Forty-one fused hips in thirty-eight patients were converted to total
hip replacement. The average length of follow-up was seven years. The
predominant indications for conversion were progressively disabling pain in
the low back or the hip, or both; loss of function due to immobility or
malposition of the hip; and progressive pain and instability of the knee
(usually ipsilateral). The postoperative arc of flexion averaged 87
degrees. Limb-length discrepancies improved an average of 2.5 centimeters.
Postoperative function of the abductor muscles depended on the preoperative
quality of those muscles and on the accuracy of the biomechanical
restoration. Postoperative strength of the muscles of the hip improved for
two years or more in most patients. There was complete or major relief of
pain, improved mobility of the hip, and decreased dependence on supports
for walking. There were nine failures: four because of sepsis, four because
of loosening of the femoral component, and one because of malposition of
the acetabular component. The failures were predominantly in patients who
were fifty years old or less at the time of arthroplasty, patients who had
had two or more previous operations, and patients who had had an injury to
the hip. The quality of the results approached that after primary hip
arthroplasty in older patients who have not had multiple previous
operations on the hip. Survivorship analysis of the spontaneously fused
hips that were treated with conventional hip replacement predicted a
probability of survival of the implant of 96 per cent at thirteen years
postoperatively (p = 0.048).