Hip replacement: the rise of cementless hips

Escrito por: Mr Godfrey Charnley
Publicado: | Actualizado: 21/10/2019
Editado por: Laura Burgess

Hip replacement is a procedure where the hip joint is replaced by a prosthetic implant, and is a very common orthopaedic operation. Hip replacement surgery was first performed in the 1930s. Almost a million hip replacements are performed now, worldwide, each year and the designs and ways of fixing the implants to the skeleton have changed, particularly over the past 20 years.

Here, one of our top orthopaedic surgeons Mr Godfrey Charnley describes how the cementless options have become used more widely, and the advantages of this.

What is the history of hip replacement?

In November 1962 Sir John Charnley, a pioneer of hip replacement surgery in the UK but also worldwide, implanted his first cemented total hip replacement. He fixed both the hip socket, (acetabular component) and the femoral stem with acrylic cement. This mode of fixation became the standard practice in the UK for 40 years.

What many people do not realise is that before this in the late 1950s, he tried a press-fit, cementless acetabular ‘Teflon’ component but these did not survive and he moved to a different way of fixing hips.

A decade or so later, other surgeons, particularly French surgeons, found alternative ways to fix hip components within the skeleton by using rough surface finishes or coatings to attract bone to adhere or grow onto the components. This is to achieve a more ‘biological’ fixation.
 

What are the differences between cemented and cementless hip replacements?

The 2019 National Joint Registry figures report that of over 100,000 hip replacements performed, 67,000 acetabular components were fixed without cement and over the same period, almost 40,000 femoral components were also cementless.

These numbers reflect a trend in the UK away from cemented to cementless fixation. This is due to better surface finishes and better biological coatings. The work from France has demonstrated that a calcium-based coating on the femoral components, ‘hydroxyapatite’, is very successful and I prefer for my acetabular components, a ‘trabecular metal’ – Tantalum surface finish.

This metal, microscopically, has a honeycomb lattice-like structure which bone cells recognise as being similar to their structure, enabling them to grow into the surface finish, giving an excellent fixation.
 

What are the advantages of a cementless hip replacement?

The benefits of modern cementless fixation are that they avoid the debris and inflammation associated with fragmentation and loosening of the bone cement in time. They also enable larger diameter bearings to be used than with cemented acetabular components, giving patients greater hip stability.

In my clinic, I routinely use the CORAIL Total Hip System®, which is a popular brand and design of stem with a hydroxyapatite coating. This bone-conserving option is designed for easy surgical installation. It was originally pioneered near Lyon in France and has a 30-year track record. It is the most commonly used stem not only in France and Europe but now in the UK.

The results of trabecular metal developed in the early 2000s in the United States of America have shown a dramatic improvement in survival of acetabular components in both primary and especially revision hip surgery.
 

Are there any drawbacks to having a cementless hip replacement?

The costs of cementless hips are more than those of cemented components. It is essential that surgeons pre-operatively plan and intra-operatively assess the stability of cementless components. This is to minimise the risk of subsidence or premature loosening.

 

Book an appointment with Mr Charnley if you would like to discuss your hip replacement options.

Mr Godfrey Charnley

Por Mr Godfrey Charnley
Traumatología

El Sr. Godfrey Charnley es un consultor ortopédico y traumatólogo altamente experimentado con sede en Essex , que se especializa en cirugía de reemplazo de cadera y rodilla . Tiene casi 25 años de experiencia como consultor en cirugía de reemplazo articular de las extremidades inferiores.

El Sr. Charnley calificó del Hospital St Thomas en Londres en 1983 y recibió capacitación como registrador en Londres y como registrador sénior en Bristol. Antes de mudarse a Chelmsford en 2002, fue consultor de cirugía ortopédica y profesor titular honorario en el Hospital Derriford en Plymouth y en la Escuela de Medicina de Postgrado de Plymouth entre 1995 y 2002.

En el hospital, fue el cirujano principal en trauma y fue tutor quirúrgico para el Royal College of Surgeons of England. Sobre la base de su estado educativo allí y posteriormente en Chelmsford, en 2007 el Sr. Charnley alcanzó el estado de miembro de la Academia de Educación Superior.

Su práctica privada es en el Hospital Springfield en Chelmsford. Ha introducido en Mid-Essex muchas técnicas nuevas en la cirugía de reemplazo articular, incluidos los componentes acetabulares de metal trabecular, el sistema de vástago cementado CPT, el sistema de vástago no cementado Corail, un abordaje anterolateral mínimamente invasivo de la articulación de la cadera y el revestimiento de la cadera de Birmingham.

El Sr. Charnley ha sido coordinador clínico regional para el Registro Nacional Conjunto y fue examinador, durante más de 10 años, para el examen FRCS Orth.

El Sr. Charnley revisa periódicamente documentos para una revista internacional de cirugía de cadera y también es reconocido como testigo experto, tanto por abogados como por los departamentos legales de NHS Trust, para dar una opinión en casos de posible negligencia médica en relación con la cirugía de reemplazo de cadera y rodilla. .


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