2003
DOI: 10.1016/j.arthro.2003.10.025
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Mosaicplasty for the treatment of femoral head defect after incorrect resorbable screw insertion

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Cited by 64 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Hart et al [21] has also reported a case of mosaicplasty for an osteochondral defect in the femoral head. The defect arose in a 28-year-old patient due to migration of a resorbable screw into the hip joint that was used for open reduction internal fixation of an acetabular fragment following a posterior hip dislocation.…”
Section: Mosaicplastymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hart et al [21] has also reported a case of mosaicplasty for an osteochondral defect in the femoral head. The defect arose in a 28-year-old patient due to migration of a resorbable screw into the hip joint that was used for open reduction internal fixation of an acetabular fragment following a posterior hip dislocation.…”
Section: Mosaicplastymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the contrary, owing to the autologous nature of this technique, it is limited by donor site morbidity, graft availability and the potential for dead space between the grafts [32]. Hart et al [33] first reported the case of an osteochondral defect of the femoral head and subsequent treatment using mosaicplasty with open surgical dislocation of the hip. At six months following surgery, the patient had a full range of painless movement of the hip with no further complaints of pain related to activities.…”
Section: Osteochondral Autograft Transplantation (Mosaicplasty)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reports of successful use of cell-based cartilage repair or autologous whole-tissue transplantation for treatment of large articular cartilage defects of the femoral head are rare: we found only one reference to osteoarticular transfer (mosaicplasty) for treatment of articular defects of the hip [16]. The case involved a patient with a deep osteochondral defect of the femoral head caused by a penetrated resorbable screw after fixation of a displaced large single fragment of the posterior acetabular rim.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%