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Published in: Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 1/2008

Open Access 01-03-2008 | Tissue-Sparing Surgery Section

Perspectives on metaphyseal conservative stems

Authors: F. Falez, F. Casella, G. Panegrossi, F. Favetti, C. Barresi

Published in: Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology | Issue 1/2008

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Abstract

Total hip replacement is showing, during the last decades, a progressive evolution toward principles of reduced bone and soft tissue aggression. These principles have become the basis of a new philosophy, tissue sparing surgery. Regarding hip implants, new conservative components have been proposed and developed as an alternative to conventional stems. Technical and biomechanical characteristics of metaphyseal bone-stock-preserving stems are analyzed on the basis of the available literature and our personal experience. Mayo, Nanos and Metha stems represent, under certain aspects, a design evolution starting from shared concepts: reduced femoral violation, non-anatomic geometry, proximal calcar loading and lateral alignment. However, consistent differences are level of neck preservation, cross-sectional geometry and surface finishing. The Mayo component is the most time-tested component and, in our hands, it showed an excellent survivorship at the mid-term follow-up, with an extremely reduced incidence of aseptic loosening (partially reduced by the association with last generation acetabular couplings). For 160 implants followed for a mean of 4.7 years, survivorship was 97.5% with 4 failed implants: one fracture with unstable stem, 1 septic loosening and 2 aseptic mobilizations. DEXA analysis, performed on 15 cases, showed a good calcar loading and stimulation, but there was significant lateral load transfer to R3–R4 zones, giving to the distal part of the stem a function not simply limited to alignment. Metaphyseal conservative stems demonstrated a wide applicability with an essential surgical technique. Moreover, they offer the options of a “conservative revision” with a conventional primary component in case of failure and a “conservative revision” for failed resurfacing implants.
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Metadata
Title
Perspectives on metaphyseal conservative stems
Authors
F. Falez
F. Casella
G. Panegrossi
F. Favetti
C. Barresi
Publication date
01-03-2008
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology / Issue 1/2008
Print ISSN: 1590-9921
Electronic ISSN: 1590-9999
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10195-008-0105-4

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