1.Short-term curative effects of Tantalum rod treatment in early avascular necrosis.
Fu-Sheng YE ; Zhe-Ji NI ; Xiao-Bing CHU ; Bang-Jian HE ; Ju LI ; Pei-Jian TONG
China Journal of Orthopaedics and Traumatology 2013;26(8):646-650
OBJECTIVETo explore the recent clinical curative effect of Tantalum rod in treating the early avascular necrosis.
METHODSFrom January 2008 to November 2008, the 25 patients (39 hips) with early avascular necrosis accepted tantalum rod placement and included 9 males (11 hips) and 16 females (28 hips) with an average age of 37 years old ranging from 18 to 74 years old. Four patients (6 hips) caused by Alcoholic, 6 patients (8 hips) by hormone, 2 cases (2 hips) by traumatic, 13 cases (23 hips) by idiopathic. Steinberg preoperative stage involved 7 hips in period I, 24 hips in period II, 8 hips in period III. Curative effect analysis included preoperative and postoperative Harris score, radiographic changes and hip replacement for follow-up to accept the end of the femoral head survival rate.
RESULTSAll patients were followed up for 6 to 47 months (averaged 37.4 months). All 12 hips imaging appeard progress,including tantalum rod exit in 1 hip, hip hemiarthroplasty collapse in 3 hips, the area increased to avascular necrosis in 8 hips. Six hips accepted total hip replacement, including imaging progress in 5 hips (41.7%, 5/12), no imaging progress in 1 hip (3.7%,1/27). All hips' Kaplan-Meier survival curves showed 6-month survival rate was (97.4 +/- 2.5)% after tantalum stick insertion, 1-year survival rate was (94.7 +/- 3.6), and 2-year survival rate was (88.6 +/- 5.4)%, 3-year survival rate was (72.5 +/- 11.2).
CONCLUSIONIt is effective for treatment of avascular necrosis of femoral head in Steinberg I and II by Tantalum rod, and it can effectively relieve femoral head replacement time.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Female ; Femur Head Necrosis ; mortality ; surgery ; Humans ; Kaplan-Meier Estimate ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Prostheses and Implants ; Retrospective Studies ; Survival Rate ; Tantalum ; Time Factors ; Treatment Outcome ; Young Adult