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. 2010 Jul 21;92(8):1715-9.
doi: 10.2106/JBJS.I.01019.

Alumina-on-alumina total hip arthroplasty: a concise follow-up, at a minimum of ten years, of a previous report

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Alumina-on-alumina total hip arthroplasty: a concise follow-up, at a minimum of ten years, of a previous report

Young-Kyun Lee et al. J Bone Joint Surg Am. .

Abstract

We previously reported the five-to-six-year results of the use of third-generation alumina-on-alumina bearings in a consecutive series of 100 primary cementless total hip arthroplasties. This report presents the longer-term outcomes of these same bearings, at a minimum of ten years postoperatively. Eighty-six of eighty-eight hips available for the study retained the original bearings at the time of the latest follow-up. Thirteen hips were associated with noise, and six hips demonstrated fretting of the femoral neck on radiographs. Two hips required a change of the bearings because of a ceramic head fracture. The ten-year survival rate of the alumina-on-alumina total hip prostheses, with revision of any implant for any reason as the end point, was 99.0%. On the basis of those results, we concluded that the rate of survival of primary cementless total hip prostheses with third-generation alumina-on-alumina bearings is excellent at ten years. However, the risk of ceramic fracture, noise, and impingement between the metal neck and the ceramic liner should be a concern to surgeons, and patients should be informed of these risks before surgery.

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