4 research outputs found
Ten-year follow-up of an anatomical hydroxyapatite-coated total hip prosthesis
We report our results after ten year follow-up of 107 consecutive ABG-I hip prostheses implanted between June 1990 and December 1992: Only 84 prostheses were still in the study after ten years, but only six patients had undergone surgical revision. We can consider our clinical outcomes as excellent, with a whole-implant survival rate greater than 96%, a mean Merle D’Aubigne and Postel score increasing from 7.97 before operation to 16.17 at ten year follow-up, and a personal subjective assessment as excellent or good in 82.14% of patients. However, radiographic outcomes are more worrying: around 90% of patients show a stress-shielding phenomenon and granulomatous lesions in the proximal femur, and more than 82% suffer polyethylene wear greater than one  millimetre (mean 1.68 mm). We think that zirconia stem heads and hooded antiluxation PE inserts are determining factors in the process of PE wear and, secondarily, in cancellous bone resorption and bone osteolysis
Fifteen- to 20-year results of uncemented tapered fully porous-coated cobalt-chrome stems
In this paper, we evaluated the long-term results of uncemented total hip arthroplasties using tapered fully porous-coated cobalt-chrome stems (Autophor 900S). The average follow-up was 206Â months in 127 hips (113 patients). The articulations of the joints were ceramic-on-polyethylene in 43 hips and ceramic-on-ceramic in 84. The survival rate of the stems at 17Â years was 94.5%. A stable stem with bony ingrowth was identified in all 120 hips, excluding femoral revision cases (seven hips). The causes of the seven femoral revisions were aseptic loosening in four, infection in two, and stem fracture in one. No surgical intervention was performed for osteolysis or stress shielding. The Autophor 900S tapered fully porous-coated cobalt-chrome femoral stem revealed encouraging radiographic long-term stability