Arthroplasty Today (Oct 2023)

Long Cephalomedullary Nails Can Be a Cheap and Effective Interval Revision Prosthesis in Infected Hip Replacements That Require Proximal Femoral Replacement: A Small Case Series

  • Boopalan Ramasamy, MS, FRACS,
  • Aaron Scott Hammat, BHMS (Hons),
  • Renjy Nelson, MD, FRACP,
  • Stuart Adam Callary, BAppSc, PhD,
  • Ping Keung Chan, MBBS, FRCSEd (Orthopaedic Surgery),
  • Lucian Bogdan Solomon, MD, PhD, FRACS

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23
p. 101218

Abstract

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Hip prosthetic joint infection management is complex and expensive, especially in severe bone loss. Reducing the price of interval prosthesis when performing staged revision could minimize costs without compromising outcomes. We present 2 similar techniques developed independently that use an antibiotic-coated cephalomedullary nail with a total hip arthroplasty bearing (head and cemented acetabular component) attached to it as an interval proximal femoral replacement prosthesis. Using this technique, the femoral implant cost was reduced up to 10-fold. All patients have recovered well with resolution of infection and functional recovery similar to patients undergoing proximal femoral replacement. In one case, the lag screw (femoral neck) fractured at 5 months prompting the second-stage revision. This complication should be considered when deciding the timing of second-stage revisions in these cases.

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