The Journal of Arthroplasty, Volume 30, Issue 4, 611 - 614

Total Hip Arthroplasty With a Non-Modular Conical Stem and Transverse Subtrochanteric Osteotomy in Treatment of High Dislocated Hips

Zhu, Junfeng et al.
Hip

Conventional stems may be unsuitable for hypoplastic femurs associated with severe dysplasia, meanwhile, custom-made or modular stems in total hip arthroplasty are often complex and expensive. This series included 21 Crowe type IV dysplastic hips in which a non-modular cementless conical stem was implanted with transverse subtrochanteric femoral osteotomy. Follow up averaged 40 months. Twenty hips survived with mean Harris hip score improved from 52 to 90. One hip failed for stem loosening. The average leg lengthening was 3.8 cm with transient sciatic nerve palsy occurring in three hips. Femoral offset averaged 3.3 cm postoperatively. The non-modular conical stem not only obviated the complexities, high medical cost and potential risk at the neck-stem interface associated with stem modularity, but also simplified surgical technique.


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