Title of article :
Clinical outcomes of hemiarthroplasty and biological resurfacing in patients aged younger than 50 years
Author/Authors :
Hammond، نويسنده , , LCDR James and Lin، نويسنده , , Emery C. and Harwood، نويسنده , , Daniel P. and Juhan، نويسنده , , Tristan W. and Gochanour، نويسنده , , Eric and Klosterman، نويسنده , , Emma L. and Cole، نويسنده , , Brian J. and Nicholson، نويسنده , , Gregory P. and Verma، نويسنده , , Nikhil N. and Romeo، نويسنده , , Anthony A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Background
shoulder arthroplasty as a treatment for glenohumeral degenerative joint disease is well accepted but has been less predictable with regard to outcomes and durability in a younger aged population, typically aged younger than 50 years. This younger population has a greater potential for glenoid component loosening. This has led surgeons to perform hemiarthroplasty or hemiarthroplasty with biological resurfacing of the glenoid in an effort to avoid the potential problems with a polyethylene glenoid and obtain durable and acceptable results for these patients.
s
udy included 44 patients, with 23 undergoing hemiarthroplasty alone and 21 undergoing hemiarthroplasty with biological resurfacing of the glenoid. All patients were aged younger than 50 years. Preoperative diagnoses, comorbidities, demographics, and range of motion were collected. Preoperative and postoperative radiographs were obtained. Preoperative and postoperative objective scoring measures (Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation, American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score, visual analog scale, Simple Shoulder Test, Constant-Murley) were used.
s
ollow-up was 3.8 years for the hemiarthroplasty group and 3.6 years for the biological resurfacing group. Six patients in the hemiarthroplasty and 12 patients in the biological resurfacing group were considered failures due to revision surgery or an American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score <50. The hemiarthroplasty group had significantly better visual analog scale and Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation scores.
sions
was a significant failure rate in the hemiarthroplasty and the biologic resurfacing groups compared with results in the literature. Improved outcomes and lower failure rates were observed in the hemiarthroplasty group compared with the biological resurfacing group in this study.
Keywords :
lateral meniscal allograft , Hemiarthroplasty , biological resurfacing , glenohumeral arthritis
Journal title :
Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery
Journal title :
Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery