Beta
409925

Combined cementless acetabular reconstruction with bone grafting in total hip replacement after acetabular fractures treated nonoperatively

Article

Last updated: 08 Feb 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

-

Abstract

Background
Acetabular fractures are serious and challenging orthopedic injuries. Many of these fractures may potentially result in late complications that can occur with or without initial surgical treatment. Such complications usually end in post-traumatic arthritis. Once symptomatic post-traumatic arthritis has developed, options for salvage are generally limited to total hip arthroplasty (THA) and arthrodesis. Whether initial nonoperative or operative treatment was used to manage acute and highly displaced acetabular fractures, formidable problems such as nonunion, malunion, bone defect, and heterotopic bone may complicate the arthroplasty. More recent studies have evaluated the techniques of THA after an acetabular fracture initially managed by a nonoperative or an operative course. Various reconstructive strategies have been assessed in an attempt to advice improvements in the surgical protocol.
Aim
The aim of the work was to evaluate the early results of THA using cementless acetabular components combined with bone grafting in the reconstruction of the hip joint in patients with post-traumatic arthritis after an old nonoperatively treated acetabular fracture or fracture dislocation.
Patients and methods
This prospective study included 12 patients who had end-stage arthritis. All patients had old acetabular fractures either with or without hip dislocation. All patients had a nonoperative treatment for their fractures 1–5 years before presentation for total hip replacement. Clinical, laboratory, and radiological evaluations before surgery were performed. In all patients, conventional cementless cups combined with bone graft from their own femoral heads were used to fill defects and reconstruct the acetabulum. The duration of the follow-up period ranged from 1 to 3 years.
Results
Clinically, there was marked improvement in the Harris Hip Score (satisfactory results in 83.33% of the study group at the last follow-up) with special concern to postoperative pain relief, the range of hip movement, and the walking distance. Radiologically, all cups were placed in the normal hip center with no early signs of cup loosening, migration, or position change with good integration of the bone graft.
Conclusion
The results were very satisfactory and significantly in favor of using this technique using conventional cementless cups combined with autogenous bone grafting to reconstruct the acetabulum in certain cases of old united fractures of the acetabulum saving the extra costs of metallic augments, special cups, or modular reconstructions using cages or rings and achieving a superior biological and biomechanical reconstruction.

DOI

10.4103/1110-1148.145402

Keywords

arthritic acetabulum with defect, autogenous bone graft, cementless cup, durable biologic construct, old fracture acetabulum

Authors

First Name

Ahmed

Last Name

Rizk

MiddleName

S.

Affiliation

-

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

49

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

53589

Issue Date

2014-04-01

Publish Date

2014-04-01

Page Start

160

Page End

166

Print ISSN

1110-1148

Online ISSN

2090-9926

Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/article_409925.html

Detail API

http://journals.ekb.eg?_action=service&article_code=409925

Order

409,925

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Orthopaedic Journal

Publication Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Combined cementless acetabular reconstruction with bone grafting in total hip replacement after acetabular fractures treated nonoperatively

Details

Type

Article

Created At

08 Feb 2025