Twenty-seven revision total hip arthroplasties were performed in
patients who were at least eighty years old. The average duration of
follow-up was five years. There were no perioperative deaths, and only 11
per cent (three) of the patients had a major complication; all of the
complications resolved. The only re-revision was the placement of an
extended lip-liner for the treatment of recurrent dislocation. Of the
twenty-five patients who were alive at the time of the most recent
follow-up or who had been survived by a family member who could be
interviewed, twenty-one (84 per cent) said that the operation had improved
function, twenty-three (92 per cent) had less pain, and twenty-two (88 per
cent) were satisfied with the result.