Arthroplasty Today (Dec 2022)

Unusual Case of a Trunnion Fracture Following a Revision Hip Arthroplasty Surgery: A Brief Review of the Literature and Discussion About Causes of Failure

  • Hamilton P. Vick, MD,
  • Grayson A. Domingue, MD,
  • Kacy Richburg, MD,
  • Ryan Dean, MD,
  • Fahmida Khan, MD, MPH,
  • Rishi Thakral, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 103 – 106

Abstract

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Trunnion fracture is an incredibly rare complication of total hip arthroplasty. Of the few reported cases, all involve implants with faulty designs, a small neck taper, or an extended neck length or offset. Most also report corrosion and an adverse soft-tissue reaction. We present a review of the literature and report on the first case, to our knowledge, of trunnion fracture in a well-fixed, cemented cobalt-chromium femoral component with a standard neck length and offset with no evidence of corrosion. This failure was likely related to scratching of the metal during previous procedures which led to crack propagation and catastrophic failure. The patient was treated with revision hip arthroplasty to an uncemented, distal-fit femoral component and insertion of new bearing surfaces.

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