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Cementation and interface analysis of early failure cases after hip-resurfacing arthroplasty
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Publikationsdatum
2012-01-11
Sprache
English
Enthalten in
Volume
36
Issue
7
Start Page
1333
End Page
1340
Citation
International Orthopaedics 36 (7): 1333-1340 (2012)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
Springer
Purpose: The use of inappropriate cementation techniques has been suggested as an adverse factor for the long-term survival of hip-resurfacing arthroplasty. Inadequate initial fixation, thermal osteonecrosis and interface biological reactions are possible causes of failure. We analysed morphological changes associated with the cementation technique in a large collection of retrieved femoral components. Methods: One hundred and fifty femoral components (mean time to failure of 8.3 months±11.0) obtained at revision surgery were analysed morphometrically and histopathologically. Cement mantle and penetration were quantified in six different regions of interest. Histopathological analysis of the bone-cement interface was performed on undecalcified processed bone tissue. Results: The vast majority of the cases differed substantially from laboratory-based cement-penetration depth recommendations. Fifty-nine cases had a fibrous membrane at the cement-bone interface. This membrane was significantly thicker in cases with osteonecrosis compared to cases viable bone. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that most failures were cemented inappropriately. We suggest that poor cementation was an important adverse factor; however, the cause of the failures was obviously multifactorial. The thickness of the fibrous membrane at the cement-bone interface differed significantly between cases with osteonecrosis and specimens with viable bone tissue. © Springer-Verlag 2012.
DDC Class
610: Medicine, Health