Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4063104 | The Journal of Arthroplasty | 2006 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
This article presents 6-year mean (2-12-year) clinical and radiographic follow-up of 62 proximally porous-coated modular S-ROM femoral revisions. These patients come from 106 consecutive cases in 97 patients performed by one surgeon between 1987 and 1992 without structural allograft (femoral bone loss was Paprosky types 1-3B). In the 99 cases with known outcome, there were 7 postoperative complications: 2 dislocations (2%), 2 deep infections (2%), 2 periprosthetic femoral fractures (2%), and 1 transient sciatic nerve palsy (1%).There was only 1 revision of the index surgery for a problem related to the stem (dislocation). Of the 62 stems, 59 (95%) with complete follow-up were ingrown, 2 (3%) were loose, and 1 had stable fibrous fixation. This represents a mechanical failure rate of 5%. Stems greater than 16 mm in diameter were more likely to show stress shielding (P = .009) and not to be ingrown (P = .0006).
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Authors
William L. FRACS, William K. FRACS, Bernard FRACS,