Hydroxyapatite-coated hip prostheses. Early results from an international study
- PMID: 7634606
Hydroxyapatite-coated hip prostheses. Early results from an international study
Abstract
A hydroxyapatite-coated hip prosthesis designed to stimulate proximal femoral stress transfer was studied in 222 patients undergoing primary total hip arthroplasty with a minimum followup of 2 years. The femoral component was a roughened titanium alloy with a 50-mu coating of hydroxyapatite applied to the proximal third. A proximal press-fit technique was applied with distal femoral over-reaming as standard procedure. The hydroxyapatite-coated acetabulum was of hemispherical design. Analysis of the clinical results showed a mean Merle D'Aubigné score of 16.7 points at 6 months and 17.4 points at 2 years. Mild residual thigh pain of unknown origin was reported in 3.6% of patients at 2 years. Radiographic evaluation showed complete acetabular and proximal femoral osseointegration without any loosening. No radiolucency or reactive line formation was observed around the hydroxyapatite-coated areas of the prostheses. Femoral bone densification occurred at the coated-uncoated transition zone (54%); 4% to 6% of cases showed cortical hypertrophy at the uncoated area of the stem. Reactive lines were seen around the distal stem in 52% of patients after 2 years. The clinical outcome was excellent, and the radiographic data pointed mainly to proximal femoral stress transfer.