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Western Journal of Emergency Medicine logoLink to Western Journal of Emergency Medicine
. 2014 Feb;15(1):107–108. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2013.8.19078

Asymptomatic Chronic Dislocation of a Cemented Total Hip Prosthesis

Andrea Emilio Salvi *,, Anthony Vatroslav Florschutz , Guido Grappiolo
PMCID: PMC3935779  PMID: 24578774

Dislocation of a total hip prosthesis is a painful and mentally stressful orthopaedic emergency.1 It may be long-standing and asymptomatic, typically involving the femoral portion.24 This report describes a peculiar chronic dislocation of both components of a total hip prosthesis. A 93-year-old female patient, thin and of short stature, had come to our attention for recent onset of lumbar pain at the orthopaedic department. She walked with significant unequal lengths of the lower limbs. She had previously been operated on for bilateral total hip replacement, in which the left hip, a Brunelli version (Brescia, Italy, 1977), was performed 30 years ago for dysplasia.5 At the emergency department, lumbar spine and pelvis radiographs were taken, showing scoliosis and vertebral arthrosic deformations, along with dislocation of both total left hip replacement components (Figure). It was detected that the femoral stem was loosened. Patient denied any fall injury or accident to the operated left hip. It was decided not to perform surgery because of the patient’s age. Many case reports have discussed hip dislocations in which a femoral component was involved. To our knowledge, this is the first case of dislocation of both prosthetic elements of a hip replacement that was completely asymptomatic while walking.

Figure.

Figure

Bilateral hip prosthetization with dislocation of both prosthetic components of the left hip. This is a Brunelli THR version, peculiar for the squared and cemented socket. On the right is visible a color photo of an explanted cup. The cemented socket is rotated and the cemented straight stem is loosened. Surgical approach used was the Watson-Jones (wire cerclage is visible around greater trochanter).

Footnotes

Conflicts of Interest: By the WestJEM article submission agreement, all authors are required to disclose all affiliations, funding sources and financial or management relationships that could be perceived as potential sources of bias. The authors disclosed none.

REFERENCES

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