From 1969 to 1985, eighty-one patients (eighty-two hips) who had an
infection after a previous total hip arthroplasty were treated with a
resection arthroplasty, followed by delayed reconstruction in the form of a
repeat total hip arthroplasty. For all of the reconstructions, the femoral
and acetabular components were fixed to bone with cement that did not
contain antibiotics. An average of 5.5 years (range, 2.0 to 13.6 years)
after reimplantation, infection had recurred in eleven hips (13 per cent).
The presence of retained cement at the time of the resection arthroplasty
appeared to be associated with recurrent sepsis, as three of seven patients
who had retained cement had a recurrent infection, compared with only eight
(11 per cent) of seventy-five patients from whom the cement had been
completely removed (p less than 0.01). The twenty-six patients (twenty-six
hips) who had the reimplantation less than one year after the resection
arthroplasty had seven recurrent infections (27 per cent), while the
fifty-six patients who had reimplantation more than one year after the
resection arthroplasty had only four recurrences (7 per cent) (p less than
0.001). Three of the seven patients in whom the infection was caused by
gram-negative bacilli and group-D streptococcal organisms (which are
considered highly virulent) and who received systemic antimicrobial therapy
for less than twenty-eight days had a recurrence. In contrast, only one of
the thirteen patients in whom the infection was caused by a virulent
organism and who were treated for longer than twenty-eight days had a
recurrence (p = 0.055). The two-stage reconstruction is an effective, safe
technique even when the infection is caused by a virulent organism.