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Total Hip Replacement in Active and Inactive Tuberculosis Hip: A Systematic Review.

INTRODUCTION: Tuberculosis of the hip joint is a debilitating disease that can result in severe joint destruction, eventually leading to painful arthritis of the hip. Total hip arthroplasty (THA) in patients with advanced arthritis offers a painless and mobile joint with good functional outcome but some aspects of THA in TB hip have been controversial in the past due to the concerns of disease reactivation, especially when disease activity is factored in. Various factors like timing of surgery, Antitubercular therapy (ATT) initiation timing, reactivation, complications etc needs to be evaluated very carefully before planning for such cases.

METHODS: Electronic databases like MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane library, Clinicaltrials gov and OpenGrey were searched. The key words used were "Tuberculosis", "Tuberculosis of hip", Hip tuberculosis, "TB", "THR", "total hip replacement", "total hip arthroplasty","THA", "ankylosed hip", "fused hip", "arthrodesis" along with boolean operators "AND" and "OR". Out of a total of 1634 articles, 38 were selected for full text review and 22 articles were finally included in the study.

RESULTS: For the timing of surgery most authors relied on the inflammatory markers to settle down with ATT before performing THA. 15 authors advocated use of pre-operative ATT with 6 studies recommending at least 2 weeks and 3 studies advocating atleast 3 months of ATT pre surgery.Single stage THA was performed in most studies(214 hips vs 18 hips) as opposed to 2 or 3 stage surgery. In the active disease 72.8% of the hips had uncemented prosthesis, 25.6% hips underwent cemented and 1.5% hips had hybrid THA fixation. Overall reactivation of the infection was seen in 2.47% cases. All authors reported excellent clinical improvement (mean HHS improvement 37.17 to 88.62).

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