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Total Hip Replacement with Fixation by Acrylic Cement A PRELIMINARY STUDY OF 100 CONSECUTIVE MCKEE-FARRAR PROSTHETIC REPLACEMENTS
P. D. WILSONJR.; H. C. AMSTUTZ; A. CZERNIECKI; E. A. SALVATI; D. G. MENDES
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From the Hospital for Special Surgery affiliated with the New York Hospital-Cornell University Medical College, New York
1972 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.  1972; 54:207-221 
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Abstract

Total hip replacement utilizing the McKee-Farrar prosthesis and acrylic cement relieved pain in seventy-nine of 100 diseased hips and improved the stance, walking function, and mobility of these same hips for periods of follow-up ranging from two to four years. The results have been so-satisfactory to the patients that continued use and further development of this type of operation is certainly warranted.

Basic long-term questions, however, remain to be answered in connection with the use of an all-metal bearing with skeletal fixation by acrylic cement. A cautious attitude toward the use of this technique of total hip replacement should be continued. The patients selected for this procedure should be the elderly and infirm, or patients with desperate and difficult clinical problems which cannot be solved adequately in any other way. The operation should be performed only after the patient has been informed of the unknowns involved.

The incidence of wound complications in this series was high. However, only the tendency to subclinical or latent deep infection seemed significantly higher with this type of procedure than with interpositional or femoral replacement arthroplasty without acrylic cement. To avoid infection, standards of surgical asepsis more stringent than those hitherto accepted seem indicated.

Prosthetic loosening even in the absence of infection was also a problem. Patient selection, operative technique, and postoperative management probably contributed importantly to this complication. Appropriate changes in methodology have been made, but it is too early to evaluate their efficacy.

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    These activities have been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) through the joint sponsorship of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc. The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
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