Arthroplasty Today (Oct 2021)

Revision Total Hip Arthroplasty due to Catastrophic Osteolysis Caused by Massive Chronic Expanding Hematoma

  • Akihiro Yamashita, MD,
  • Yu Takeda, MD,
  • Tomokazu Fukui, MD,
  • Toshiya Tachibana, MD,
  • Shigeo Fukunishi, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
pp. 32 – 37

Abstract

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An 84-year-old woman who underwent bilateral cementless total hip arthroplasty (THA) for dysplastic osteoarthritis 22 years ago was subjected to analysis. A huge soft-tissue mass was revealed in her left medial thigh. Plain radiographs of the left hip joint revealed severe osteolysis around the stem, cup, and ischium. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a 25 × 14-cm multilobulated mass with a thick-walled pseudocapsule. Two-stage surgery was performed with resection of the mass followed by a subsequent revision THA. The mass was diagnosed as a chronic expanding hematoma through gross and histologic findings. Two years after the revision THA, there was no recurrence of a hematoma. Two-stage revision THA was useful for definitive diagnosis, and good functional recovery was obtained after surgery.

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