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1.
J Biomed Mater Res A ; 90(4): 1032-42, 2009 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18671264

ABSTRACT

The impact of femoral head surface roughness on wear of gamma-irradiation sterilized (3 MRad in nitrogen, crosslinked) and nonsterilized (not crosslinked) UHMWPE acetabular cups has been evaluated. Gravimetric wear testing was performed in a hip joint simulator for 2 x 10(6) cycles. CoCrMo heads were used with different surface roughness (R(a) = 15 nm and R(a) = 400 nm). The surface roughness after wear test was unchanged for the roughened heads, whereas the initially smooth heads showed a few scratches. The roughened heads increased the wear of the acetabular cups 2-fold. The gamma-irradiated cups tested against rough heads underwent the highest wear. The absorption of water was highest for the gamma-irradiated cups (0.0204% compared to 0.0031% after 85 days). Raman spectroscopy showed small but significant crystallinity changes in the wear zone, where the gamma-irradiated cups with the most extensive abrasion increased in crystallinity, whereas the nonsterilized cups underwent a crystallinity decrease.


Subject(s)
Acetabulum , Femur Head , Polyethylenes/standards , Sterilization/methods , Absorption , Gamma Rays , Hip Joint , Humans , Materials Testing/methods , Surface Properties , Vitallium , Water
2.
Proc Inst Mech Eng H ; 222(5): 617-28, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18756681

ABSTRACT

The wear of metal-on-metal bearings is affected by various design parameters, such as the clearance or surface roughness. It would be very useful to have a significant indicator of wear according to these design parameters, such as the lambda ratio. Three different batches of cast high- and low-carbon cobalt-chromium hip implants (28 mm, 32 mm, and 36 mm diameters) were tested in a hip joint simulator for 2 x 10(6) cycles. Bovine calf serum was used as lubricant, and the samples were weighed at regular intervals during the test. The predictive role of the lambda ratio on the wear behaviour was investigated. Three different configurations were tested to explore the wear rate for a broad range of lambda ratios. The results of these studies clearly showed that the femoral heads of 36 mm diameter had the best wear behaviour with respect to the other two smaller configurations tested. From a predictive point of view, the lambda ratios associated with the configurations tested could clearly indicate that the femoral heads of 36 mm diameter worked in the mixed-lubrication regime (lambda > 1); all the smallest configurations (28mm size) had lambda < 1, thus showing their aptitude to work in the boundary lubrication regime, with substantially higher volume depletion due to wear. The lambda values associated with the 32 mm size varied in a range around 1 (0.95 < lambda < 1.16), suggesting the possibility of operating in the mixed-lubrication regime.


Subject(s)
Equipment Failure Analysis/methods , Hip Prosthesis , Materials Testing/methods , Metals/chemistry , Models, Theoretical , Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Computer Simulation , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Surface Properties
3.
Proc Inst Mech Eng H ; 222(3): 319-31, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18491701

ABSTRACT

Success of total knee replacement (TKR) depends on the prosthetic design. Aseptic loosening of the femoral component is a significant failure mode that has received little attention. Despite the clinical relevance of failures, no protocol is available to test long-term implant-bone fixation of TKR in vitro. The scope of this work was to develop and validate a protocol to assess pre-clinically the fixation of TKR femoral components. An in vitro protocol was designed to apply a simplified but relevant loading profile using a 6-degrees-of-freedom knee simulator for 1,000000 cycles. Implant-bone inducible micromotions and permanent migrations were measured at three locations throughout the test. After test completion, fatigue damage in the cement was quantified. The developed protocol was successfully applied to a commercial TKR. Additional tests were performed to exclude artefacts due to swelling or creep of the composite femur models. The components migrated distally; they tilted towards valgus in the frontal plane and in extension in the sagittal plane. The migration patterns were consistent with clinical roentgen-stereophotogrammetric recordings with TKR. Additional indicators were proposed that could quantify the tendency to loosen/stabilize. The type and amount of damage found in the cement, as well as the migration patterns, were consistent with clinical experience with the specific TKR investigated. The proposed pre-clinical test yielded repeatable results, which were consistent with the clinical literature. Therefore, its relevance and reliability was proved.


Subject(s)
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee , Bone Cements , Femur , Knee Joint , Prosthesis Failure , Bone Cements/chemistry , Cementation/standards , Computer Simulation , Equipment Failure Analysis , Femur/surgery , Hardness Tests , Humans , Knee Joint/physiopathology , Knee Prosthesis/standards , Materials Testing , Models, Structural , Motion , Transducers , Weight-Bearing
4.
J Biomech ; 40(8): 1871-6, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17014854

ABSTRACT

Despite the fundamental value of wear simulation studies to assess wear resistance of total joint replacements, neither specialised simulators nor established external conditions are available for the human ankle joint. The aim of the present study was to verify the suitability of a knee wear simulator to assess wear rates in ankle prostheses, and to report preliminary this rate for a novel three-component total ankle replacement design. Four intact 'small' size specimens of the Box ankle were analysed in a four-station knee wear simulator. Special component-to-actuator holders were manufactured and starting spatial alignment of the three-components was sought. Consistent load and motion cycles representing conditions at the ankle joint replaced exactly with the prosthesis design under analysis were taken from a corresponding mechanical model of the stance phase of walking. The weight loss for the three specimens, after two million cycles, was 32.68, 14.78, and 62.28mg which correspond to a linear penetration of 0.018, 0.008, and 0.034mm per million-cycle, respectively for the specimens #1, #2, and #3. The knee wear simulator was able to reproduce load-motion patterns typical of a replaced ankle. Motion of the meniscal bearing in between the tibial and talar components was smooth, this component remaining in place and in complete congruence with the metal components throughout the test.


Subject(s)
Ankle Joint/physiopathology , Biomimetics/instrumentation , Equipment Failure Analysis/instrumentation , Joint Prosthesis , Knee Joint/physiopathology , Prosthesis Design/instrumentation , Prosthesis Failure , Ankle Joint/surgery , Biomimetics/methods , Equipment Failure Analysis/methods , Humans , Prosthesis Design/methods
5.
Clin Orthop Relat Res ; 456: 153-8, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17065844

ABSTRACT

Metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty has the longest clinical history of all total arthroplasties. We asked whether large diameter femoral heads would result in less wear than those with small diameters. We also asked if there is a threshold diameter that ensures good wear behavior. We tested three batches of cast high-carbon cobalt-chromium-molybdenum hip implants (28 mm, 36 mm, and 54 mm diameters) in a hip simulator for 5 million cycles. We used bovine serum as lubricant and weighed the samples at regular intervals during testing. The 28-mm configuration had almost twice the wear of the 54-mm configuration, but we observed no difference between the 36-mm and the 54-mm configurations. The similarity in the wear performances of the larger configurations supports the presence of a threshold diameter that ensures good wear behavior.


Subject(s)
Hip Prosthesis , Materials Testing , Vitallium , Femur Head , Prosthesis Design
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