The fixation of the femoral stem in a total hip arthroplasty was studied
in sixty patients (sixty-four hips) with use of roentgen
stereophotogrammetric analysis. The hips were randomly stratified on the
basis of the age, sex, and weight of the patient; the roentgenographic
quality of the bone; and the reason for the operation (primary or secondary
osteoarthrosis). The hips were then randomly assigned to one of three types
of fixation of the femoral component: insertion with cement, hydroxyapatite
coating, or porous coating. Examinations with roentgen stereophotogrammetry
were done as long as two years after the operation. Micromotion of the
prostheses was evaluated in terms of subsidence or proximal migration and
rotations and translations of the proximal-lateral (shoulder) and distal
(tip) parts of the prostheses. The clinical results at the two-year
follow-up evaluation did not differ significantly between the groups with
regard to the Harris hip score or the pain score (p > 0.05 for both;
Wilcoxon rank-sum test). There were small or no differences in rotations
and micromotions of the shoulder and the tip of the prostheses. Increased
subsidence of 0.1 to 0.2 millimeter was recorded for the cemented and the
porous-coated prostheses (p = 0.002 and p = 0.02, respectively; Wilcoxon
rank-sum test). Thus, proximal hydroxyapatite coating seems to enhance the
early fixation of the stem. Conventional roentgenography revealed an
increased number of radiodense lines surrounding the porous-coated
prostheses. Distal hypertrophy of the femoral cortex was found mainly
around the hydroxyapatite-coated prostheses. Proximal resorption of bone
and heterotopic ossification occurred to approximately the same extent
regardless of the type of fixation used.