| Resurfacing vs. THR By Mark Bloomfield |
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The first point I want to make is I have done hundreds or thousands of total hip replacements (THR) on all sorts of people at all sorts of ages and activity levels. Some of this experience pre-dates hip resurfacing, but I still often do THR as well. There were many very happy THR patients, but quite a few with a host of problems. My patients and colleagues' patients referred to me for a second, third or more opinion! Dislocation [sometimes occurring so often further
surgery was required], infection, leg length differences and completely inexplicable pain. Another frequent problem was limping or muscle weakness as a result of using the direct lateral or Hardinge approach to the hip in an effort to avoid the higher dislocation rate associated with the posterior approach - which more rarely has muscle weakness or limp associated with it. Preserving the femoral head and neck is also so intuitively 'correct' that several of the earliest pioneers of hip surgery tried again and again to devise prostheses that would work. Charnley, Amstutz, Wagner, Freeman and others all experimented with resurfacing way before McMinn. They all failed because the materials [metal on plastic or ceramic on plastic] were not up to the job, NOT because the concept is flawed. Metal on metal (MOM) bearings have been around for a very long time. McKee and Farrar in Norwich had a MOM THR that is well known. Sometimes it lasted for decades, but too often there were early failures. All MOM bearings need several factors to be just right in order to work well. Not nearly right, nearly perfect in order to work. Metal on plastic bearings can have several technical factors quite wrong, but they are more forgiving of these flaws, and work well regardless. So Charnley, with his metal on slippery polyethylene, was able to outshine and eventually eclipse all the other bearing couples being used, so that by the 70's and 80's metal on plastic was the near universal basis of THR. When we realised that tiny plastic particles cause aseptic loosening and failure of THR - especially in young active patients, there was a surge of interest in alternatives eg ceramic on ceramic or back to MOM. The genius of McMinn was to take 2 unrelated historical 'failures' and use modern metallurgy and manufacturing techniques to create a prosthesis that would solve nearly all the historical problems. So he married the concept of resurfacing with a MOM bearing that had low - in fact negligble - wear rates. And was repeatably reliable in terms of metal quality and manufacturing tolerances. McMinn was INCREDIBLY lucky to stumble upon just the right metal alloy AND the right manufacturing tolerances. Change the metal alloy even a little bit, or change the tolerances, gaps thickess etc. and the result may be very different. Hence the reason I have personally avoided copies of the McMinn BHR like the plague. But that is not all that must be right. The alignment of the devices in the body is critical. This is hard to get consistently right and x-rays can be very misleading in terms of assessing whether you have 'got it right'. |
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