Total hip replacement after intra-articular injection of local anaesthetic and steroid

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Abstract

Intra-articular injections of steroid into the hip are used for a variety of reasons in current orthopaedic practice. Recently their safety prior to ipsilateral total hip replacement has been called into question owing to concerns about deep joint infection. We undertook a retrospective analysis of all patients who had undergone local anaesthetic and steroid injections followed by ipsilateral total hip replacement over a five-year period. Members of the surgical team, using a lateral approach to the hip, performed all the injections in the operating theatre using a strict aseptic technique. The mean time between injection and total hip replacement was 18 months (4 to 50). The mean follow-up after hip replacement was 25.8 months (9 to 78), during which time no case of deep joint sepsis was found. In our series, ipsilateral local anaesthetic and steroid injections have not conferred an increased risk of infection in total hip replacement. We believe that the practice of intraarticular local anaesthetic and steroid injections to the hip followed by total hip replacement is safer than previously reported. © 2007 British Editorial Society of Bone and Joint Surgery.

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APA

Chitre, A. R., Fehily, M. J., & Bamford, D. J. (2007). Total hip replacement after intra-articular injection of local anaesthetic and steroid. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery - Series B, 89(2), 166–168. https://doi.org/10.1302/0301-620X.89B2.18428

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