article = {JSCR-2020-3-107} title = {Unusual Case of Acetabular Liner Dissociation Following Failure of Ceramic-OnCeramic Bearing Total Hip Arthroplasty: A Case Report} journal = {Surgery Case Reports} year = {2020} issn = {2733-225X} doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.31487/j.JSCR.2020.03.07} url = {https://www.sciencerepository.org/unusual-case-of-acetabular-liner-dissociation-following-failure-of-ceramic_JSCR-2020-3-107 author = {Michael Foxall-Smith,Richard Donovan,Stephen Eastaugh-Waring,Mehool Acharya,} keywords = {Ceramic liner, dislocation, migration, computed tomography} abstract ={Modular hip implants can improve construct stability and the rate of volumetric wear in Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA), however, there is still a 0.2-10% risk of dislocation. We report the unusual case of a 54-year-old lady who presented with a dislocated migrated ceramic liner following a twisting injury. She had undergone a ceramic-on-ceramic THA five years earlier. This diagnosis of the dislocated liner was confirmed with computed tomography (CT) scanning. Review of National Joint Registry data showed ceramic-on-ceramic acetabular liner dissociation to be rarer than in those with metal-on-polyethylene (incidence 0.27 vs. 0.46 per 1000 prosthesis years). We suggest the liner may have migrated in retrograde along the iliopsoas. We recommend the use of cross-sectional imaging (CT) to assist in confirming the diagnosis and planning future surgery.}