Pulmonary function during and after total hip replacement. Findings in patients who have insertion of a femoral component with and without cement.
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
- Vol. 75 (4) , 581-587
- https://doi.org/10.2106/00004623-199304000-00012
Abstract
Eleven patients who had a femoral component inserted with cement and twenty-three who had a femoral component inserted without cement were studied prospectively for changes in the pulmonary shunt associated with total hip replacement. The levels of oxygen in the arterial blood and the platelet counts were measured preoperatively and each morning for three days after the arthroplasty. Levels of oxygen in the arterial blood were determined intraoperatively, once before and once after the femoral component was inserted. Intraoperative shunt values increased 28 per cent when a femoral component was inserted with cement (p < 0.05), but they did not change when cement was not used. The average postoperative shunt values were higher than the average preoperative shunt values for both groups of patients, but only the values on the second postoperative day after a procedure with cement were significantly higher (p < 0.05). The ability of the patient to tolerate an increase in pulmonary shunt should be assessed when the femoral component is to be cemented during total hip replacement.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- AIR EMBOLISM DURING TOTAL HIP REPLACEMENT: COMPARISON OF TWO SURGICAL TECHNIQUESBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1989
- Ventilation ‐ Perfusion Relationship during Hip ArthroplastyActa Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 1983
- Circulating Tissue Thromboplastin during Hip SurgeryEuropean Surgical Research, 1979
- Physiologic Emboli Changes Observed During Total Hip Replacement ArthroplastyPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1975
- Tracking respiratory therapy in the trauma patientThe American Journal of Surgery, 1975
- Fat Embolism during Total Hip ReplacementJournal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1974
- Experimental Production of Vascular Hypotension, and Bone Marrow and Fat Embolism with Methylmethacrylate CementPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1974
- Some Physiological Aspects of Prosthesis Stabilization with Acrylic PolymerPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1972
- Fat embolism following prosthetic replacement of the femoral headInjury, 1972
- The Intraoperative Hazard of Acrylic Bone Cement: Report of a CaseAnesthesiology, 1971