Results of the Evora dual-mobility socket after a minimum follow-up of five years
Dislocation is a well-known complication of total hip arthroplasty. The risk can be reduced to one or two cases per thousand using a dual-mobility cup. The survival rate achieved with the Bousquet implant is 95% at 10 years. The complications with this implant are early mobilization and inguinal pai...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Revue de chirurgie orthopedique et reparatrice de l'appareil moteur 2008-12, Vol.94 (8), p.e17-e22 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Dislocation is a well-known complication of total hip arthroplasty. The risk can be reduced to one or two cases per thousand using a dual-mobility cup. The survival rate achieved with the Bousquet implant is 95% at 10 years. The complications with this implant are early mobilization and inguinal pain. An overly-large cup and insufficient primary and secondary fixation can be implicated. The design of the original implant was later modified to limit these early complications. The purpose of this study was to check the validity of these design changes.
The chromium–cobalt moulded cementless cup was used. The outer surface of this cup presents large geometric striations and is coated with hydroxyapatite. The cup has the shape of a 180° half sphere and a posterior wall prolongation measuring 6.5
mm. Three mechanisms were used for the primary fixation: an asymmetrical growth ring, four anchorage stems and a superior screw. Two hundred cementless cups were implanted in 194 patients. The femoral piece was a Charnley stainless-steel implant (
n
=
139), a titanium SEM implant (
n
=
59) or another implant (
n
=
12). Cement was used for femoral fixation in 193 implantations. The series included 97 women and 103 men with osteoarthritis (
n
=
180), necrosis (
n
=
16) and surgery for fracture and primary arthroplasty (
n
=
9). The Harris and Postel–Merle-d’Aubigné scores were noted. Eight radiographic criteria were analyzed to assess the position of the cup and the radiological course of the interface.
The mean follow-up was six years and the minimum was five years. The mean age at surgery was 70 years (range, 32 to 91). At last follow-up, 17 patients had died, eight were lost to follow-up and five were bedridden. Three patients underwent revision surgery. Thus, this analysis included 170 prostheses followed for more than five years (mean, six years; range, five to seven years). The Harris score improved from 48 to 92 and the Postel–Merle-d’Aubigné score from 2/5/4 to 5.8/5.9/5.5 (range, 4 to 6/5 to 6/1 to 6). None of the patients complained of anterior pain during active hip flexion in supine position (related to ilio-psoas irritation). Cup inclination was 46° on average (range, 62 to 22°). Medialization, lateralization or ascension greater than 10
mm from the center of rotation was not observed on the postoperative films. At the last follow-up, no measurable mobilization or migration could be identified on plain X-rays. Radiolucent lines, condensations and bony defect |
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ISSN: | 0035-1040 1776-2553 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.rco.2007.10.015 |