4.3 Article

Wear rates of retentive versus nonretentive reverse total shoulder arthroplasty liners in an in vitro wear simulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF SHOULDER AND ELBOW SURGERY
Volume 24, Issue 9, Pages 1372-1379

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2015.02.016

Keywords

Retentive humeral liners; reverse total shoulder arthroplasty; wear particle analysis; in vitro wear simulation; micro-CT surface deviation analysis

Funding

  1. Zimmer (Warsaw, IN, USA)
  2. OMeGA Medical Grants Association [000605]
  3. Orthopaedic Research and Education Foundation [11105]

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Background: Although short-term outcomes of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (rTSA) remain promising, the most commonly cited complication remains prosthetic instability. A retentive rTSA liner is commonly used to increase system constraint; however, no studies have evaluated the rate of polyethylene wear. Our hypothesis was that more constrained retentive liners would have higher wear rates than nonretentive liners. Methods: Six nonretentive and six retentive rTSA non-cross-linked polyethylene liners were subjected to 4.5 million cycles of alternating cycles of abduction-adduction and flexion-extension motion loading profiles. The rTSA liners were assessed for gravimetric wear loss, 3-dimensional volumetric loss by novel micro-computed tomography analysis, and particulate wear debris analysis. Results: Volumetric wear rates were significant at 7 specific time points (1.0, 2.0, 2.5, 3.25, 3.75, 4.0, and 4.5 million cycles) throughout testing between nonretentive and retentive liners; however, overall mean volumetric wear rate was not statistically significant (P = .076). Total volume loss between liner test groups was found to be significant starting after 3.5 million cycles of testing. Maximum and mean surface deviations were found to be larger for retentive liners vs. nonretentive liners by micro-computed tomography analysis across the entire articulation surface. Discussion and conclusion: Retentive liners undergo significantly greater volume loss and greater surface deviation compared with nonretentive liners, most notably at later time points representing extended implantation times. Additional stability afforded by retentive liners should be balanced against the potential for increased wear and potential for subsequent polyethylene wear-induced aseptic loosening. (C) 2015 Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery Board of Trustees.

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