| Hip Resurfacing vs. Standard Total Hip Replacement by Dr. Thomas Gross |
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Hip Resurfacing vs. Standard Total Hip Replacement
HIP RESURFACING:
PROS CONS
STANDARD TOTAL HIP REPLACEMENT:
PROS CONS
CONTROVERSIAL TOPICS:
1. Which bearing type is more prone to wear related failure?
Ceramic on ceramic bearings may develop extremely loud squeaking in 1‐5% cases if an adverse wear problem develops. Bone or tissue destruction does not seem to occur, but revision is needed to get rid of the very bothersome noise. Imperfect positioning of the acetabular component is probably a major cause of this problem. Metal bearings may deposit excess cobalt and chromium in the tissues in rare cases causing inflammation and irritation of the local soft tissues. These have been called pseudotumors (false tumors). We have so far seen this problem in 0.1% of 3500 metal bearing cases over 12 years. This requires revision surgery. Although thorough debridement of the soft tissues is required in addition to revising the implants, we have been able to preserve all of the normal structures quite well; minimal bone destruction (osteolysis) is typically seen. This problem seems to be linked to placement of the acetabular component into a position that is too steep (high inclination angle) and sometimes also too tilted forward (anteversion). We have now developed intraoperative XR techniques that make acetabular component positioning more reproducible. Hopefully this will eliminate the adverse wear problems. Currently no comparative studies exist to show which modern bearing has the highest revision rate for adverse wear failure. It is likely that in all of these bearings the acetabular component position is the most critical factor.
Blood loss and need of transfusion is another way to measure invasiveness of an operation. Many factors influence the need for a transfusion. Generally the national transfusion rate is about 30% for THR. There is little data on HR. In one randomized study the surgical blood loss was twice as high for HR when compared to THR and this was, in fact, listed as the reason to avoid HR in this Canadian study. Rapidity of recovery and return to normal function is another measure. Many studies have shown that generally minimally invasive techniques have sped up the recovery of patients when compared to larger incision techniques for both THR and HR. Usually the final result is equal. However, in occasional studies, complications rates have been higher with minimally invasive surgery. The bottom line is that some surgeons are more skilled than others and are able to safely perform the same operation more precisely with a smaller incision and give their patient a small benefit of earlier recovery.
I perform almost 90% my hip operations using a posterior minimally invasive technique. Most THR are done through a 3‐inch incision and most HR are done through a 4‐inch incision. Larger incisions are sometimes required if we have to reuse an old scar from a previous surgery, if the patient is obese around the hip or is extremely muscular around the hip, if old hardware needs to be removed, or if extreme bone deformity exists. HR is too difficult to perform in massive patients In summary, both THR and HR can safely be performed using minimally invasive techniques by some skilled and experienced surgeons, decreasing pain, eliminating transfusions, minimizing the hospital stay, and speeding up recovery and return to normal function. Final function may also be improved. There is no difference in any of these factors including the rate of recovery between a large metal bearing THR vs. a HR. It is advisable to review your surgeons published data on all of these factors.
Unfortunately, some surgeons who don’t perform HR or have not kept abreast of the scientific literature claim that there is less data on HR instead of discussing the true pros and cons with their patients. There is certainly much room for interpretation in the data, but all younger patients with severe hip arthritis at least need to be advised of the options. The only type of hip replacement that has published long‐term data is an implant with a small metal on plastic bearing that has shown poor results in young patients. We have already dramatically exceeded these results at mid‐term follow‐up with all modern devices. Is it better to resurface the hip or to perform a stemmed total hip? There is much controversy among orthopedic joint replacement specialists about this topic. In the final analysis, the answer is not known because the few randomized studies comparing the two rival techniques are seriously flawed; a recalled implant system was utilized in both arms of these studies. When summarizing the scientific literature, it appears that both resurfacing and replacement using modern bearings have a similar overall 95% survivorship rate at 10 years. Longer‐term results are not available. From a philosophical standpoint, hip resurfacing is the correct operation because it corrects the primary problem in hip arthritis without altering much else. The vast majority of severe hip arthritis cases are caused by the complete loss of the cartilage surface on both sides of the hip joint (femoral and acetabular). Replacement of these cartilage surfaces should be the goal. Cartilage is a thin (3mm in the hip) layer of live material that covers the surfaces of all joints. It allows one bone to move smoothly against the other. Surface cartilage doe not have nerve receptors. If the cartilage surfaces are lost, bone rubs against bone. Bone has nerve endings that register this irritation and send a pain signal to the brain. This is the source of pain that is felt in a severely arthritic joint. joint replacement is essentially a replacement of this cartilage layer by a pair of artificial implants. The goal is to remove enough bone to allow fixing an implant rigidly to each bone end. The implants then rub against one another. As long as the implants are fixed solidly to the bone, the arthritic joint pain is relieved. Ideally, we would find a way to re‐grow cartilage over these damaged surfaces. This is still a long way off in the future. In the meantime, hip resurfacing is the operation that alters the natural joint the least; it preserves the most native material and leaves the biomechanics of the hip the most normal. Therefore, in my opinion, it ought to be the way a hip joint is replaced. Then why are most surgeons using standard stemmed total hip replacement? Historically, the first hip replacements in the 1950s were hip resurfacings. However artificial materials available were not durable enough to allow thin replacement surfaces to work. The first type of hip replacement that can be said to have been truly successful was the hip replacement pioneered by John Charnley. He used a stainless steel stem and ball and a plastic (polyethelene) cup and cemented them into the bones with methylmethacrylate. Much advancement in materials and techniques has now vastly improved upon his initial success. About 20 years ago, McMinn and Amstutz first recognized that materials were now good enough to allow resurfacing with thin metal bearings. This is when the modern era of metal on metal hip resurfacing began. I began performing hip resurfacing 12 years ago. Today there is a large group of specialized joint replacement surgeons who are skilled at performing a standard hip replacement. Performing a hip resurfacing is very different technically. Preserving the head and neck of the femur makes it much more difficult to access the socket. In the standard hip replacement, after the head is removed, the socket is easily visualized. This is the primary reason why a surgeon who can quite skillfully perform a standard hip replacement may have difficulty with a hip resurfacing. If you can’t get adequate exposure of the joint with your approach, it is very difficult to place the implants properly. Most skilled hip surgeons could probably eventually learn how to do a hip resurfacing well. But there is a long learning curve. This means many complications may occur as the surgeon learns this new technique. Few experienced hip resurfacing surgeons practice in academic teaching centers; as a consequence, new residents being trained are skilled at standard hip replacement, but not resurfacing.
It is probably best that hip resurfacing is confined to relatively few high volume centers that can gain enough experience to identify the problems of this technique and develop solutions. This will limit the overall number of complications. For a patient interested in this procedure, it is best to bear the small additional cost and hassle to travel to an experienced surgeon with a good track record rather than take a chance on a local surgeon with little experience.
We look forward to serving you!
Thomas P. Gross, M.D. |
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