A radiographic study was done of 171 total hip replacements that had
been followed for an average of 3.3 years (range, two to five years). The
study was performed to assess the incidence of loosening of the femoral
component in older adult patients (average age, sixty years) in whom the
medullary canal had been plugged with methylmethacrylate (using the
medullary plug syringe to introduce the plug) prior to introducing the
cement (Simplex P) with a cement-gun. Most of the femoral components that
were used were of the CAD or HD-2 design, and all were made of
chromium-cobalt alloy. Three categories of loosening were defined: definite
(requiring radiographic evidence of migration of the component or the
cement), probable (requiring evidence of complete 100 per cent radiolucent
zone around the cement mantle on one or more radiographs), and possible
(requiring evidence of a radiolucent zone that occupied more than 50 but
less than 100 per cent of the cement-bone interface on one or more
radiographs). One hip required revision for a loose femoral component and
another patient had asymptomatic subsidence of the femoral component. Thus,
the total incidence of definitely loose femoral components was 1.1 per
cent. No hip was classified as having probable loosening; seven hips (4 per
cent) were rated as having possible loosening. Compared with the results of
four other published reports of patients of similar age with similar
follow-up, and using the same radiographic criterion for loosening, the
current series demonstrated a statistically significant reduction in the
incidence of definitely loose femoral components.