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Hip Surgery: An Odyssey
Augusto Sarmiento
SECTION 1: RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY
1:
Thromboembolic Disease
References*
2:
Fat Embolism
3:
Acetabular and Femoral Osteotomies
4:
Cement Pressurization
References*
5:
Radiolucent and Sclerotic Lines
References*
6:
The Charnley Prosthesis
References*
7:
Long-term Follow-up of Charnley Arthroplasties
References*
8:
Broken Wires and Nonunion of the Greater Trochanter
9:
Metal-backed Cemented Acetabula
References*
10:
The Posterior Surgical Approach
References*
11:
Leg-Length Discrepancy
12:
Hip Dislocation, Dislocated Total Hips and Acetabular Containment
References*
13:
Self-constrained Acetabular Components
14:
Minimally Invasive Total Hip Arthroplasty
Reference*
15:
The Effect of Age in Total Hip Surgery
References*
16:
Factors Likely to Influence Success in Cemented Total Hip Surgery
References*
17:
The Effects of Material and Prosthetic Design
References*
18:
Bilateral Simultaneous Versus Staged Total Hips
Reference*
19:
The Titanium Total Hip Experience
References*
20:
Retrieved Titanium Implants
References*
21:
Acetabular Grafts
References*
22:
Augmentation: Impaction of Morsellized Bone
References*
23:
Noncemented Total Hip Prostheses
References*
24:
Hybrid Total Hip Arthroplasty
Reference*
25:
An Experimental Bone-Cement Hybrid Fixation Technique
Reference*
26:
Early Failure of a Series of Hybrid Total Hip Arthroplasties
Reference*
27:
Femoral Lysis
References*
28:
A Technique for the Prevention of Femoral Lysis in Cemented Total Hips
Materials and Method
Results
Reference*
29:
Acetabular Lysis
Reference*
30:
Late Onset of Thigh Pain
SECTION 2: SPECIFIC PATHOLOGICAL CONDITIONS
31:
The Osteoarthritic Hip
Reference*
32:
The Acetabular Labrum
33:
Acetabular Impingement
34:
Destructive Osteoarthritis
35:
Ankylosing Spondylitis
36:
The Rheumatoid Hip
Reference*
37:
The Dysplastic Hip
The sequelae of congenital hip dysplasia and dislocation in the adult
Reference*
38:
Avascular Necrosis
Reference*
39:
Slipped Capital Epiphysis
40:
Protrusio Acetabulum
41:
Prosthetic Replacement for Neoplasms
Reference*
42:
Synovial Chondromatosis
Reference*
43:
Neuropathic Hip Joints
44:
The Infected Hip
Reference*
45:
Conversion of Osteotomized Femurs
46:
Conversion of Girdlestone Arthroplasties
47:
Conversion of the Fused Hip
48:
Revision of the Failed Femoral Components
References*
49:
Revision of the Failed Acetabular Components
References*
50:
Surface Replacement
51:
Isoelastic Total Hip Prostheses
References*
52:
Metal-on-Metal, Ceramics and Bigger Prosthetic Heads
53:
Ring Total Hip Prostheses
54:
Modular Components
References*
55:
Wear of Total Hip Components
References*
56:
Special and/or Difficult Replacements
57:
Vascular Injury
Reference*
58:
Peripheral Nerve Injury
59:
Periprosthetic Fractures
Reference*
60:
The Broken Stem
61:
Heterotopic Bone
62:
Rehabilitation
63:
Why So Many Total Hips…
References*
SECTION 3: THE FRACTURED HIP
64:
Acetabular Fractures
References*
65:
The Intertrochanteric Fracture
References*
66:
Interlocking Intramedullary Nail
References*
67:
Subtrochanteric Fractures
References*
68:
Femoral Head Fractures
References*
69:
The Femoral Neck Fracture
References*
70:
Nonunion of Femoral Neck Fractures
References*
71:
Femoral Endoprostheses
References*
72:
Bipolar Prostheses
References*
73:
Primary Total Hip
Reference*
74:
Rehabilitation
References*
SECTION 4: ANNEXURES
75:
Joint Replacement Registries—The Hurdles Ahead
References*
76:
The Hip Society
The History
Report to the Hip Society
References*
77:
The International Hip Society
INDEX
TOC
Index
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