Arthroplasty Today (Sep 2018)

Fracture of an S-ROM stem at the sleeve-stem junction

  • Kilian Rueckl, MD,
  • Friedrich Boettner, MD,
  • Ulrich Bechler, MD,
  • Elexis C. Baral, BS,
  • Timothy M. Wright, PhD,
  • Peter K. Sculco, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
pp. 295 – 299

Abstract

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Fracture of a well-ingrown femoral component is a rare and often challenging complication. Modular junctions and sleeve interfaces have been identified as one potential point of weakness with corrosion and fretting being contributing factors to ultimate femoral component fracture. Stem fractures at the sleeve interface were reported occasionally for the proximal ingrowth modular Emperion System (Smith and Nephew, Memphis, TN). However, this failure mechanism has been reported infrequently, often associated with corrosion at the modular junction, for the similarly designed S-ROM system (DePuy Orthopedics Inc., Warsaw, IN). We present the case of a 52-year-old patient, with a body weight of 84 kg (185 lbs) and a body mass index of 30.6 kg/m2, who suffered a fatigue fracture of a 14 × 09 × 130 mm S-ROM stem 42 months after implantation. The present study presents the results of the surface analysis, discusses possible failure mechanisms, provides treatment guidelines, and a review of the literature revealing 15 cases of failure at the level of the stem-sleeve junction. In particular, modifiable risk factors for potential stem failure, including stem diameter, stem offset, and the resulting cantilever bending forces on the proximal sleeve-stem junction, are discussed in detail. Keywords: Stem fracture, Removal technique, Breakage, Failure, Corrosion