Clodronate prevents prosthetic migration: A randomized radiostereometric study of 50 total knee patients

Authors

  • Maria Hilding
  • Leif Ryd
  • Sören Toksvig-Larsen
  • Per Aspenberg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/000164700317362163

Abstract

In a double-blind study, we randomized 50 patients to receive peroral clodronate medication or placebo from 3 weeks before until 6 months after a total knee replacement with a cemented NexGen implant. Migration of the tibial components was measured by radiostereometry at 1 year. Clodronate reduced prosthetic migration, as measured by maximum total point motion, from 0.40 mm to 0.29 mm (p = 0.01). This confirms that the early postoperative migration is related to bone resorption and thus the biology of the bone bed. Since early migration is related to late loosening, 6 months of clodronate medication might reduce the risk of loosening.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2000-01-01

How to Cite

Hilding, M., Ryd, L., Toksvig-Larsen, S., & Aspenberg, P. (2000). Clodronate prevents prosthetic migration: A randomized radiostereometric study of 50 total knee patients. Acta Orthopaedica, 71(6), 553–557. https://doi.org/10.1080/000164700317362163