Cementing acetabular liners into secure cementless shells for polyethylene wear provides durable mid-term

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Abstract

Background: In a previous experiment studying cementation of liners into cementless acetabular shells, placing grooves in the liner in a spider-web configuration created the greatest construct strength. Scoring shells without screw holes or other texturing helped prevent failure at the shell-cement interface. However, it was unclear whether these practices caused durable constructs in patients. Questions/purposes We therefore determined (1) rerevision rates; (2) functional scores (Harris hip scores, WOMAC, and SF-36); (3) acetabular loosening rates; and (4) acetabular osteolysis rates in patients in whom we cemented nonconstrained liners into well-fixed and wellpositioned acetabular shells. Methods We prospectively followed 30 patients with 31 total hip arthroplasties in which a worn acetabular liner was revised by cementing a new liner into the existing shell that was stable and well positioned. Acetabular liners were prepared as determined by our previous study. Twentyseven of the 30 patients (28 hips) were evaluated clinically. We recorded revisions and determined radiographic loosening and osteolysis. The minimum clinical followup was 2 years (mean, 5.3 years; range, 2-10 years). Twenty-six hips (87%) had minimum 2-year radiographic followup with an average length of 4.8 years. Results No hip required rerevision during the followup interval. Two hips (6%) dislocated once, both treated nonoperatively. Harris hip scores, WOMAC, and SF-36 scores increased over preoperatively at last followup. All acetabular shells and liners were radiographically stable without evidence of loosening or progressive acetabular osteolysis. Conclusions Cementation of a liner into a well-fixed cementless shell after scoring in a spider-web configuration provided secure fixation with no failures of the construct at average 5.3 years followup. Level of Evidence Level IV, therapeutic study. See Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence. © The Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons® 2012.

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Callaghan, F. J., Hennessy, D. W., Liu, S. S., Goetz, K. E., & Heiner, A. D. (2012). Cementing acetabular liners into secure cementless shells for polyethylene wear provides durable mid-term. In Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research (Vol. 470, pp. 3142–3147). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11999-012-2380-x

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