3.9 Article

Wear particles: key to aseptic prosthetic loosening?

Journal

PATHOLOGE
Volume 27, Issue 6, Pages 447-460

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00292-006-0868-4

Keywords

prosthetic loosening; aseptic loosening; periprosthetic membrane; wear particles

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The aseptic prosthetic loosening of hip and knee prosthesis is the most important cause of implant insufficiency. Bone loss as a result of the biological effect of wear particles is the main cause of such loosening. Wear particles develop their biological activity along different cellular pathways, above all via macrophages, foreign body giant cells as well as fibroblasts of the periprosthetic membrane. These cells induce particle-dependent bone resorption by means of proinfiammatory cytokines, such as IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, IL-6 and PGE(2). These factors induce the activation of osteoclasts as well as the suppression of osteoblasts. Neutrophil granulocytes and lymphocytes do not play an important role in the process of aseptic loosening. The different wear particles, such as ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene, metal particles, ceramic particles and polymethylmethacrylate can be morphologically recognized very easily. From the clinical point of view, the differentiation between acute or chronic implant infection and particle induced prosthetic loosening is very important, with the histomorphological differential diagnosis between septic and aseptic loosening and their combination being the key clinicopathological factor.

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