Artigo Revisado por pares

Surface finish of the Exeter Trauma Stem

2013; British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery; Volume: 95-B; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1302/0301-620x.95b1.31001

ISSN

2049-4408

Autores

Timothy Petheram, M Bone, TJ Joyce, Ignacio Serrano‐Pedraza, Mike Reed, Paul Partington,

Tópico(s)

Bone fractures and treatments

Resumo

Recent guidance recommends the use of a well-proven cemented femoral stem for hemiarthroplasty in the management of fractures of the femoral neck, and the Exeter Trauma Stem (ETS) has been suggested as an example of such an implant. The design of this stem was based on the well-proven Exeter Total Hip Replacement stem (ETHRS). This study assessed the surface finish of the ETS in comparison with the ETHRS. Two ETSs and two ETHRSs were examined using a profilometer with a precision of 1 nm and compared with an explanted Exeter Matt stem. The mean roughness average (RA) of the ETSs was approximately ten times higher than that of the ETHRSs (0.235 μm (0.095 to 0.452) versus 0.025 μm (0.011 to 0.059); p < 0.001). The historical Exeter Matt stem roughness measured a mean RA of 0.973 μm (0.658 to 1.159). The change of the polished Exeter stem to a matt surface finish in 1976 resulted in a high stem failure rate. We do not yet know whether the surface differences between ETS and ETHRS will be clinically significant. We propose the inclusion of hemiarthroplasty stems in national joint registries.

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