J Korean Hip Soc.  2006 Sep;18(4):139-145. 10.5371/jkhs.2006.18.4.139.

Cementless Total Hip Arthroplasty with Circumferentially Proximal Porous-Coated Femoral Stem -Minimum 10-Year Follow-up Results

Abstract

Purpose
The results of a more than 10-year follow-up after total hip arthroplasties with circumferential and proximal porous-coated femoral stems were evaluated. Materials and Methods: Seventy-six patients (80 hips), who were operated on between Aug. 1991 and July 1994, were followed for more than 10 years after primary total hip arthroplasties using Multilock stems. The mean age at the time of the operations was 47.3 years old and the mean duration of follow-up was 12.3 years. The clinical results and radiological findings were evaluated. Results: The mean Harris hip scores improved from 54.7 points to 88.5 points at the time of the 10-year follow up. On the last follow-up radiograph, endosteal bone formation was observed in 70 hips (90%) and all femoral stems were biologically stable. Femoral osteolysis, which was linear in Gruen zone I and VII and mostly restricted to the proximal zones, was observed in 67 hips (84%), and no hip had distal osteolysis in the femur. There was no loosening, migration, or revisions of the stems. Conclusion: Total hip arthroplasties using circumferential and proximal porous coated Multilock femoral stems demonstrated stable osseous fixation and no distal osteolysis for a minimum 10-year follow-up; therefore, all stems were reported to have satisfactory outcomes. With improvement of cup design and liner wear, circumferential and proximal porous coating designs of femoral stems can be an alternative answer to mechanical failure due to aseptic loosening.

Keyword

Hip; Cementless total hip arthroplasty; Multilock femoral stem; Circumferential porous coating; Osteolysis

MeSH Terms

Arthroplasty
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip*
Femur
Follow-Up Studies*
Hip
Humans
Osteogenesis
Osteolysis
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