Using clinical, radiographic, and pathological data, we investigated
eighteen cases of early aseptic failure of an implant in patients who had
undergone reconstruction of the hip with a Wagner resurfacing prosthesis.
Sixteen patients required revision for loosening of the acetabular
component, with eight of them also demonstrating loosening of the femoral
component. One patient had loosening of the femoral component without
failure of the acetabular component, and one patient sustained a femoral
neck fracture that was associated with osteonecrosis. Six of the patients
with loosening of the acetabular component had an associated significant
loss of acetabular bone stock. Loosening was associated with the
development of a membrane at the bone-cement interface in all patients.
Histological examination of the membrane demonstrated a marked foreign-body
response to wear products from the arthroplasty. Bone resorption appeared
active at the bone-membrane interface. We concluded that the acetabular
component of the Wagner prosthesis is prone to early loosening and that the
early loosening is potentiated by a foreign-body response to debris
resulting from arthroplastic wear.