The
History of Hip Resurfacing
| In the 1930's Phillip Wiles from the Middlesex
Hospital designed and inserted the first total hip replacements.
Prior to this date prosthetic replacement surgery was of the
hemi-arthroplasty type with only one arthritic surface being
replaced and the results were unsatisfactory. The records of
Wiles' cases were lost during the war but one patient is
reported to still have their implant in situ 35 years later.1 |

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GK McKee was a trainee with Wiles and following
his appointment as Orthopaedic Surgeon in Norwich, England, began
development of total hip replacement designs. He developed various
uncemented prototype total hip replacements in the 1940's and 1950's.
McKee presented his results to the BOA meeting in Cambridge in 1951.The
results in those early days were initial relief of pain followed by
loosening and mechanical failure. |
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Haboush2 introduced polymethylmediacrylate
for fixation of hip endoprostheses in 1953 and Charnley popularised this
use of bone cement.
McKee's cement fixed McKee-Farrar total hip replacement (THR)
from 1960 was the first widely used and successful THR. This THR
had a Thompson stem, a chrome cobalt metal on metal articulation
and both the acetabular and femoral components were fixed with
cement.
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Professor Sir John Charnley was convinced that
the metal on metal articulation of the McKee joint was unsatisfactory.
He performed experiments to show that the McKee joint had a high
frictional torque in the laboratory and he predicted that this
frictional torque would eventually loosen the fixation of the McKee
components in their bony bed. He was convinced that the natural elastohydrodynamic lubrication with synovial fluid could not be used to
reduce the frictional torque of the metal on metal articulation and he
began his search for self-lubricating bearings.
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This search took him into the field
of polymers and his first attempt at hip arthroplasty in the
early 1950's was a Teflon on Teflon bearing used as a
resurfacing for the arthritic femoral head and acetabulum.
Unfortunately the Teflon on Teflon bearings wore out within two
years. |
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Charnley's next attempt at hip arthroplasty spanned the
years 1958-1962. This arthroplasty followed the McKee idea of resecting
the femoral head and inserting a stemmed component cemented into the
upper femur. The metal head of this component articulated against a
Teflon socket inserted into the acetabulum.3 Several hundred
patients were treated by this method but unfortunately, high wear of the
Teflon occurred, causing severe osteolysis and loosening in the
surrounding bone and a large number of revision operations had to be
performed. (Fig.6 & 7).
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Charnley
Metal/Teflon THR showing
marked Teflon wear
with surrounding Osteolysis. |
Marked
linear penetration of
22.25mm head into Teflon cup. |
In this series of patients, Charnley used four different
head sizes and noted that the larger femoral heads had a higher
volumetric polymer wear. He therefore determined to use a small
(22.25mm) head against polymer in his future designs in order to
minimize plastic wear volume. This had two undesirable side effects.
Linear penetration into the polymer cup was increased with the small
head and stability was compromised.
Charnley's third attempt at hip arthroplasty began in
1962 and involved a stemmed cemented femoral component, a 22.25 mm
femoral head and a high-density polyethylene cup inserted into the
acetabulum.
That implant was successful in the elderly inactive
population of patients treated and is the basis of all hip arthroplasties developed since. Charnley recognized that
the success of
this athroplasty would largely depend on the rate and effect of the polyethylene wear.
He cautioned against
the use of his THR is your patients.
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"Below the age of 65" the situation is very
different. The younger the patient, the more the surgeon must guard
against allowing the patients subjective symptoms to influence his
judgment. The decision to operate should be made almost entirely on the
surgeon's objective assessment. He must turn deaf ears to exaggerated
adjectives used to describe the intolerable quality of the pain".
"Technique of delaying operation":
"Obviously not many patients between 35 and 45 years of age will accept
the advice to delay surgery for a more or less indefinite period of
years (say 5 years) unless the method of presenting this advice is
adjusted to their particular psychology. A good way of doing this is
never to accept for operation at the first consultation very young
patients with only moderate physical signs. It is essential to see the
patient several times, at first perhaps at 6 monthly intervals".
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"In this age group we look for factors which offer a
'built-in restraint" which will continue after the operation, such as
defective knees or ankles, and impose some general physical limitations
on the patient. Built-in restraint is any factor which will persist
after total hip replacement, to hold back physical activity below that
expected of a normal subject of the same age". |
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Charnley understood well that younger patients with a
high activity level were the problem group for this type of replacement,
but he did accept for operation young patients whose crippled general
condition prevented them from resuming a high activity level and wearing
out the joint.
This restriction of
surgery to the elderly population
or the young crippled population
was widely practiced and taught by Charnley.
This is reflected in the case selection in results
published from Wrightington and from other centres that adopted the
Charnley method. This aspect of patient selection must be clearly
understood by those who seek evidence of effectiveness in the published
literature relating to the treatment of the young patient with an
arthritic hip. The published results do not relate to young patients
with an arthritic hip, they relate to young patients who have another
built-in restraint giving them the activity level of an elderly inactive
patient.
Charnley did use the McKee metal on metal joint in his
clinical practice and he conceded that the McKee worked just as well in
patients as his own commenting, "It is nice to know that both are
British".

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Peter Ring from Redhill, Surrey, provided the next
development in hip arthroplasty (Fig.8).
He distrusted bone cement and
developed a self locking total hip replacement for uncemented fixation.
(Fig. 9) This design also had a metal on metal articulation.
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Thus, by the 1970's
three types of total hip replacement were in common use:
the McKee, Charnley and Ring types. |
Surgeons across the world experienced initial success
with all varieties and attention then focused on which would be more
durable. Charnley's intervention at this stage proved decisive. He
returned to his favorite theme of frictional torque. He built a pendulum
comparator to test the frictional torque of the McKee metal on metal
joint versus the Charnley metal on polyethylene joint. (Fig. 10). Under
test the McKee metal on metal came to a juddering halt and the Charnley
joint kept on swinging. (Fig. 11)
Thousands of visiting surgeons to Wrightington
were immediately convinced of the superiority of the Charnley joint and the
metal on metal joint finally ended in the late 1970's when McKee and
Ring themselves switched to metal on polyethylene articulations for
their own hip replacement designs.
End of an era
Chamley died believing that his metal polyethylene joint had been
totally vindicated. McKee died believing that his metal on metal joint
had been rightly superseded by the metal on polyethylene articulation.
Peter Ring, who is still alive, was initially optimistic
about his new polyethylene joint but with the passage of time saw the
results ruined by osteolysis from polyethylene debris, a complication
unheard of in his earlier metal on metal joint. Ring now deeply regrets
ever moving away from the metal on metal articulation.
Satisfactory results have been published for the McKee
metal on metal,4-5 the Charnley6 and the best for
the Ring Metal on Metal with 5% revision at 17 yrs.7
The Modern Era
It is now accepted that a Charnley type total hip replacement can give
perfectly satisfactory results in an elderly inactive population. The
results published are a reflection of the quality of the surgical
procedure with good results (failure of below 1% per year) reported from
specialist centres.6,8,9,10 Less good results are reported
from general hospitals, with 9% revision at 5 years and 27% of
patients having a poor outcome.11 (Trent Regional
Arthroplasty Study)
Back to History of Hip Resurfacing Menu
5/29/2006
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