1998
DOI: 10.1097/00003086-199807000-00009
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Bone Density at the Proximal Femur After Total Hip Arthroplasty

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Cited by 96 publications
(122 citation statements)
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“…A number of prospective studies of uncemented femoral implants have shown a significant bone loss (10-40%) in the calcar region after 1 4 years [S,lS, 23,26,27,30,34,35]. Our findings of the Unique stem are in agreement with this.…”
Section: Bone-mineral Densitysupporting
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A number of prospective studies of uncemented femoral implants have shown a significant bone loss (10-40%) in the calcar region after 1 4 years [S,lS, 23,26,27,30,34,35]. Our findings of the Unique stem are in agreement with this.…”
Section: Bone-mineral Densitysupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Some studies following patients up to 10 years have shown a progressive recovery or a minimal loss of BMD after the first to second postoperative year [ 16,20,30,34]. A different pattern of BMD changes has been found around loosened implants [9,23,31,32]. The importance of the early (1-2 years) bone resorption that we and others have found around fixed stems is not known.…”
Section: Bone-mineral Densitymentioning
confidence: 82%
“…A large degree of bone loss of the proximal femur has been identified in longitudinal studies as early as 3-6 months after implantation of an uncemented stem; thereafter, the BMD stabilizes during the first postoperative year (Marchetti et al 1996, Nishii et al 1997, Wixson et al 1997, Kröger et al 1998. None of our patients were measured until 2 years after surgery.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…The main concern about the use of metallic implants, such as magnesium alloys, is the mismatch of Young's moduli of the implants and the adjacent bone tissue. This inconsistency between mechanical properties results in the inadequate loading of the bone that leads to bone stress shielding, can subsequently cause bone resorption, implant loosening, formation of cracks within the implant, and implant migration [77][78][79][80]. Thus, implants should have appropriate strength and stiffness matching those of bone tissue.…”
Section: Accepted M Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%