| Mr. Derek McMinn on Pseudotumors |
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Mr. Derek McMinn on Pseudotumors - May 2010 (taken from written interview)
A few centres have reported a phenomenon, which has been named
‘pseudotumors’ by a renowned orthopaedic hospital in Oxford. The term
pseudotumor refers to a problem, whereby a hip resurfacing or a
metal-on-metal hip replacement fails with a painful swelling or with
collection of fluid around the hip joint. The word ‘pseudotumor’ has
caused consternation among patients who were worried if this is some
kind of a hidden cancer or a pre-cancerous condition. These need to be
put into perspective. Furthermore some women are constantly exposed to metals like nickel in costume jewellery which may pre-sensitize them to the tiny amounts of nickel found in the resurfacing or replacement components. It is not yet clear if there is a very tiny group of patients who would react badly in the face of expected and regular amounts of wear. The percentage of patients who may react like that is believed to be very rare, of the order of 1 in a 1000 or less. What symptoms do these patients develop? Out of over 3000 resurfacings over the past 12 years, we had 10 patients who were treated for a local adverse reaction like this. In a majority of these there was only a collection of fluid around the hip joint nearly 10 years or more after their original operation. They complained of groin pain or discomfort. A few developed swelling of the foot or ankle because of the collection of fluid above. In many cases there were subtle X-ray changes, although not in all. What is the solution if a person develops a pseudotumor several years after a hip resurfacing? If a person presents with a history suggestive of a pseudotumor, he/she needs to be examined by an orthopaedic surgeon and undergo Xrays, a special multi-slice CT scan and some blood tests in order to establish the diagnosis. The CT scan must be able to reduce artefact from the metal in order to provide any useful information. In some cases it may be necessary to exclude infection by aspiration of the hip joint. If it is indeed a pseudotumor then a revision operation to convert the resurfacing into a total hip replacement with a non-metal-metal bearing will have to be performed. How do patients recover after revision of a resurfacing to a hip replacement for a pseudotumor? The ten patients described above have recovered as if they were recovering from any first hip replacement. Their hips are functioning well. The worst affected of these patients underwent the revision operation in January 2010 and needed bone grafting of the socket. She has seen the sensational reports in the newspaper and questions “What is all the fuss about? I have had 10 good years of my life restored to me. I had then been in my early 50s and now I am in my 60s. I noticed hip discomfort a few months before the 10th anniversary of my operation and I had to undergo a revision operation to convert my hip resurfacing into a hip replacement and I am now getting back to normal again.” She adds, “Ten years ago, had I known that I would need a revision at this stage I would not have changed one thing. I would have gone ahead with the resurfacing operation”. Two months after her revision operation, she kindly agreed to be filmed and you can follow her account on our website, www.mcminncentre.com/flash under the section Case Studies – Other – Joan Lindh. |
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