# Radial Head Prosthesis with Interconnected Porosity Showing Low Bone Resorption Around the Stem

**Authors:** Valeria Vismara, Enrico Guerra, Riccardo Accetta, Carlo Cardile, Emanuele Boero, Alberto Aliprandi, Marco Porta, Carlo Zaolino, Alessandro Marinelli, Carlo Cazzaniga, Paolo Arrigoni

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14155439 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2025-08-01

## TL;DR

A new radial head prosthesis with interconnected porosity shows low bone resorption around the stem in patients with radial head fractures.

## Contribution

The study introduces a reliable radiological scoring system and evaluates a novel prosthesis design with interconnected porosity.

## Key findings

- Average bone resorption around the prosthesis stem was 3.5 mm ± 2.3.
- No correlation was found between resorption extent and follow-up time.
- The scoring system showed high inter-evaluator correlation for measuring resorption.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Radial head arthroplasty is a commonly preferred treatment for complex, unreconstructable radial head fractures. Recent studies have raised the question of whether factors such as bone resorption may be related to failure. This observational, retrospective, multicenter, spontaneous, and non-profit study aims to assess radiological outcomes, focusing on bone resorption around the stem, for radial head replacement using a modular, cementless radial head prosthesis with interconnected porosity. Methods: A series of 42 cases was available for review. Patients underwent radial head arthroplasty using a three-dimensional-printed radial head prosthesis. Patients were eligible for inclusion if they had undergone at least one follow-up between 6 and 15 months post-operatively. A scoring system to detect bone resorption was developed and administered by two independent evaluators. Results: Forty-two patients (14 males, 28 females), with an average age of 59 ± 11 years (range: 39–80 years), were analyzed with a minimum of six months’ and a maximum of 32 months’ follow-up. At follow-up, 50 radiological evaluations were collected, with 29 showing ≤3 mm and 12 showing 3–6 mm resorption around the stem. The average resorption was 3.5 mm ± 2.3. No correlation was found between the extent of resorption and the time of follow-up. The developed scoring system allowed for a high level of correlation between the evaluators’ measurements of bone resorption. Conclusions: Radial head prosthesis with interconnected porosity provided a low stem resorption rate for patients after a radial head fracture at short-to-mid-term follow-up after the definition of a reliable and easy-to-use radiological-based classification approach. (Level of Evidence: Level IV).

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** radial head fracture (MESH:D000092467), Bone Resorption (MESH:D001862)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12347323/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12347323