Arthroplasty Today (Jun 2024)

Hardware Removal and Conversion Hip Arthroplasty via a Single Interval Anterior Approach: Surgical Technique

  • Yaniv Steinfeld, MD,
  • Bheeshma Ravi, MD, PhD, FRCSC,
  • Daniel Pincus, MD, PhD, FRCSC

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27
p. 101369

Abstract

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The supine ‘off-table’ anterior-based muscle-sparing (ABMS) approach is an established approach for primary total hip arthroplasty. The approach is performed with the patient positioned supine on a regular operating room table. It combines utilizing the Watson-Jones interval (without disrupting the abductor muscles) with principles of capsular management borrowed from the direct anterior approach. The approach may also be utilized for complex primary and revision hip arthroplasties. One clinical scenario the ABMS approach may be particularly well-suited to is conversion hip arthroplasty when retained hardware requires removal. The approach enables the surgeon to remove proximal femoral hardware and perform hip arthroplasty within the same muscle interval. This is in contrast to direct anterior approach, which entails separate windows being created on either side of the tensor fascia lata muscle to remove hardware and insert hip arthroplasty components, respectively. In this article, we describe our surgical technique for performing conversion total hip arthroplasty with hardware removal (sliding hip screw and plate in the discussed case) via a single interval with the supine off-table ABMS approach.

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