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ADVERSE REACTIONS TO METAL DEBRIS FOLLOWING LARGE BEARING METAL ON METAL ARTHOPLASTY



Abstract

In our independent centre, in the period from January 2003 to august 2008, over 1100 36mm MoM THRs have been implanted as well as 155 Birmingham Hip Resurfacing procedures, 402 ASR resurfacings and 75 THRs using ASR XL heads on SROM stems.

During this period we have experienced a number of failures with patients complaining of worsening groin pain at varying lengths of time post operatively. Aspiration of the hip joints yielded a large sterile effusion on each occasion. At revision, there were copious amounts of green grey fluid with varying degrees of necrosis. There were 11 failures of this nature in patients with ASR implants (10 females) and 2 in the 36 MoM THR group (one male one female).

Tissue specimens from revision surgery showed varying degrees of ‘ALVAL’ as well as consistently high numbers of histiocytes. Metal debris was also a common finding.

A fuller examination of our ASR cohort as a whole has shown that smaller components placed with inclinations > 45° and anteversions < 10 or > 20° are associated with increased metal ion levels. The 11 ASR failed joints were all sub optimally positioned (by the above definition), small components.

Explant analysis using a coordinate measuring machine and out of roundness device confirmed greater than expected wear of each component. The lower number of failures in the 36mm MoM group, as well as the equal sex incidence, suggests that the majority of these failures are due to the instigation of an immune reaction by large amounts of wear debris rather than adverse reactions to well functioning joints. It is likely that small malpositioned ASRs function in mixed to boundary lubrication, and this, combined with the larger radius of these joints compared to the 36mm MoM joints, results in more rapid wear.

Correspondence should be addressed to BHS c/o BOA, at the Royal College of Surgeons, 35–43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London, WC2A 3PE, England.