Background: Acute hypotension, hypoxemia, cardiac arrest, and sudden death are well recognized complications during total hip arthroplasty, and they have been attributed to embolization of fat and bone marrow. An increase in intramedullary pressure in the femur is the most important pathogenic factor for the development of embolic events. Intravasation of fat, bone marrow, and bone debris during the implantation of a femoral component, and the embolization of these elements through the venous system located along the linea aspera and through the metaphyseal vessels, have been demonstrated experimentally and clinically. The purpose of the present study was to compare the effects of fixation of the femoral component without cement with those of fixation with a bone-vacuum cementing technique on the severity of embolic phenomena and cardiopulmonary impairment during total hip arthroplasty. Fixation with a conventional cementing technique was also evaluated as a control.
Methods: Sixty patients (sixty hips) were entered into a prospective, randomized clinical trial. The patients were assigned to one of three groups. Group 1 consisted of twenty patients who had the femoral component inserted without cement, Group 2 comprised twenty patients who had the component inserted with a conventional cementing technique, and Group 3 included twenty patients who had fixation with the so-called bone-vacuum cementing technique. In the hips in Group 3, a suction of -800 millibars (-80,000 pascals) was applied to a proximal drainage cannula placed along the linea aspera and a distal drainage cannula placed in the diaphysis in order to produce a vacuum in the medullary cavity of the femur during the application of cement and the insertion of the stem. Transesophageal echocardiography and hemodynamic and blood-gas analysis were performed during the operation.
Results: Severe embolic events (defined as a cascade of fine echogenic particles of less than five millimeters in diameter) were observed in seventeen (85 percent) of the twenty patients during insertion of the stem with use of a conventional cementing technique but in none of the patients who had the stem inserted without cement (p < 0.05). Insertion of the femoral component with the bone-vacuum cementing technique prevented embolic phenomena in all but one patient (5 percent). Arterial oxygen saturation decreased significantly (p < 0.05) from a mean of 99.5 to 92.9 percent after insertion of the stem with a conventional cementing technique, but only slight changes were observed in the patients who had fixation of the component without cement and in those who were managed with the bone-vacuum cementing technique. Intraoperative pulmonary shunt values increased a mean of 24 percent (p < 0.05) when the femoral component was inserted with a conventional cementing technique, but with the numbers available we did not detect a significant change in those values when the component was fixed without cement or when it was inserted with use of the bone-vacuum cementing technique.
Conclusions: The present study showed that severe embolic events and intraoperative pulmonary impairment are common when a femoral component is fixed with use of a conventional cementing technique. The results clearly demonstrated a low risk of embolism during total hip arthroplasty when the femoral component was fixed without cement and when it was fixed with the bone-vacuum cementing technique. The ability of a patient to withstand an embolic event should be considered before fixation of the femoral component with use of a conventional cementing technique is planned.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2106/00004623-199906000-00010 | DOI Listing |
Clin Oral Investig
January 2025
Department of Restorative Dentistry, Graduate School of Dental Medicine, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan.
Objectives: To evaluate the shear bond strength (SBS) of universal cements (UCs) to dentin prepared with different diamond burs using various adhesive strategies.
Materials And Methods: One-hundred-twenty molars were prepared to expose the mid-coronal dentin. The teeth were divided into two groups according to diamond bur preparations: coarse and super-fine grit burs.
Eur J Dent
December 2024
Postgraduate Program of Conservative Dentistry Specialist, Faculty of Dental Medicine, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia.
Objectives: Calcium carbonate (CaCO), a major inorganic component in bones and teeth, offers potential protection against demineralization. This study investigates the effect of CaCO from shells on the expression of fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2), transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), and collagen type 1 in the rat dental pulp.
Materials And Methods: The first maxillary molars of were perforated and subsequently pulp capped with CaCO extracted from shells.
BMC Oral Health
January 2025
Department of Endodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, Ordu University, Ordu, 52200, Turkey.
Background: Immature maxillary central teeth can be managed by using several treatment options. The aim of this finite element stress analysis study was to evaluate the effect of different treatment procedures on the stresses on immature maxillary incisor teeth models that generated on cone beam computed tomography, by trauma and bite forces.
Methods: A total of 11 different models consisting of revascularization treatment using MTA and biodentine and the state of the root apex formed with cement after treatment, apexification, modified apexification, traditional root canal treatment and two different control groups have been created.
Bone Joint J
January 2025
Department of Research, Sint Maartenskliniek, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Aims: Tibial fixation in revision total knee arthroplasty (rTKA) can present surgical challenges. It has been suggested that appropriate fixation in at least two of the three anatomical zones (epiphysis, metaphysis, and diaphysis) is essential for implant survival. However, supporting clinical data are lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Dent Child (Chic)
September 2024
Brazilian Dental Association, all in Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil.
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