Hip-simulator ranking of polyethylene wear:Comparisons between ceramic heads of different sizes

Authors

  • Ian C Clarke
  • Allen Gustafson
  • Henry Jung
  • Akira Fujisawa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679608994656

Abstract

We carried out simulator studies on ceramic-polyethylene total-hip combinations to determine the volumetric wear-rates of 22 mm, 26 mm and 28 mm femoral-head sizes. Bovine-serum lubrication and 2 kN peak sinusoidal load-profile were used with poly-ethylene (UHMWPE) cups. Wear was assessed by gravimetric technique. Precision (9%) was ensured by the use of multiple specimens, multiple wear-events, and the linear-regression method of estimating the average wear trend, thereby reducing the inherent, unpredictable nature of each wear-event. Volumetric wear-rates for polyethylene averaged 23 mm3 per 106 cycles for the 22 mm ceramic head and up to 32 mm3 per 106 cycles for the 28 mm head. The difference between 22 mm and the larger head-sizes was significant. This may well be the first laboratory confirmation of Charnley's original clinical Low-Friction Arthroplasty concept with regard to wear rate. The wear penalty increased linearly at the rate of 6% to 9% per mm of diameter increase.

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Published

1996-01-01

How to Cite

Clarke, I. C., Gustafson, A., Jung, H., & Fujisawa, A. (1996). Hip-simulator ranking of polyethylene wear:Comparisons between ceramic heads of different sizes. Acta Orthopaedica, 67(2), 128–132. https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679608994656