Abstract

Little information is known regarding the energy expenditure of the surgeon during total hip arthroplasty (THA). We sought to compare the energy expenditure associated with femoral broaching using two techniques: manual and automated. We recorded energy expenditure, minute ventilation, heart rate, and total broaching time of a single surgeon while broaching the femoral canal during direct anterior THA using two different techniques: Manual broaching (n=26) and automated broaching (n=20). Manual broaching required a longer time than automated broaching (6.1±1.1 vs. 3.7±0.9min; p<0.001) with an increase in energy expenditure (32.6±7.0 vs. 16.0±7.1 Calories; p<0.001). Heart rate was higher with manual broaching (99.4±9.8 vs. 90.1±9.8 beats per min; p=0.003), along with minute ventilation (36.5±7.0 vs. 30.3±5.8L/min; p=0.003). There were no intraoperative complications. Automated femoral broaching during THA can decrease the energy expenditure of broaching by 50% and time of broaching by 40%, when compared to manual technique. This research was not a clinical trial.

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