Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery, CIUSSS-de-L’Est-de-L’Ile-de-Montréal, Hospital Maisonneuve-Rosemont, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
2. Department of Surgery, University of Montreal, Canada
Abstract
Purpose: Short stems were developed with the promise of providing easier implantation, facilitating revision, reducing thigh pain and proximal stress shielding. The aim of this study is to present the mid-term clinical results of a titanium short stem with modular neck. Methods: This is a prospective case series of 144 THAs performed on a series of 131 patients using the PROFEMUR Preserve Femoral Stem (MicroPort Orthopedics, Arlington, TN, USA). 2 surgeons, operated on the patients using a mini-posterior approach. The primary outcomes evaluated were stem revision for aseptic loosening and all-cause stem revision. Clinical and radiographic outcomes were also assessed. Results: Of the 144 THAs, there were 43 males and 101 females, with an average age of 61 (range 22–92) years at surgery. After a mean of 78 (range 53–87) months follow-up, there were 2 (1.5%) femoral implant revisions; 1 for early femoral periprosthetic fracture and 1 for fatigue failure of the modular femoral neck. There were no cases of stem aseptic loosening and radiographic analysis demonstrated no cases of stem migration. The mean UCLA activity, WOMAC and Fogotten Joint scores were respectively 6.1, 10.7 and 86.6. 70% of prosthetic hips were observed as having no restriction and 99.2% of patients were satisfied with their THA. Conclusions: This short modular stem produced satisfactory clinical and radiological results at mid-term, with 98.5% implant survival for any cause of stem revision and no revisions for aseptic loosening. Long-term results are required to further evaluate the stem’s promising early results.
Subject
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery
Cited by
6 articles.
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