Abstract

Determination of the amount of variation in conventional acetabular cup positioning (radiological inclination and anteversion) in view of different factors that could influence the measured angles. The intended acetabular cup position of 45 degrees inclination and 20 degrees anteversion was checked radiologically in 950 patients who received a cementless total hip replacement. The qualifications of the surgeon, operated side and implant model were recorded and analyzed with respect to a possible correlation with the results. Since a "safe angle" cannot be defined without consideration of other variables, a tolerable deviation of the target position was investigated. The mean inclination angle was 48.7 degrees (SD 7 degrees, minimum 28 degrees, maximum 75 degrees ). Anteversion was measured with a mean of 18.6 degrees (SD 9 degrees, minimum -9 degrees, maximum 50 degrees ). Assuming an acceptable deviation of +/- 5 degrees from the target position (45 degrees inclination and 20 degrees anteversion), only 22.7 % of the acetabular cups were in this range. In the case of an acceptable deviation of +/- 10 degrees, 34.5 % of the cups were still outside of the acceptable range. The qualifications of the surgeon, the implanted model, as well as the operated side did not have a significant influence on the results. The common implantation technique yielded significant variation with respect to anteversion and inclination. The application of computer-aided navigation in the placement of acetabular cups would help to improve accuracy and reproducibility considerably in total hip arthroplasty.

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