Midlands Orthopaedics, P.A. Columbia, South Carolina, USA.
J Orthop Surg Res. 2011 Oct 17;6:55. doi: 10.1186/1749-799X-6-55.
Femoral head cysts have been identified as a risk factor for early femoral failures after metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA) based on limited scientific data. However, we routinely performed HRA if less than 1/3 of the femoral head appeared destroyed by cysts on the preoperative radiograph. This study was undertaken to analyze whether there was an added risk of early femoral failures in HRA when femoral head cysts were present.
This retrospective case-control study included 939 MOM HRAs operated by a single surgeon with use of the posterior minimally invasive surgical (MIS) approach between November 2005 and January 2009. Patients with all diagnoses except osteonecrosis were included. Among them, 117 HRAs had femoral head cysts ≥ 1 cm identified in surgery. All cysts were treated with bone grafting using acetabular reamings packed into the cavitary defect (instead of filling the cysts with cement). The control group, which had no cyst observed at the time of surgery, was randomly selected from our database using computer algorithms to match those cases in the study group for the parameters of surgical date, age, gender, body mass index, diagnosis, femoral fixation method, and the size of the femoral component.
The minimum follow-up was 24 months for both groups. The early femoral failure rate in the study group was 3/117 (2.6%) and 0/117 in the control group; there was no statistical difference between these two groups (P = 0.08). In the study group, there were two femoral neck fractures (revised): both occurred in patients having a cyst size of 1 cm3; and there was one femoral component loosening at 3-year follow up in a patient having a cyst size of 2 cm(3).
Although the risk of early femoral failures among the group with cysts appeared higher than the group without cysts, we could not demonstrate a significant statistical difference between the two groups. It is possible that bone grafting cysts rather than cementing them may account for the low failure rate, and that this technique may minimize the risk of resurfacing a femoral head with cysts.
基于有限的科学数据,股骨头上的囊肿已被确定为金属对金属髋关节表面置换术(HRA)后早期股骨失败的一个危险因素。然而,如果术前 X 光片上显示股骨头上小于 1/3 的区域被囊肿破坏,我们通常会进行 HRA。本研究旨在分析在存在股骨头囊肿的情况下,进行 HRA 是否会增加早期股骨失败的风险。
本回顾性病例对照研究纳入了 2005 年 11 月至 2009 年 1 月间由同一位医生采用后入路微创外科(MIS)技术进行的 939 例 MOM HRA。纳入的患者均为除股骨头坏死以外的其他诊断。其中,117 例 HRA 术中发现股骨头上的囊肿≥1cm。所有囊肿均采用髋臼锉取骨植骨治疗,将骨屑填入囊腔缺损处(而非用骨水泥填充囊肿)。对照组为术中未发现囊肿的患者,我们使用计算机算法从数据库中随机选择,以与研究组病例相匹配,比较两组的手术日期、年龄、性别、体重指数、诊断、股骨固定方式和股骨假体尺寸等参数。
两组的最低随访时间均为 24 个月。研究组的早期股骨失败率为 3/117(2.6%),对照组为 0/117,两组间无统计学差异(P=0.08)。在研究组中,有两例股骨颈骨折(翻修):均发生于囊肿体积为 1cm³的患者;有一例囊肿体积为 2cm³的患者在 3 年随访时出现股骨假体松动。
尽管有囊肿的组的早期股骨失败风险似乎高于无囊肿的组,但我们未能证明两组间存在显著的统计学差异。用骨屑填充囊肿而不是用骨水泥填充可能是低失败率的原因,这种技术可能最大限度地降低了用有囊肿的股骨头进行髋关节表面置换的风险。