Accuracy of femoral head center reconstruction using a straight cementless rectangular stem: An in-silico study comparing elderly and middle-aged patients
Hidde D. Veldman, Ide C. Heyligers, Philip C. Noble, Tim A.E.J. Boymans

TL;DR
A cementless hip implant can accurately reconstruct femoral head position in most patients, regardless of age or sex, but some anatomical variations may require special attention.
Contribution
Demonstrates that a single non-modular cementless stem achieves good femoral head center reconstruction across age groups with careful planning.
Findings
92.4% of femoral head center reconstructions were within 5 mm accuracy across age and sex groups.
Very elderly males required larger stem sizes and more lateralized stems compared to middle-aged males.
Reconstruction failures were linked to high native mediolateral offsets and low neck-shaft angles.
Abstract
Accurate reconstruction of the femoral head center (FHC) is essential for restoring hip biomechanics in total hip arthroplasty (THA). Previously described age-related morphological changes—such as canal widening and a mediocaudal FHC shift—may complicate anatomical reconstruction in all age-categories using a single non-modular cementless stem. This study assessed the capacity of such implant to achieve adequate FHC reconstruction across age groups and sexes. Virtual implantation of a non-modular cementless stem (SL-PLUS™) was performed in CT-based 3D reconstructions of 148 femora from middle-aged (<80 years) and very elderly (≥80 years) subjects. For each case, the optimal implant size, type (standard or lateral), and modular head (-4 mm, 0 mm or +4 mm) were selected. FHC deviation was measured in three dimensions; reconstructions were considered adequate if < 5 mm in all directions.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthopaedic implants and arthroplasty · Total Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes · Hip and Femur Fractures
