We studied the cases of fifty-two patients with an infection at the site
of a prosthetic total hip replacement, and are reporting the significant
clinical features, infecting organisms, methods of treatment, and results
at long-term follow-up. Forty-eight per cent of the hips had had an
operation prior to the index arthroplasty, and 42 per cent had a wound
complication. All patients had pain in the infected hip, but only 54 per
cent had an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of more than thirty millimeters
per hour, 44 per cent had fever, and 15 per cent had leukocytosis. In 88
per cent of the patients a single organism was grown on culture, and
Staphylococcus epidermidis, Staphylococcus aureus, and Escherichia coli
were present in about 75 per cent. When antibiotic therapy alone was the
initial treatment, the infection was eradicated in only one patient.
Excisional arthroplasty was the definitive surgical procedure in
thirty-three patients and the infection was eradicated in twenty-seven of
them, but the clinical result was satisfactory in only twenty. Of ten
patients who had a true Girdlestone arthroplasty, none had recurrence of
the infection and all had a clinically satisfactory outcome.