
Safety Issue of Hip Resurfacing
Author(s) -
Timothy McTighe
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
reconstructive review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2331-2270
pISSN - 2331-2262
DOI - 10.15438/rr.5.3.123
Subject(s) - hip resurfacing , femoral head , medicine , surgery , engineering , forensic engineering , arthroplasty
Hip Resurfacing (HR) development of the 1970s was an attempt to address the failures of conventional cemented stems. Those early HR designs failed because problems with maintaining bone under the resurfaced femoral head, and loosening of the socket with substantial acetabular bone loss. However technology, knowledge and surgical techniques have evolved over the past 45 years. The more recent designs like the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing (BHR) focused on metal to metal bearing surfaces. These devices are under attack and maybe they should be. However, lets not ignore the significant amount of information and potential improvements in both design technology and surgical techniques that have come about over the past few years.