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  • Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Apr 2009

    The use of structural periacetabular allografts in acetabular revision surgery: 2.5-5 years follow-up.

    • S Schelfaut, S Cool, and M Mulier.
    • Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University Hospitals Louvain, Catholic University Louvain, Louvain, Belgium.
    • Arch Orthop Trauma Surg. 2009 Apr 1; 129 (4): 455461455-61.

    Introduction"Acetabular bone loss" presents a major reconstructive challenge in total hip arthroplasty. Loss of acetabular bone stock is a consequence of removal of bone during the original procedure, subsequent prosthetic failure and osteolysis resulting from wear particles of cement and polyethylene. In case of severe bone loss treatment options are rather limited, as fixation requires either biological (cancellous allograft with cage or structural allograft) or non-biological (trabecular metal, triflange implant, etc.) scaffolds.Materials And MethodsFourteen acetabular revisions with a cemented cup, supported by a deep frozen structural periacetabular allograft without using a reinforcement ring or an antiprotrusio cage were performed. Clinical assessment was done using a Harris hip score. Graft resorption was radiographically quantified using a digital measurement program.ResultsKaplan-Meier survivorship was 67.1% at 42 months. After a mean follow-up of 3.6 years, 9 out of 14 patients had good clinical results. Mean resorption of 17.1% in six out of ten patients was observed. No sound evidence for union was found in nine out of ten patients. In the four re-revised patients, no bone stock restoration was found.ConclusionThe bicortical allograft without protective device seems to function as a passive biocompatible dead scaffold, which has a less intrinsic strength at intermediate term follow-up, compared to the by ring or cage protected structural allografts.

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