Abstract
1. Prosthetic acetabular cups of the Charnley and McKee-Farrar designs were cemented into cadaveric pelves using different procedures for preparing the acetabulum.
2. The torsional moments needed to loosen these cups were measured.
3. The torsional moments so measured were found to be from about four to more than twenty times higher than the frictional moments measured in independent tests on the two designs of prosthesis.
4. It is argued that late looseness of the acetabular component after total hip replacement, in the absence of infection, seems most likely to be due to thermal damage to the bone occurring at the time of polymerisation of the cement, and to subsequent bone resorption.
5. Surgical preparation of the acetabulum should include removal of all the articular cartilage and cleaning of the acetabular fossa, but the drilling of additional holes in the floor of the acetabulum seems unimportant.
6. The possibility of fatigue fracture in bone as a factor contributing to late loosening is an argument in favour of metal-on-polyethylene prostheses with their lower frictional moments, although the importance of this factor cannot be estimated.