Title of article :
Cobalt Cardiomyopathy Secondary to Hip Arthroplasty: An Increasingly Prevalent Problem
Author/Authors :
Tilney, Russel Department of Medicine - Mater Dei Hospital, Msida, Malta , Roberta Burg, Melanie Department of Cardiology - Mater Dei Hospital, Msida, Malta , Adrian Sammut, Mark Department of Cardiology - Mater Dei Hospital, Msida, Malta
Abstract :
A forty-year-old man experienced worsening heart failure four years following bilateral complicated total hip replacement.
His condition was extensively worked up but no underlying pathology was immediately evident. Given the cobalt-chromium
alloy component present in the hip arthroplasties, the raised cobalt blood levels, and a fitting clinical picture coupled with
radiological findings, the patient underwent right hip revision. Evidence of biotribocorrosion was present on direct visualisation
intraoperatively.The patient subsequently experienced symptomatic improvement (NYHA class III to class I) and echocardiography
showed recovery of ejection fraction. Cobalt exists as a bivalent and trivalent molecule in circulation and produces a cytotoxicity
profile similar to nanoparticles, causing neurological, thyroid, and cardiological pathology. Blood levels are not entirely useful as
there is no identifiable conversion factor for levels in whole blood, serum, and erythrocytes which seem to act independently of each
other. Interestingly cobalt cardiomyopathy is frequently compounded by other possible causes of cardiomyopathy such as alcohol
and a link has been postulated. Definitive treatment is revision of the arthroplasty as other treatments are unproven.
Keywords :
Cobalt Cardiomyopathy , Hip Arthroplasty
Journal title :
Case Reports in Cardiology