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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 49 - 49
1 Apr 2017
Lancaster-Jones O Al-Hajjar M Thompson J Isaac G Fisher J
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Background. Many factors contribute to the occurrence of edge-loading conditions in hip replacement; soft tissue tension, surgical position, patient biomechanical variations and type of activities, hip design, etc. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of different levels of rotational and translational surgical positioning of hip replacement bearings on the occurrence and severity of edge-loading and the resultant wear rates. Method. The Leeds II Hip-Joint Simulator and 36mm diameter alumina matrix composite ceramic bearings (BIOLOX delta, DePuy Synthes, UK) were used in this study. Different levels of mismatch between the reconstructed rotational centres of the head and the cup were considered (2, 3 and 4mm) in the medial-lateral axis. Two cup inclination angles were investigated; an equivalent to 45 and 65 degrees in-vivo, thus six conditions (n=6 for each condition) were studied in total with three million cycles completed for each condition. The wear of the ceramic-on-ceramic bearings were determined using a microbalance (Mettler Toledo, XP205, UK) and the dynamic microseparation displacement was measured using a Liner Variable Differential Transformer. Results. When a translational joint centre mismatch was coupled with a higher cup inclination angle, the severity of edge-loading increased when compared with the effect of those variables applied individually. Increasing the medial-lateral joint centre mismatch from 2 to 3 to 4mm resulted in increased wear rates under both cup inclination angles, with the 65 degree cup inclination angle having significantly higher wear rate than the cup inclination angle of 45 degree (p=0.02, p=0.02, and p<0.01 respectively). Conclusion. The cups with a 45 degree inclination angle showed greater resistance to dynamic microseparation as a result of joint centre mismatch. This study demonstrated that optimal position should not only consider the rotational position of the acetabular cup but also the relative centres of rotation of the head and the cup. Disclosure. John Fisher is a paid consultant to DePuy Synthes. Jonathan Thompson and Graham H. Issac are employees at DePuy Synthes


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVIII | Pages 55 - 55
1 May 2012
Mellon SJ Kwon Y Simpson DJ Murray DW Gill HS
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Introduction. Metal-on-metal (MoM) hip resurfacing arthroplasty is a popular choice for young and active patients. However, there are concerns recently regarding soft tissue masses or pseudotumours. The appearance of these complications is thought to be related blood metal ion levels. The level of metal ions in blood is thought to be the result of MoM wear. In the present study the contribution of acetabulum orientation to stress distribution was investigated. Methods. Four subjects with MoM resurfacings and with known blood metal ion levels underwent motion analysis followed by CT scans. The positions of the acetabular (cup) and femoral components were determined the CT data relative to local coordinate systems in the pelvis (PCS) and the femur (FCS). Transformations, calculated from the motion analysis data, between the PCS and FCS gave the position of the cup relative to the femoral component for each frame of captured motion data. Hip reaction forces were taken from published data1. The intersection of hip reaction force with each subject's cup and the increase in inclination required to move the force to the edge of the cup was calculated for 2% intervals during the stance phase of gait. Finite element models representing each subject's cup and femoral components were created and contact stresses were determined for the native cup inclination angle. For each model, the effect of increasing the inclination of the cup, by up to 10°, in 1° increments, was determined. Results and Discussion. The two subjects with high metal ion levels had inclination angles of 60.2° and 53.7° whereas the two with low metal ion levels had inclination angles of 45.6° and 46.5°. The subjects with high metal ion levels required very little increase to their inclination angle to cause the hip reaction force vector to intersect at the edge. The contact stress on the cup increased dramatically when the inclination angle was such that the hip reaction force intersected with the edge. The average increase in contact stress under edge-loading conditions was 57% for the two subjects with high metal ions. In contrast, the subjects with low metal ions exhibited no change in contact stress when the inclination angle of their cups was increased by 10°. The inter-subject variability in the measured hip reaction forces was greater than the amount of increase in cup inclination required to induce edge-loading for the subjects with high metal ion levels. These results suggest that poor positioning of the cup during surgery may result in edge-loading, a greater rate of wear and adverse biological reactions associated with metal ion release