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Title: The long-term outcome of 755 consecutive constrained acetabular components in total hip arthroplasty examining the successes and failures. Author: Berend KR, Lombardi AV, Mallory TH, Adams JB, Russell JH, Groseth KL. Journal: J Arthroplasty; 2005 Oct; 20(7 Suppl 3):93-102. PubMed ID: 16214009. Abstract: Constrained acetabular components can treat or prevent instability after total hip arthroplasty (THA). We examine long-term results of 755 consecutive constrained THA in 720 patients (1986-1993; 62 primary, 59 conversion, 565 revision, 60 reimplantation, and 9 total femur). Eighty-three patients (88 THAs) were lost before 10-year follow-up, leaving 639 patients (667 THAs) available for study. Dislocation occurred in 117 hips (17.5%), in 37 (28.9%) of 128 constrained for recurrent dislocation, and 46 (28.2%) of 163 with dislocation history. Other reoperations were for aseptic loosening (51, 7.6% acetabular; 28, 4.2% stem; 16, 2.4% combined), infection (40, 6.0%), periprosthetic fracture (19, 2.8%), stem breakage (2, 0.3%), cup malposition (1, 0.1%), dissociated insert (1, 0.1%), dissociated femoral head (1, 0.1%), and impingement of 1 broken (0.1%) and 4 (0.6%) dissociated constraining rings. Although constrained acetabular components prevented recurrent dislocation in 71.1%, they should be used cautiously, with a 42.1% long-term failure rate observed in this series. Dislocation was common despite constraint with previous history as a significant risk.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]