Historical Hip Resurfacing
Hip resurfacing has always been an attractive concept and the theoretical advantages of hip resurfacings are:
Sir John Charnley carried out the first hip resurfacing in the 1950's using Teflon on Teflon bearings but unfortunately these Teflon bearings wore out within two years. This problem of failure of hip resurfacing materials was to plague surgeons and engineers for the following thirty years. The 1970's saw the next significant development of hip resurfacing using materials available for total hip replacement of the day.
If we consider the situation of hemi-resurfacing arthroplasty, which is performed in avascular necrosis patients with intact acetabular cartilage, then we can see the normal outcome of a cement-fixed femoral resurfacing shell in the absence of polyethylene debris. Long term results show that these herni-arthroplasties do not fail by collapse of the femoral head and Grecula et al. report a zero loosening rate of these hemi-resurfacing arthroplasties at 15 years. 41
The conclusion of the 1970's and 1980's experiment with hip resurfacing was that: THE BAD RESULTS
OF RESURFACING It was clear that polyethylene could not be used as the bearing material in hip resurfacing as the inevitable use of a large femoral head size in the resurfacing arthroplasty would lead to excess polyethylene debris, osteolysis, loosening and collapse of femoral heads. A bearing material had to be found which would be durable for use in young active patients, and would be durable when used with a large diameter articulation. In addition, the bearing material had to be capable of manufacture as a thin component to avoid excessive resection of valuable bone stock in young patients. Ironically such material had in fact been in successful clinical use for thirty years but had not been used in resurfacing arthroplasty in any significantly large study.
Back to History of Hip Resurfacing Menu 12/31/2005 OUR
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