Ceramic bearings have several desirable properties, such as resistance to wear, hardness, and biocompatibility, that favour it as an articulating surface in hip arthroplasty. However,
Ceramic bearing fracture is a rare complication following implantation using modern day ceramic bearing materials. Revision bearing options in such cases is debated, with the choice between ceramic-on-ceramic and ceramic-on-polyethylene bearings. Revision to a hard on soft bearing raises concerns about potential catastrophic wear secondary to a third-body reaction caused by the
Improvements in ceramic materials, component design, and surgical technique have made ceramic bearing complications increasingly rare. However, when it happens, a
Symptomatic cobalt toxicity from a failed total
hip replacement is a rare but devastating complication. It has been reported
following revision of
The practice of removing a well-fixed cementless
femoral component is associated with high morbidity. Ceramic bearing
couples are low wearing and their use minimises the risk of subsequent
further revision due to the production of wear debris. A total of
165 revision hip replacements were performed, in which a polyethylene-lined acetabular
component was revised to a new acetabular component with a ceramic
liner, while retaining the well-fixed femoral component. A titanium
sleeve was placed over the used femoral trunnion, to which a ceramic
head was added. There were 100 alumina and 65 Delta bearing couples
inserted. The mean Harris hip score improved significantly from 71.3 (9.0
to 100.0) pre-operatively to 91.0 (41.0 to 100.0) at a mean follow
up of 4.8 years (2.1 to 12.5) (p <
0.001). No patients reported
squeaking of the hip. There were two fractures of the ceramic head, both in alumina
bearings. No liners were seen to fracture. No fractures were observed
in components made of Delta ceramic. At 8.3 years post-operatively
the survival with any cause of failure as the endpoint was 96.6%
(95% confidence interval (CI) 85.7 to 99.3) for the acetabular component and
94.0% (95% CI 82.1 to 98.4) for the femoral component. The technique of revising the acetabular component in the presence
of a well-fixed femoral component with a ceramic head placed on
a titanium sleeve over the used trunnion is a useful adjunct in
revision hip practice. The use of Delta ceramic is recommended. Cite this article:
We report a case of fatal heart failure caused by cobalt intoxication after revision THR in the patient who successfully underwent re-revision THR. 53-year old male presented to emergency room in our hospital with progressive shortness of breath. Symptom was started about 6 months ago so he visited local hospital. He worked up for worsening dyspnea. Simple chest radiograph and enhanced heart MRI study were performed and they showed bilateral pericardial and pleural effusion. There was no evidence of ischemic change. Transthoracic echocardiogram showed the evidence of heart failure, left ventricular ejection fraction(EF) was 40%. He was admitted at local hospital and started on vasopressors but urine output was decreased and follow-up echocardiogram showed a 25% of EF. Patient recommended heart transplantation and transferred our hospital emergency room. He underwent sequential bilateral total hip arthroplasties using CoP bearing surfaces. At 12 years postoperatively, he presented to the other hospital with acute onset of left hip pain. He was diagnosed
Ceramic-on-ceramic (CoC) articulations in total hip arthroplasty (THA) have low wear, but the unique risk of fracture. After revision for CoC
Ceramic bearing fractures are rare events, but mandate revision and implantation of new bearings. Revisions using metal heads have been reported to lead to gross volumetric head wear (due to abrasive retained ceramic micro-debris), cobalt toxicity, multi-organ failure and death. Such complications are widely published (50+ reports), yet we know that patients continue to be put at risk. Using data from the NJR and AOANJRR, this study seeks to compare the risk of re-revision and death by revision bearing combination following a ceramic bearing fracture. Data were extracted from the NJR and AOANJRR, identifying revisions for ceramic bearing fracture. Subsequent outcomes of survival, re-revision and death were compared between revision bearing combinations (ceramic-on-ceramic, ceramic-on-polyethylene, and metal-on-polyethylene). 366 cases were available for analysis from the NJR dataset (MoP=34, CoP=112, CoC=221) and 174 from the AOANJRR dataset (MoP=17, CoP=44, CoC=113). The overall incidence rate of adverse outcome (revision or death) was 0.65 for metal heads and 0.23 for ceramic head articulations (p=0.0012) across the whole time period (NJR). Kaplan-Meir survival estimates demonstrate an increased risk of both re-revision and death where a metal head has been used vs a ceramic head following revision for
Introduction and Objective. Ceramic on Ceramic bearings in Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) afford a low friction coefficient, low wear rates and extreme hardness. Significant complications include hip squeak,
Aims. We conducted a prospective study of a delta ceramic total hip
arthroplasty (THA) to determine the rate of
Fracture risks are the most common argument against the use of Ceramic on ceramic (CoC) hip implants. Question: is ceramic material at risk in case of severe local trauma?. Over a long period, we tried to identify patients with a CoC prosthesis (Ceraver Osteal°)who did sustain a trauma. This was conducted in three different institutions. Eleven patients were found: 9 males and 2 females aged 17 to 70 years at time of index surgery. Accident occurred 6 months to 15 years after index: one car accident, five motorcycle accident, five significant trauma after a fall, including one ski board accident. Consequences of these trauma were: six fractures of the acetabulum with socket loosening in 4 that needed revision, two femoral shaft fracture, one orifed and one stem exchanged, one traumatic hip dislocation associated to loosening of the socket revised at 10 years, and one traumatic loosening of the socket. Ten had no consequence on ceramic integrity. One experienced a fracture of the patella from a dashboard trauma, a liner shipping was discovered during socket revision 2 years later. This is the only case of possible relation between trauma and
Background. Theoretically, improved material properties of new alumina matrix composite (AMC) material, Delta ceramics, are expected to decrease concerns associated with pure alumina ceramics and allow manufacturing thinner liners and consequent larger heads. However, limited short-term clinical results are available and mid-term results of these effects are unclear. Questions/Purposes. (1) Does AMC material decrease the rate of
Introduction. Modern ceramic-on-ceramic bearings have become attractive alternatives to conventional polyethylene due to their low wear and minimal particle production. However, ceramic-on-ceramic implants have been associated with
Large femoral heads have become popular in total
hip replacement (THR) as a method of reducing the risk of dislocation.
However, if large heads are used in ceramic-on-ceramic THR, the
liner must be thinner, which may increase the risk of fracture.
To compare the rates of
Ceramic bearing complications are rare but can cause significant pain and morbidity following total hip arthroplasty (THA). The hard and sharp particulate debris from
The disadvantage of removing a well-fixed femoral stem are multiple (operating time, risk of fracture, bone and blood loss, recovery time and post-op complications. Ceramic heads with titanium adapter sleeves (e.g. BIOLOX®OPTION, Ceramtec) are a possibility for putting a new ceramic head on slightly damaged used tapers. ‘Intolerable’ taper damages even for this solution are qualitatively specified by the manufacturers. The aim of this study was to determine the fracture strength of ceramic heads with adapter sleeves on stem tapers with such defined damage patterns. Pristine stem tapers (Ti-6Al-4V, 12/14) were damaged to represent the four major stem taper damage patterns specified by the manufacturers:
. -. ‘Truncated’: Removal of 12.5% of the circumference along the entire length of the stem taper at a uniform depth of 0.5mm parallel to the taper slope. -. ‘Slanted’: Removal of 33.3% of the proximal diameter perimeter with decreasing damage down to 3.7mm from the proximal taper end. -. ‘Cut’: Removal of the proximal 25% (4mm) of the stem taper. -. ‘Scratched’: Stem tapers from a previous
Introduction. Long term results of Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) are affected by wear of articulation. Ceramic on ceramic articulation have been used especially for young patients because of its low wear and bio-inert property. However, because of its hardness, it is concerned that
Purpose. The fourth generation ceramic, in which zirconia is incorporated into the alumina matrix, was developed to reduce the risk of
Introduction. The optimal bearing for hip arthroplasty is still a matter of debate. in younger and more active patients ceramic-on-polyethylene (CoP) bearings are frequently chosen over metal-on-polyethylene (MoP) bearings to reduce wear and increase biocompatibility. However, the fracture risk of ceramic heads is higher than that of metal heads. This can cause serious issue, as
The fourth generation Delta ceramic, in which zirconia is incorporated into the alumina matrix, was developed to provide improved fracture toughness and wear characteristics. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the minimum 5-year outcomes and bearing-specific complications in a single surgeon series of Delta ceramic-on-ceramic total hip arthroplasties (THAs). We retrospectively analysed 667 patients (749 hips) who underwent cementless THAs using Delta ceramic-on-ceramic bearings by a single surgeon. There were 315 men and 352 women with mean age of 55 years (range, 16 to 88 years) at the time of index surgery. Acetabular and femoral components were cementless in all hips. A 36 mm head was used in 472 hips and a 32 mm head was used in 227 hips. The mean duration of follow-up was 6.3 years (range, 5 to 8 years). The mean Harris hip score improved from 47.6 points preoperatively to 91.1 points at the time of final follow-up. All but one acetabular components were well-fixed, and all but one femoral components were well-fixed. No radiographic evidence of osteolysis was identified at the time of final follow-up. There were 2 (0.27%)