Artigo Revisado por pares

Classification and Management of the Unstable Total Hip Arthroplasty

2011; Elsevier BV; Volume: 27; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.arth.2011.09.010

ISSN

1532-8406

Autores

Glenn D. Wera, Nick T. Ting, Mario Moric, Wayne G. Paprosky, Scott M. Sporer, Craig J. Della Valle,

Tópico(s)

Orthopedic Infections and Treatments

Resumo

Seventy-five total hip arthroplasty revisions for instability were classified into 6 primary etiologies: I, acetabular component malposition; II, femoral component malposition; III, abductor deficiency; IV, impingement; V, late wear; or VI, unresolved etiology. The most common etiologies were cup malposition (type I; 33%) and abductor deficiency (type III; 36%). At a mean of 35.3 months, 11 redislocations occurred (14.6%). Acetabular revisions were protective against redislocation (P < .015). The number of previous operations (P = .0379) and previously failed constrained liners (P < .02) were risk factors for failure. Tripolar constrained liners demonstrated improved survivorship vs locking ring types (P < .02); cemented constrained liners failed more often than modular constrained liners (P < .0018). The highest risk of failure was in patients with abductor insufficiency with revisions for other etiologies having a success rate of 90%.

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