Surgical approach may influence survival of large-diameter head metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty: A 6- to 10-year follow-up study

Chih Chien Hu, Tsan Wen Huang, Shih Jie Lin, Po Chun Lin, Feng Chih Kuo, Kuo Ti Peng, Kuo Chin Huang, Hsin Nung Shih, Mel S. Lee*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Large-diameter head (LDH) metal-on-metal (MoM) total hip arthroplasty (THA) has lost popularity because of metal allergy or ALTRs (adverse local tissue reactions) in the past decade. Whether the surgical approach may influence the survival of LDH-MoM-THA has not been reported. From 2006 to 2009, we performed 96 LDH-MoM-THAs on 80 patients using an in situ head-neck assembly technique through a modified Watson-Jones approach. With a mean follow-up of 8.4 years (range, 6.3-10.1 years), the implant survival rate was 100%. All patients were satisfied with the results and the Harris Hip Score improved from 52 points to 98 points. No ALTRs were found, but 17.7% of the 96 hips (17 adverse events) experienced adverse events related to the cup, including 5 cases of outlier cup malposition, 11 cases of inadequate cup seating, and 1 acetabular fracture. The tissue tension that was improved by a muscle-sparing approach might lessen the chance of microseparation or edge-loading that is taken as the major risk for early implant failure. Further investigation of whether these LDH-MoM-THAs would fail or not would require a longer follow-up or even retrieval analysis in the future.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4209634
JournalBioMed Research International
Volume2017
DOIs
StatePublished - 2017

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Chih-Chien Hu et al.

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