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Hip

DIFFERENT BEARINGS ON EACH SIDE HAVE DIFFERENT INCIDENCE OF PERIPROSTHETIC FEMORAL FRACTURE IN BILATERAL CEMENTED TOTAL HIP

The International Hip Society (IHS), London, England, September 2017



Abstract

It is unknown whether the risk of periprosthetic femoral fracture is the same in patients with two different bearing surfaces, ceramic on ceramic (CoC) and ceramic on polyethylene (CoP).

We retrospectively reviewed selected 126 patients (252 hips) with bilateral THA (one ceramic-ceramic, AL/AL and the contralateral ceramic-polyethylene, AL/PE) who had THA performed between from 1981 to 1985 for osteonecrosis. Surgery was performed in patients who were average 50 years (range 30–60) old. The stem was always cemented and the same for both sides. The alumina head was 32 mm in diameter. The acetabular component was a polyethylene cup or an alumina cup and was always cemented. The mean follow-up for living patients was 35 years (range 32 to 36), and the mean follow-up for patients who had died was 23 years range 15 to 30).

14 periprosthetic fractures occurred in 252 hips after THA, representing an overall prevalence of 5.5% for hips and 11% for patients. Periprosthetic fractures increased in number with followup: 3 patients (3%) sustained fractures within 10 years of their primary implantation, 7 within 20 years, 10 within 30 years, 14 (11%) within 35 years. The risk of fracture was influenced (p=0.01) by the bearing surfaces at the time of prosthetic implantation, low (1%) for ceramic on ceramic (1/14 fractures; 1/126 hips), higher (10%) for ceramic on PE (13/14; 13/126).

When the contralateral hip of the same patient is the control, the long-term risk of periprosthetic fracture on the side with PE cup is greater (10%) than on the side with ceramic/ceramic bearing.


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