Homma, MD, PhD,a,b,∗ Xu Zhuang, MD, PhD,a Naotake Yanagisawa, PhD,c Seiya Ishii, MD, PhD,b Tomonori Baba, MD, PhD,a,b and Muneaki Ishijima, MD, PhDa,bHip
Background
Listening to the change in the hammering sound is 1 of the elements used to assess the cementless stem stability. This study aimed to quantitatively investigate the change in the acoustic characteristics between the early and late phases of cementless stem insertion in total hip arthroplasty and to identify which patient characteristics contribute to the change in the hammering sound.
Methods
The acoustic parameters of the hammering sounds in the early and late phases of cementless taper-wedged stem insertion for 51 hips in 45 patients who underwent total hip arthroplasty (mean age = 68 years, height = 1.56 m, weight = 55.0 kg) were analyzed. Parameters including patient’s basic characteristics, radiographical femoral morphology, and canal fill ratio were assessed as potential contributors to the change in the hammering sound.
Results
The low-frequency bands (0.5-1.0 kHz and 1.0-1.5 kHz) showed the largest changes during stem insertion and were therefore considered key bands for the analysis of sound alterations. Multivariate linear regression analysis showed that height (β = 8.312, P = .013) and proximal canal fill ratio (β = −3.8568, P = .038) were independently associated with the sound alterations. The decision tree analysis identified height (≥1.66 m or <1.66 m) as the best single discriminator for the sound alteration.
Conclusions
Patients with smaller stature showed the least change in the hammering sound during stem insertion. Understanding the acoustic characteristics of hammering sound alteration during cementless stem insertion may aid in the achievement of optimal stem insertion.
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