Literature DB >> 6787059

A ten-year follow-up study of our first one hundred consecutive Charnley total hip replacements.

E A Salvati, P D Wilson, M N Jolley, F Vakili, P Aglietti, G C Brown.   

Abstract

This study concerns the fate of the first 100 Charnley total hip replacements done in ninety ninety patients at The Hospital for Special Surgery. At the time of this study, the follow-up of the surviving sixty-seven patients ranged from nine and one-half to eleven and one-half year (average, ten years). When studied at an average of ten years after the initial operation, twenty-six of the original 100 hips that had been operated on had been lost to follow-up due to death, and seven could not be traced. Of the remaining sixty-seven hips that were available for clinical evaluation, thirty-seven were rated as excellent; twenty-two, as good; four, as fair; and four, as poor, according to The Hospital for Special Surgery scoring system. The radiographs of fifty-four of the sixty-seven hips were available for this evaluation. Twenty-three of these hips showed radiographic signs of problems that appeared to have no significant bearing on the quality of their clinical results. There was loosening of the femoral component in five hips which occurred within the first three years after operation and then apparently stabilized. One required reoperation eight years after the original surgery. There was one fracture of the femoral stem eight years after the original operation, requiring reoperation. Six hips demonstrated so-called calcar resorption, the greatest measuring fourteen and thirty millimeters. Ten acetabular components showed wear of more than one millimeter, the maximum being five millimeters in both components of a patient with bilateral hip replacement. Two acetabular components migrated, one requiring reoperation due to progressive bone loss nine and one-half years after the original procedure. All three reoperations have been successful to date.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1981        PMID: 6787059

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am        ISSN: 0021-9355            Impact factor:   5.284


  23 in total

1.  The Hospital for Special Surgery 1972-1989; Philip D. Wilson, Jr., Eighth Surgeon-in-Chief.

Authors:  David B Levine
Journal:  HSS J       Date:  2010-04-27

2.  Reconstructive surgery of the lower extremity.

Authors:  R J Claridge
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  1990-03       Impact factor: 3.275

3.  Comparison between straight- and curved-stem Müller femoral prostheses. 5- to 10-year results of 545 total hip replacements.

Authors:  J Wilson-MacDonald; E Morscher
Journal:  Arch Orthop Trauma Surg       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 3.067

4.  [Results of cement-free implanted, Robert Mathys isoelastic acetabular cup].

Authors:  L C Olivier; F Neudeck; C Hippel; S Kaiser; K P Schmit-Neuerburg
Journal:  Unfallchirurgie       Date:  1998-04

5.  Long-term results and survivorship of the McKee-Farrar total hip prosthesis.

Authors:  T Visuri
Journal:  Arch Orthop Trauma Surg       Date:  1987

6.  Total hip replacement with Müller prosthesis and ICLH double cup. 2- to 6-year results of a prospective comparative study.

Authors:  A Reigstad; M Brandt; K R Hetland
Journal:  Arch Orthop Trauma Surg       Date:  1986

7.  Ten-year results of cemented Weller-type total hip arthroplasties. Analysis using different definitions of failure.

Authors:  M Böhler; K Knahr; M Riegler; M Salzer
Journal:  Arch Orthop Trauma Surg       Date:  1994       Impact factor: 3.067

Review 8.  Regulation of hematopoiesis.

Authors:  J F Desforges
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1984-07

9.  Case report 246. Osteolysis of the ilium associated with a loose acetabular cup following total hip arthroplasty, secondary to foreign body reaction to polyethylene and methyl methacrylate.

Authors:  R S Bell; G B Ha'eri; S B Goodman; V L Fornasier
Journal:  Skeletal Radiol       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 2.199

Review 10.  Identification and preoperative optimization of risk factors to prevent periprosthetic joint infection.

Authors:  Seung-Hoon Baek
Journal:  World J Orthop       Date:  2014-07-18
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