bearing surfaces thr

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Bearing Surfaces in Total Hip Arthroplasty

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Page 1: Bearing surfaces THR

Bearing Surfaces in Total Hip Arthroplasty

Page 2: Bearing surfaces THR

HistoryInterpositional arthroplasty

1912- Sir Robert Jones- Gold foil

Page 3: Bearing surfaces THR

Mould arthroplasty 1923-Smith Peterson

Restore congruous articular surfacesBleeding cancellous bone of femoral head

and acetabulum Metaplasia of fibrin clot to fibrocartilage

Page 4: Bearing surfaces THR

Glass

Pyrex – viscalloid - celluloid derivative

Bakelite

Fragility and foreign body reaction

Page 5: Bearing surfaces THR

1937-Venable and Stuck- Vitallium- results encouraging

Aufranc

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Judet brothers- heat curved acrylic femoral head prosthesis-fragmentation of acrylic with wear- severe tissue reaction-bone destruction

Thompson and Moore – metallic endoprosthesis with medullary stems- erosion of bone on pelvic side

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Metal on metal Urist, Ring and McKee Farrar

Friction metal wear

High incidence of loosening and pain.

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Sir John Charnley -Low friction torque arthroplasty-Surgical alteration of hip biomechanics-Lubrication-Material design-Operating room environment-PMMA

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1 st Charnley prosthesis Moore prosthesis stainless steel femoral

component

Thin polytetrafluroethylene shell for acetabulum

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Tribology Surfaces interacting under an applied load

and in relative motion

Study of: -Friction -Lubrication -Wear

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Wear Types of wear:

1.Adhesive wear2.Abrasive wear3.Third body wear4.Fatigue wear

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Adhesive wear Adhesion during contact of opposing bearing

surfacesSliding breaks these contactsStrength of adhesion exceeds strength of

materialParticles are pulled from the material

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Abrasive wear

Hard projection on one surface cuts into the opposing surface

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Third body wear

Hard particles such as bone or PMMA if trapped between bearing surfaces cause abrasive damage

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Fatigue wear

Repetitive loading of the bearings during articulation

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Wear modes

Conditions under which the prosthesis was functioning when the wear occurred

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Mode 1

Motion of 2 primary bearing surfaces against each other

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Mode 2

Primary bearing surface moving against a secondary surface that was not intended to come into contact with the first

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Mode 3

Contaminant particles directly abrade one or both of the primary bearing surfaces

Third body abrasion or wear

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Mode 4 2 secondary surfaces rubbing together

Backside wear

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Wear debris causes osteolysis Compromise fixation

Complicate revision procedure.

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Wear threshold value

0.1 mm/year

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Threshold is modified by

-Intracapsular pressure-Bone interface access-Patient reaction to debris

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Types of bearings Hard

Soft

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Femoral Head material Metallic alloys that can be used with

UHMWPE liner:-Stainless steel 316L-Cobalt chromium alloy-Titanium alloys

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Ceramics with UHMWPE Alumina

Zirconia

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Conventional UHMWPE Ram extrusion

Compression molding

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Sterilization Ethylene oxide Gas plasma Gamma radiation in air (2.5 to 4 mrad)Gamma radiation in inert atmosphere

(nitrogen, argon or vacuum)

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Gamma radiationCross-linking of polyethylene molecules

Interaction of free radicals formed during irradiation

Improved wear resistance

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Highly cross-linked UHMWPE Higher doses of radiation

Heat

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Remelting: Heating above the melting range of polyethylene

Annealing: Heating below the melting range

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UHMWPE- Semi crystalline polymer Mechanical behavior - crystalline morphology

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Benefits of cross linked polyethylene -High wear resistance-No toxicity-Relatively low cost-Multiple liner options (elevated rim etc)

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Risks of cross-linked polyethylene -Reduction in other material properties -gross

material failure

-Increased bioactivity of wear particles

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Metal on metal bearings Muller and Weber Wear depends on:1.Type of cobalt chromium alloy2.Surface finish3.Bearing clearance4.Sphericity

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Fluid film lubrication 1. Bearing size2. Clearance3. Sphericity4. Surface finish

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Benefits of Metal on metal Very high wear resistance

Favors larger diameters (lowers wear)

Long in vivo experience

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Risks of Metal on metal Increased ion levels

Delayed type hypersensitivity

Carcinogenesis

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Ceramic on ceramic bearings Alumina:1.Hardness2.High wear resistance3.Chemical inertness

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Benefits of ceramic on ceramicHighest wear resistance

No toxicity

Long in vivo experience

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Risks of ceramic on ceramic

1.Position sensitivity2.Liner chipping3.Fracture risk

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Material properties

CoC MoM MoHCLUHMWPE

HardnessMPa

2300 350 Low

# reported no +remelted

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TribologyCoC MoM HCLUHM

WPE

Wear 1 25 100

Particle size

<0.02and >0.2

0.05 0.4

Metal ion Not increased

increased Not increased

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Biologic effectsCoC MoM MoHCLUHWPE

Cell toxicity

No Yes No

Local tissue reaction

Low Low Low

Chromo. changes

NR R NR

Hypersensitivity

NR R NR

Carcin. NR * NR

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Coc MoM MoHCLUHMWPE

Squeaking + + -

Clicking + + -

Seizing - + -

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Future

*IDEAL*

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Next generation polyethylenes 1. Sequential irradiation and annealing 2. Irradiation and solid state deformation by

extrusion below melting temperature3. Vit E antioxidant containing polyethylene

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Metal on metal Increase in femoral head size –greater sliding

velocity and increased probability of fluid film lubrication – decrease in wear

Reduced risk of impingement and dislocation 32 mm and bigger

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Ceramic on metal Alumina head Cobalt chromium alloy cup Reduced wear rate 100 foldClinical studies underway

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Ceramics Alumina – Zirconia combination: for

increasing toughness of alumina75 % alumina 24 % Zirconia 1 % chromium

oxide-         Greater bending strength-         Lower wear rate-         Added manufacturing complexity-         Cost

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Take home message There is no 100 % ideal bearing surface Hard/hard and hard/soft Tribology –friction, lubrication and wear Wear causes osteolysis

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Modern bearings: - all have low wear

Young and active patients Hard/hard bearings will produce less wear debris but noise remains a problem

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For hard on hard bearings cup placement is important to reduce risk of impingement, excessive wear and fracture.

Metal on metal bearings release metal ions and corrosion products and probably should not be used for patients with impaired kidney function or women of child bearing age.