Title of article :
Gluteal muscle fatty atrophy is not associated with elevated blood metal ions or pseudotumors in patients with a unilat- eral metal-on-metal hip replacement
Author/Authors :
REITO, Aleksi Coxa Hospital for Joint Replacement, Tampere, Finland , NIEMINEN, Jyrki Coxa Hospital for Joint Replacement, Tampere, Finland , PUOLAKKA, Timo Coxa Hospital for Joint Replacement, Tampere, Finland , ESKELINEN, Antti Coxa Hospital for Joint Replacement, Tampere, Finland
Abstract :
Background and purpose — There are no international guidelines
to define adverse reaction to metal debris (ARMD). Muscle fatty
atrophy has been reported to be common in patients with failing
metal-on-metal (MoM) hip replacements. We assessed whether
gluteal muscle fatty atrophy is associated with elevated blood
metal ion levels and pseudotumors.
Patients and methods — 263 consecutive patients with unilateral
ASR XL total hip replacement using a posterior approach
and with an unoperated contralateral hip were included in the
study. All patients had undergone a standard screening program
at our institution, including MRI and blood metal ion measurement.
Muscle fatty atrophy was graded as being absent, mild,
moderate, or severe in each of the gluteal muscles.
Results — The prevalance of moderate-to-severe gluteal muscle
atrophy was low (12% for gluteus minimus, 10% for gluteus
medius, and 2% for gluteus maximus). Muscle atrophy was neither
associated with elevated blood metal ion levels (> 5 ppb) nor
with the presence of a clear (solid- or mixed-type) pseudotumor
seen in MRI. A combination of moderate-to-severe atrophy in
MRI, elevated blood metal ion levels, and MRI-confirmed mixed
or solid pseudotumor was rare. Multivariable regression revealed
that “preoperative diagnosis other than osteoarthrosis” was the
strongest predictor of the presence of fatty atrophy.
Interpretation — Gluteal muscle atrophy may be a clinically
significant finding with influence on hip muscle strength in
patients with MoM hip replacement. However, our results suggest
that gluteal muscle atrophy seen in MRI is not associated with
either the presence or severity of ARMD, at least not in patients
who have been operated on using the posterior approach.
Keywords :
Gluteal muscle fatty atrophy , blood metal ions , pseudotumors , metal-on-metal hip replacement
Journal title :
Acta Orthopaedica