J Korean Orthop Assoc.  2003 Jun;38(3):233-238.

Clinical and Radiological Results of Revision Acetabular Arthroplasty using an Acetabular Roof Reinforcement Ring

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. oskim@snu.ac.kr
  • 2Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Cheju National University, College of Medicine, Jeju, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
We evaluated the clinical and radiological results of acetabular reconstructions using an acetabular roof reinforcement ring (ARR). MATERIALS AND METHODS: From May 1993 to November 1999, 18 hips revised with ARR were evaluated. The mean age at operation was 53 years. The average follow-up period was 51 months (24-94 months). Acetabular defects were classified based on the AAOS classification system. There was one case of type IIA defect, six cases of type IIB defect, ten cases of type III defect and one case of type IV defect. All were treated with morselized allografts and autografts, and three were reconstructed with additional structural autografts. RESULTS: The average Harris hip score improved from 54 preoperatively to 76 postoperatively, but five patients complained of intermittent hip pain. On the last follow-up radiographs, the bone grafts were united and remodeled in all cases, but only partial resorption was observed in two hips. We found evidence of osteolysis in four hips and observed cup migration in three hips. Three hips, in which Muller rings were used, were re-revised during the follow-up period.
CONCLUSION
Acetabular reconstruction using ARR led to good clinical and radiological results, but a relative high rate of rerevision was shown in the cases fitted with the Muller ring. Appropriate ARR should be used depending on the extent of the acetabular defect.

Keyword

Acetabulum; Bone defect; Acetabular revision; Acetabular roof reinforcement ring (ARR)

MeSH Terms

Acetabulum*
Allografts
Arthroplasty*
Autografts
Classification
Follow-Up Studies
Hip
Humans
Osteolysis
Transplants
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