A retrospective study of patients who had had a primary total hip
arthroplasty without cement between 1983 and 1990 was done to examine
differences in clinical and radiographic results between obese and
normal-weight individuals. Patients were considered to be of normal weight
if the body-mass index (calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height
in meters squared) was between twenty and less than thirty, and they were
considered to be obese if the body-mass index was thirty or more. There
were 127 normal-weight patients (142 hips) and fifty-five obese patients
(sixty hips) in the analysis. Eight obese patients (eight hips) who had a
body-mass index of forty or more were considered to be morbidly obese and
were examined separately as a subset of the obese group. The duration of
follow-up averaged forty-eight months (range, twenty-four to ninety-two
months). There were no differences between the groups with regard to age,
diagnosis, the type of stem or cup, the type of bone, the postoperative
level of activity, or the duration of follow-up. The obese patients had a
significantly greater loss of blood during the operation than the patients
in the normal-weight group. There were no significant differences between
groups with regard to the prevalence of perioperative complications, the
number of units of blood transfused, the operative duration, or the
duration of hospitalization. Of the 202 hips, 184 (91 percent) were
pain-free or only mildly painful at the latest follow-up
examination.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)