Literature DB >> 9759813

Postoperative mortality after total hip arthroplasty. An analysis of deaths after two thousand seven hundred and thirty-six procedures.

J T Dearborn1, W H Harris.   

Abstract

We retrospectively determined the prevalence and nature of mortality as many as ninety days after 2736 primary and revision total hip arthroplasties performed in 2002 patients by one surgeon at a teaching hospital between January 1969 and December 1996. All but seventy-one of the patients had received prophylaxis against venous thromboembolic disease. There were no intraoperative deaths, and no events during the operation could be linked directly to postoperative mortality. Eight deaths (mortality rate, 0.3 per cent) occurred within ninety days after the 2736 procedures. Four deaths (mortality rate, 0.15 per cent) occurred during the initial hospitalization. The cause of seven of the deaths was determined. Three patients died as a result of preexisting disease (severe hepatorenal disease, metastatic esophageal cancer, or severe cardiac disease), and one patient died from sepsis with a gram-negative organism during a thoracotomy eight days postoperatively. A bleeding complication that occurred while the patient was receiving warfarin therapy led to the death of two other patients; one of these deaths occurred in 1974 and the other, in 1982. At the time that these patients were managed, the desired prothrombin time was considered to be twice the control value. The remaining patient, who had had a clip placed on the inferior vena cava after a pulmonary embolus occurred in 1970, died secondary to acute, severe thrombosis of this vessel after a total hip arthroplasty in 1971. The patient for whom the cause of death was not determined had had an artificial aortic valve and had been receiving chronic warfarin therapy. She died suddenly eighty-nine days postoperatively; no autopsy was performed. No patient died as the direct result of a known pulmonary embolus. No deaths related to venous thromboembolic disease or its prophylaxis or treatment occurred after 1982 (1458 operations). We attribute this, in part, to reduced levels of warfarin prophylaxis and improved management with warfarin. The ninety-day postoperative mortality rate after 2736 procedures performed over nearly three decades was low (0.3 per cent). This span of time included the period before the introduction of many current improvements in perioperative care, such as routine intubation of patients under general anesthesia, continuous monitoring of the electrocardiogram intraoperatively, and blood-gas determinations. When the patients who died as a result of known, severe preexisting disease were excluded, the mortality rate was 0.18 per cent (five of 2733).

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9759813     DOI: 10.2106/00004623-199809000-00007

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


  16 in total

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Authors:  R D Start; S S Cross
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1999-09       Impact factor: 3.411

2.  Age and obesity are risk factors for adverse events after total hip arthroplasty.

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Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 4.176

3.  The Impact of Femoral Component Cementation on Fracture and Mortality Risk in Elective Total Hip Arthroplasty: Analysis from a National Medicare Sample.

Authors:  Adam I Edelstein; Eric L Hume; Liliana E Pezzin; Emily L McGinley; Timothy R Dillingham
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  2022-03-16       Impact factor: 5.284

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Journal:  Clin Orthop Relat Res       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 4.176

5.  Early postoperative mortality following total hip arthroplasty in a community setting: a single surgeon experience.

Authors:  Kristin A Miller; John J Callaghan; Devon D Goetz; Richard C Johnston
Journal:  Iowa Orthop J       Date:  2003

6.  Risk Factor Analysis for 30-Day Mortality After Primary THA in a Single Institution.

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Authors:  Michael Aynardi; Luis Pulido; Javad Parvizi; Peter F Sharkey; Richard H Rothman
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8.  [Proximal fracture of the femur in elderly patients. The influence of surgical care and patient characteristics on post-operative mortality].

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9.  Estimating risk in Medicare patients with THA: an electronic risk calculator for periprosthetic joint infection and mortality.

Authors:  Kevin J Bozic; Kevin Ong; Edmund Lau; Daniel J Berry; Thomas P Vail; Steven M Kurtz; Harry E Rubash
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10.  India Joining the World of Hip and Knee Registries: Present Status-A Leap Forward.

Authors:  Shrinand V Vaidya; Abhinav D Jogani; Jahavir A Pachore; Richard Armstrong; Chintan S Vaidya
Journal:  Indian J Orthop       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 1.251

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