INCREASING PREVALENCE OF FEMORAL LYSIS IN CEMENTLESS TOTAL HIP-ARTHROPLASTY

Authors
Citation
E. Smith et Wh. Harris, INCREASING PREVALENCE OF FEMORAL LYSIS IN CEMENTLESS TOTAL HIP-ARTHROPLASTY, The Journal of arthroplasty, 10(4), 1995, pp. 407-412
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Biomedical
Journal title
ISSN journal
08835403
Volume
10
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
407 - 412
Database
ISI
SICI code
0883-5403(1995)10:4<407:IPOFLI>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
A follow-up study was made of 94 primary total hip arthroplasties in 8 6 patients with a Harris-Galante (Zimmer, Warsaw, IN) porous-coated fe moral component implant to determine the change in prevalence of femor al lysis and its clinical significance. At a mean follow-up period of 53 months (range, 16-86 months), femoral lysis was present in 31% of t he femurs. In the first report of this condition, the incidence was 3% . The mean patient age was 54 years (range, 30-69 years). The most com mon diagnosis was osteoarthritis (62 hips). Of the 29 hips with femora l lysis, Ii were graded as extensive. Of the 14 hips in which the femo ral component was defined as loose, 12 had femoral osteolysis; however , the mean Harris hip score among those with lysis was not reduced in those with femoral osteolysis (88 compared with 90 the entire group). Pelvic osteolysis, in contrast, was present in only one hip, around a screw. In this series, femoral lysis was a major complication, whether the femoral component was stable or not, and the prevalence of lysis increased sharply over time.