Profile of hip arthroplasty patients in a teaching hospital

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Abstract

Objective: to characterize the epidemiological profile of patients undergoing hip replacement, primary or revisional. Methods: we conducted a retrospective, descriptive study, including hip arthroplasties performed from January 2009 to June 2012 in a Belo Horizonte teaching hospital, Minas Gerais State – MG, Brazil. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Results: orthopedic procedures represented 45% of the operations at the hospital in the period, 1.4% hip arthroplasties. There were 125 hip replacements, 85 total, 27 partial and 13 reviews. Among the patients, 40% were male and 60% were female. Age ranged between 20 and 102 years, mean and median of 73 and 76 years, respectively. The most frequent diagnosis (82%) was femoral neck fracture by lowenergy trauma caused by falling form standing position. In 13 revision operations, 12 required removal of the prosthesis. The infectious complication led to revision in 54% of the time, followed by dislocation (15%), peri-prosthetic fracture (15%) and aseptic loosening (15%). The infection etiologic agent was identified in 43% of occasions. The average length of the prosthesis to a revision operation was eight months. Conclusion: patients undergoing hip arthroplasty are elderly, with femoral neck fracture caused by falling form standing position, affecting more women. The incidence of hip prosthesis loosening was 10%. The main cause of the infection was loosening. The incidence of revisional hip arthroplasty was 10% and the incidence of hospital mortality in patients undergoing hip arthroplasty was 7.2%.

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Goveia, V. R., Mendoza, I. Y. Q., Couto, B. R. G. M., Ferreira, J. A. G., Paiva, E. B., Guimarães, G. L., & Stoianoff, M. A. R. (2015). Profile of hip arthroplasty patients in a teaching hospital. Revista Do Colegio Brasileiro de Cirurgioes, 42(2), 106–110. https://doi.org/10.1590/0100-69912015002007

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