Abstract
PURPOSE
To evaluate the clinical and radiological results of revision total hip arthroplasty using cemetless acetabular cup and several kinds of morseled bone grafts.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
We performed 20 cases of revision total hip arthroplasties between July 1993 and June 1996. Acetabular bone deficiency was classified as type I in 4 hips, type II in 13 hips, type III in 2 hips and type IV in one hip by AAOS classification. Autogenous bone graft was used in 10 cases, heterograft in 5 cases, allograft in 2 cases and a mixture with autografts and allografts in 2 cases. The average contact rate between cup and host bone was 33.5% in type I acetabular deficiency, 65.1% in type II, 50% in type III and 39% in type IV.
RESULTS
The mean Harris hip score was 82.9 points at the last follow-up. Osseous union between host bone and graft bone occurred within 6 months in 14 cases. Radiological failure was noted in 8 cases at the last follow-up. Three cases were revised during the follow-up period. Five cases out of 7 cases in which the contact rate between acetabular cup and host bone was less than 50% were determined to be a radiologic failure. Only 2 cases of the 10 cases in which autogenous bone graft had failed grafts. The rate of complication was 7cases (35%).
CONCLUSIONS
The usage of the hemispherical cementless acetabular cup with autogenous bone graft and increasing the contact rate between the acetabular cup and host bone could be a safe management method in revision total hip arthroplasty. We recomrnend avoiding the use of heterograft in cementless cup revision arthroplasty.