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Soft Tissue Reactions to Metal-on-Metal Arthroplasty Due Mostly to Increased Bearing Surface Wear

Study by Mr. Langton & Colleagues

Updated 8/17/09

Read Complete Article Here

By Robert Trace
September 17, 2009

MANCHESTER - Researchers here reported that adverse soft tissue reactions following metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty are typically due to increased wear of the bearing surfaces, and patients with smaller femoral heads may be particularly susceptible to these complications.

In an independent center study, David Langton, FRCS, and colleagues in the Joint Replacement Unit at the University Hospital of North Tees in Stockton, England, reviewed 155 Birmingham Hip resurfacings (BHR, Smith & Nephew) performed between 2002 and 2009 (mean follow-up, 60 months). They also studied 420 articular surface replacements (ASRs) and 75 total hip replacements using ASR XL implants (both DePuy Orthopaedics) with S-ROM stems (DePuy Orthopaedics) with a mean follow-up of 35 months...

...There were 17 failures of this nature in patients with ASR implants (3.5%) and no failures in the BHR group...

...Patients who had adverse reactions to metal debris (ARMD) had a mean femoral size of 45 mm, a mean acetabular angle of 27° and a mean inclination angle of 53°. Among the asymptomatic patients, those numbers were 49 mm, 20° and 48°, respectively...

..."I think we can say that the most important points are that increased wear causes more complications, and all hip resurfacing systems are not the same," Langton said. "Also, we found that it is an issue of joint size and orientation, rather than an issue of gender. And size does matter because men with femoral components less than 49 mm have a 10% incidence of ARMD."

Reference:
Langton D, Jameson S, Joyce T, et al. The incidence of adverse reactions to metal debris (ARMD) following hip resurfacing with the articular surface replacement (ASR) and Birmingham Hip Resurfacing systems (BHR). Presented at the British Orthopaedic Association Annual Congress 2009. Sept. 15-18, 2009. Manchester.



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