4.4 Article

Friction of ceramic and metal hip hemi-endoprostheses against cadaveric acetabula

Journal

ARCHIVES OF ORTHOPAEDIC AND TRAUMA SURGERY
Volume 124, Issue 10, Pages 681-687

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00402-004-0734-x

Keywords

friction; hip; hemi-endoprostheses; acetabulum

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Introduction Studies of hip arthroplasty have dealt mainly with total endoprosthesis, while tribology measurement values of hemi-endoprosthetic implants are rare. The small amount of experimental tribological data concerning materials of hemi-endoprosthetic implants in the form of pendulum trials, animal experiments, in vivo measurements on human hip joints and pin on disc studies report friction coefficients between 0.014 and 0.57; the friction coefficients measured in fresh human cadaver hip joints were determined between 0.001 and 0.08. Materials and methods The HEPFlEx-hip simulator was constructed to test the friction coefficients of unipolar femur head hemi-endoprostheses made of metal or ceramic against fresh cadaveric acetabula. Its plane of movement is uniaxial with a flexion-extension movement of + 30/-18degrees. The force is produced pneumatically dynamic with amounts of 2.5 kN. Newborn calf serum serves as a lubricant. We mounted 20 fresh porcine acetabula and 10 fresh human cadaver acetabula in the HEPFlEx-hip simulator and compared the two unipolar femur head hemi-endoprostheses ( metal vs. ceramic). Results The mean friction coefficients against porcine acetabula were (mu) over bar = 0.017-0.082 for ceramic and (mu) over bar = 0.020 - 0.101 for metal; against human cadaver acetabula (mu) over bar = 0.017 - 0.083 for ceramic and (mu) over bar = 0.019 - 0.118 for metal. The frictional coefficient deltas (metal-ceramic) values of all measurements were Delta(mu) over bar = 0.004 for porcine acetabula and Delta(mu) over bar = 0.001 for cadaver acetabula. Box-plots graphics document significantly lower frictional coefficients of the ceramics. Conclusions The lower frictional coefficients of ceramic compared to metal against fresh cadaveric acetabula may have a clinical impact on the process of the protrusion of the corresponding femoral head through the acetabulum.

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