Abstract
The growing interest in the use of metal on metal bearings in the treatment of end stage hip arthritis in the young has raised the need to monitor metal ion levels in these patients. Blood levels are good indices of the safety of these devices. Total wear/corrosion over a given time period is best estimated from 12 or 24-hour urine collections. Whole blood samples of 52 patients with metal on metal hip arthroplasties were analysed for levels of chromium, cobalt and molybdenum using high-resolution induction coupled plasma mass-spectrometry. Fifteen of these were in an older age group (mean age 75.3years) and had metal on metal hip replacements performed 19–28 years before the assessment. The rest (37) were younger (mean age 52.9 years) and had hip resurfacings performed in the last 4 years. The results show higher levels of ions than those found in the normal population.
This agrees with other studies. However we found no significant difference between the levels in the older patients with THR and the younger patients with hip resurfacing. In another study, urine collections from 78 patients who had hip resurfacings in the past and are now at different postoperative durations (2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 18, 24 and 36-month periods) were analysed for metal ions using the same technique. The mean levels show an increase compared to the preoperative values but this increase is not statistically significant.
The urinary excretion of cobalt in these groups have also been compared with the expected cobalt release due to corrosion in this alloy. They were found to rise above the corrosion levels only in the 8–12 month period, possibly due to “run-in” of the bearing. It can be concluded that the ion levels can be attributed mainly to corrosion and there is minimal contribution from wear.
The abstracts were prepared by Nico Verdonschot. Correspondence should be addressed to him at Orthopaedic Research Laboratory, University Medical Centre, PO Box 9101, 6500 HB Nijmegen, The Netherlands.