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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 223 - 223
1 Sep 2012
Herrera L Loving L Essner A Nevelos J
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Osteolysis induced by UHMWPE debris has historically been one of the major causes of long term failure of TJR. An increase in concentration of polyethylene particles in the peri-prostheic tissue has been linked to an increased incidence of osteolysis. The dual mobility hip bearing concept mates a femoral head into a polyethylene liner which has an unconstrained articulation into a metal shell. The wear mechanism of the dual mobility hip bearing is distinct from a constrained single articulation design, which may result in a difference in wear debris particles. The aim of this study is to evaluate wear debris generated from a dual mobility hip and compare it to a conventional single articulation design when both are manufactured from sequentially crosslinked and annealed polyethylene. The dual mobility hip (Restoration ADM) incorporated a 28mm CoCr femoral head into a polyethylene liner that articulates against a metal shell (48mm ID). The conventional hip (Trident®) mated a 28mm CoCr femoral head against a polyethylene liner. The polyethylene for all liners was sequentially crosslinked and annealed (X3). A hip joint simulator was used for testing at a rate of 1 Hz with cyclic Paul curve physiologic loading. A serum sample from each testing group was collected. Serum samples were protein digested following the published process by Scott et al. The digested serum was then filtered through a series of polycarbonate filter papers of decreasing size and sputter coated with gold for analysis using SEM. Image fields were randomized and wear debris was compared in terms of its length, width, aspect ration, and equivalent circular diameter (ECD). A total of 149 conventional hip particles and 114 dual mobility hip particles were imaged. Results show a majority of particles are of spherical nature and images do not indicate the presence of fibrillar or larger elongated polyethylene debris. Particle length between designs is not statistically different, while all other comparisons show statistical significance (p<0.05). It is hypothesized that the dual mobility hip system reduces the total amount of cross-shear motion on any one articulation, which aids in the reduction in wear. This design feature may be responsible for the slight difference in morphology of dual mobility wear debris when compared to the constrained hip design. The length of the particles was similar, simply indicating a different shape rather than a marked reduction in overall size. The debris generated is this study was from highly crosslinked polyethylene in two different designs, which produced a very significant decrease in quantity of particles when compared to the quantity of debris from conventional polyethylene. The wear debris was of similar length in both designs and so we do not expect any difference in biological response to debris from either device. The dual mobility design has also shown no effect of cup abduction angle on wear demonstrating forgiveness to implant positioning. This advantage, combined with the low wear rate and similar length wear particles, should lead to good clinical performance of dual mobility cups with sequentially irradiated and annealed polyethylene.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 2 - 2
1 Sep 2012
Wuestemann T Bastian A Parvizi J Nessler J Kolisek F Nevelos J
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Introduction

The origins of the uncemented tapered wedge hip stem design currently offered by several orthopaedic device companies can be linked back to the cemented Straight Mueller type stem design first used in 1977. The design, a wedge shape with a taper angle of 6 degrees, maintains a single medial curvature for all sizes and increases laterally in the width to accommodate different size femurs. Although evolutionary improvements have been made over the years the basic body geometry of the stem has stayed mainly unchanged with excellent clinical survivorship. Over the past decade, the demographics of hip replacement have changed, with a large increase in younger male patients in the age range of 40 to 60 years. In this study the femoral fit of a novel tapered stem, designed to fit a wide array of patient types, is compared to a standard predicate tapered stem design.

Methods

A bone morphology study was performed on a patient population of 556 patients using three dimensional digital data from CT-scans. To characterize the fit of the stem designs we analyzed the ratio of a distal (60mm below lesser trochanter) and a proximal (10mm above lesser trochanter) cross section. The same measurements were taken with the standard tapered stem design and the novel tapered stem design, with a given constant implantation height of 20mm above the lesser trochanter. The fit of the stems was classified as Type 1, where there was both proximal and distal engagement, Type 2, proximal engagement only, Type 3, distal engagement only. The distal and proximal engagement, Type 1, was specified with a maximum engagement difference of 2mm proximal to distal.