Bone Remodelling after Total Hip Arthroplasty Using an Uncemented Anatomic Femoral Stem: A Three-Year Prospective Study Using Bone Densitometry

Purpose. To evaluate the clinical, radiological, and densitometric changes in the bone-remodelling patterns of femoral stems aligned in neutral, valgus, or varus positions. Methods. Between February and October 2000, 70 patients underwent unilateral total hip arthroplasty for primary osteoarthritis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: JJ Panisello, L Herrero, A Herrera, V Canales, A Martinez, J Cuenca
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2006-04-01
Series:Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/230949900601400108
Description
Summary:Purpose. To evaluate the clinical, radiological, and densitometric changes in the bone-remodelling patterns of femoral stems aligned in neutral, valgus, or varus positions. Methods. Between February and October 2000, 70 patients underwent unilateral total hip arthroplasty for primary osteoarthritis using an uncemented Anatomique Benoist Girard (ABG) II stem. 69 patients (30 males and 39 females) with a mean age of 59 years (range, 38–76 years) and a mean body weight of 79.3 kg (range, 29–110 kg) completed 3 years' follow-up on bone remodelling. The clinical, radiological, and densitometric changes of the neutral, valgus, and varus groups were evaluated, and the difference in bone-remodelling patterns between the 3 groups was analysed. Results. 54 patients had neutrally placed stems, while varus and valgus malalignment occurred in 6 and 9 patients, respectively. Clinical and radiological evaluations were very similar among the 3 groups. Only densitometry could detect traceable changes resulting from the differing biomechanics of the neutral, varus, and valgus stem alignments. Conclusion. The ABG II stem design made moderate errors in alignment biomechanically tolerable. Alignment defects had no clinical consequences and resulted in minimal differences in bone remodelling.
ISSN:2309-4990