Allergic reaction and metal hypersensitivity after shoulder joint replacement
Autor: | Enrico Bellato, P Pellegrino, A Ferrario, I. Zorzolo, E Pira, Andrea Pautasso, Filippo Castoldi |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Allergy business.industry medicine.medical_treatment Urinary system Allergies Cement Metal hypersensitivity Patch test Shoulder arthroplasty Urine medicine.disease Arthroplasty Asymptomatic Surgery Anesthesia medicine Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Implant medicine.symptom business Shoulder replacement |
Zdroj: | Musculoskeletal surgery. |
ISSN: | 2035-5114 |
Popis: | Purpose Metal ion release may cause local and systemic effects and induce hypersensitivity reactions. The aim of our study is first to determine if implant-related hypersensitivity correlates to patient symptoms or not; second, to assess the rate of hypersensitivity and allergies in shoulder arthroplasty. Methods Forty patients with shoulder replacements performed between 2015 and 2017 were studied with minimum 2-year follow-up; no patient had prior metal implants. Each patient underwent radiographic and clinical evaluation using the Constant-Murley Score (CMS), 22 metal and cement haptens patch testing, serum and urine tests to evaluate 12 metals concentration, and a personal occupational medicine interview. Results At follow-up (average 45 ± 10.7 months), the mean CMS was 76 ± 15.9; no clinical complications or radiographic signs of loosening were detected; two nickel sulfate (5%), 1 benzoyl peroxide (2.5%) and 1 potassium dichromate (2.5%) positive findings were found, but all these patients were asymptomatic. There was an increase in serum aluminum, urinary aluminum and urinary chromium levels of 1.74, 3.40 and 1.83 times the baseline, respectively. No significant difference in metal ion concentrations were found when patients were stratified according to gender, date of surgery, type of surgery, and type of implant. Conclusions Shoulder arthroplasty is a source of metal ion release and might act as a sensitizing exposure. However, patch test positivity does not seem to correlate to hypersensitivity cutaneous manifestations or poor clinical results. Laboratory data showed small constant ion release over time, regardless of gender, type of shoulder replacement and implant used. Levels of evidence Level II. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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