AHF Podcast

Operation FUBAR: One-in-Six-Million Bone


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What do you do when the greater trochanter shears off during a routine hip replacement — and the bone is too soft to hold a screw? Dr. Jeff Barry of UCSF walks through two intraoperative disasters in the same patient, and how he salvaged both.

Jeff Barry, who directs the Hip and Knee Arthroplasty Fellowship at UCSF and co-directs the Arthroplasty for the Modern Surgeon course, joins Joe Schwab for an Operation FUBAR case review most surgeons will recognize with a wince: a frail 75-year-old retired nurse with a rapidly collapsing hip, leukemia, low platelets, and osteoporosis so severe her DEXA T-score came back at -5.1 — statistically about one in six million.

On the first side, the trochanter shears off during a femoral exposure Barry has performed thousands of times. On the second side a year later — after a missed femoral neck fracture — a gently tapped multi-hole cup punches straight through the medial wall. Barry talks through the decision-making in both moments: when less is more, how locking-screw revision cups can function as an internal cage, and why the "trap side" of a case is often the one you weren't worried about.

The conversation goes beyond technique into how surgeons process intraoperative complications — stepping back from the wound to game-plan, communicating with anesthesia before cementing in a pulmonary patient, protecting the next case on the schedule, and the value of a "confessional" text thread with trusted colleagues. For arthroplasty surgeons, fellows, and residents, this is an honest look at what severely osteoporotic bone can do to even a well-planned primary.

⏱️ Chapters:
00:00 Introduction and guest background
01:31 Frail elderly patient with a rapidly collapsing hip
03:37 Planning a cemented hip in severe osteoporosis
06:21 Greater trochanter shears off during femoral exposure
08:00 How surgeons react when a case goes wrong
13:27 What a T-score of -5.1 means for hip surgery
14:42 Missed femoral neck fracture in the opposite hip
16:44 Acetabular cup punches through the medial wall
19:21 Salvaging a failed cup with locking screws
24:45 Managing pelvic discontinuity as the rescue surgeon
28:46 Knowing when to call for help in the OR
33:33 Teaching trainees through intraoperative complications
40:12 Debriefing and the surgeon confessional after complications

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Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com

This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only.
The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion.

#AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #TotalHipArthroplasty #THA #AnteriorApproach #HipReplacement #Osteoporosis #RevisionHipSurgery #FemoralNeckFracture #PeriprostheticFracture #CementedStem #PelvicDiscontinuity #JeffBarry #OrthopedicSurgery

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AHF PodcastBy Anterior Hip Foundation

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