| Literature DB >> 26169452 |
Yasser R Farid1, Rishi Thakral2, Henry A Finn3.
Abstract
Rotating-hinge knee prostheses have low survivorship and high complications except in primary arthroplasties in elderly patients. We retrospectively reviewed 142 single third-generation design, rotating hinge prostheses (11 primary procedures and 131 revisions) at 57 months follow up. Implant survival was 73%. Successful two-stage reimplantation for prosthetic infection was 78.4% but new infection rate was 22%. The tibial component was durable while the femoral component was problematic. We observed only one patellar maltracking and no polyethylene wear. A third generation rotating-hinge arthroplasty reconstruction was reliable in complex problems. Outcomes in primary situations were excellent. Complications were the rule rather than the exception in revisions. With timely intervention, attention to soft tissue coverage, and realistic expectations, complications were contained and functional benefits were appreciable.Entities:
Keywords: complications; knee arthroplasty; revision; rotating-hinge; salvage
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26169452 DOI: 10.1016/j.arth.2015.06.033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Arthroplasty ISSN: 0883-5403 Impact factor: 4.757