4.6 Article

Metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty does equally well in osteonecrosis and osteoarthritis

Journal

CLINICAL ORTHOPAEDICS AND RELATED RESEARCH
Volume 466, Issue 5, Pages 1148-1153

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1007/s11999-008-0180-0

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Many previous reports suggest total hip arthroplasty performs suboptimally in young patients with osteonecrosis. We retrospectively compared the performance of metal-on-metal articulation in a select group of 107 patients with 112 hips (98 uncemented and 14 cemented stems) 60 years of age or younger with either osteonecrosis (27 patients, 30 hips) or primary osteoarthritis (80 patients, 82 hips). We evaluated all patients with patient-generated Harris hip score forms and serial radiographs. Five mechanical complications were caused by impingement, two with pain, two dislocations, and one liner dissociation. At a minimum followup of 2.2 years (mean, 5.5 years; range, 2.2-11.7 years), we observed no osteolysis or aseptic loosening in the osteonecrosis group, whereas one osteoarthritic hip had cup revision for loosening (none showed evidence of osteolysis). None of the stems were loose. Patients with osteonecrosis or primary osteoarthritis were similar in clinical and radiographic performance. The patients with metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty for osteonecrosis had no revisions for aseptic loosening, but did have one liner change in a cup for painful impingement. Level of Evidence: Level III, therapeutic study. See the Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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