| Literature DB >> 22233783 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The importance of appropriately selecting patients based on factors such as bone mineral density, body mass index, age, gender, and femoral component size has been demonstrated in many studies as an aid in decreasing the rate of revisions and improving the outcomes for patients after hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA); however, there are few published studies quantitatively specifying the potential risk factors that affect early femoral component failures. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate the specific causes of early femoral component failures in hip resurfacing separately and more carefully in order to develop strategies to prevent these failures, rather than excluding groups of patients from this surgical procedure.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22233783 PMCID: PMC3284462 DOI: 10.1186/1749-799X-7-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Detailed information of early femoral component failures.
| Time after surgery (Months) | Reason of Failure | Femoral Fixation | T Score | Femoral Size (mm) | Primary Diagnosis | Sex | Body mass index (kg/m2) | Age (yrs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Femoral Neck Fracture | Fully porous coated | -1.9 | 52 | OA | Male | 35 | 59 |
| 1.4 | Femoral Neck Fracture | Fully porous coated | -0.3 | 44 | OA | Female | 24 | 61 |
| 3.1 | Femoral Neck Fracture | Cemented | -1.6 | 46 | OA | Female | 29 | 43 |
| 10 | Femoral Loosening | Fully porous coated | -0.5 | 54 | Dysplasia | Male | 34 | 50 |
| 17.8* | Femoral Loosening | Cemented | -2.1 | 52 | AVN | Male | 31 | 31 |
* The primary indication of hip resurfacing was avascular necrosis for this young gentleman. The symptom of severe pain due to avascular necrosis into femoral component was found 17.8 months post-operatively with visual analog scale pain score of 9/10. The patient waited to revise to total hip arthroplasty 27.6 months after surgery.
Figure 1Kaplan-Meier survivorship curves with use of femoral component failure, acetabular component failure, or either for any reason taken as the end point.
Summary of the full and reduced multivariable logistic regression model.
| Variables | Degree of Freedom | Type* | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Femoral fixation type | 1 | C | 0.7 |
| Femoral Component Size | 1 | N | 0.5 |
| Primary DX | 1 | C | 0.95 |
| Sex | 1 | C | 0.27 |
| Age | 1 | N | 0.67 |
| T-score | 2** | C | |
| BMI | 1 | N | |
| T-score | 2** | C | |
| BMI | 1 | N | |
* C = Category; N = Numerical
** Grouped with T≥0, 0 > T > -1.5, and T≤ -1.5
Risk analysis between failure rates with T-score, body mass index, or combined.
| Variable | Threshold | Failure Rate | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T-score | T ≥ 0 | 0/172 | 0% | 0.003 |
| 0 > T > -1.5 | 2/161 | 1.2% | ||
| T ≤ -1.5 | 3/40 | 8% | ||
| Body mass index | < 29 | 1/234 | 0.4% | 0.05 |
| ≥ 29 | 4/139 | 2.9% | ||
| Combined | T < -1.5 & BMI ≥ 29 | 3/12 | 25% | < 0.001 |
| Others | 2/361 | 0.6% | ||
Figure 2Correlation of the success rate as a function of T-score and BMI.