Granulomatous pseudotumors in total joint replacement
- 1 February 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Skeletal Radiology
- Vol. 16 (2) , 146-152
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00367764
Abstract
Fourteen patients (15 joints) developed a foreign body reaction to methylmethacrylate, polyethylene, or metal adjacent to a total joint implan, a condition we would like to term granulomatous pseudotumors. There were eight male and six female patients. Their average age was 61 years. The hip was involved in 14 joints (femoral component 11 times, acetabulum 7, and great trochanter once). One patient presented with granulomatous pseudotumors of the knee. The principal findings included increasing pain and radiographic evidence of loosening occurring on average 2.7 years following the implant. This was followed by a characteristic and gradually developing radiographic pattern of discrete rounded lucencies. These developed into large ovoid lytic areas, destroying both methylmethacrylate and bone. Histologically, the appearances were characterized by histiocytic infiltration and the presence of multiple foreign body giant cells. Foreign material was identified in 9 of 11 cases. The pathogenesis is unknown but appears related to micromovement or loosening of the implant.This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- A study of implant failure in the Wagner resurfacing arthroplasty.Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1985
- Focal lytic lesions associated with femoral stem loosening in total hip prosthesisAmerican Journal of Roentgenology, 1985
- Bone cysts containing silicone particles in bones adjacent to a carpal silastic implantSkeletal Radiology, 1983
- Destructive arthritis due to silicone: a foreign-body reaction.Radiology, 1983
- Case report 246Skeletal Radiology, 1983
- The synovial-like membrane at the bone-cement interface in loose total hip replacements and its proposed role in bone lysis.Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1983
- Observations upon the interface between bone and polymethylmethacrylate cement.1982
- CAN METAL SENSITIVITY LOOSEN JOINT REPLACEMENTS?The Lancet, 1980
- Metal sensitivity before and after total hip arthroplastyJournal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1977
- Measurements of the Quantity of Monomer Leaching Out of Acrylic Bone Cement into the Surrounding Tissues during the Process of PolymerizationPublished by Springer Nature ,1975