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1.
During the operation of total hip arthroplasty, when the cement polymerizes between the stem implant and the bone, residual stresses are generated in the cement. The purpose of this study was to determine whether including residual stresses at the stem-cement interface of cemented hip implants affected the cement stress distributions due to externally applied loads. An idealized cemented hip implant subjected to bending was numerically investigated for an early post-operative situation. The finite element analysis was three-dimensional and used non-linear contact elements to represent the debonded stem-cement interface. The results showed that the inclusion of the residual stresses at the interface had up to a 4-fold increase in the von Mises cement stresses compared to the case without residual stresses.  相似文献   

2.
Experimental models can be used for pre-clinical testing of cemented and other type of hip replacements. Total hip replacement (THR) failure scenarios include, among others, cement damage accumulation and the assessment of accurate stress and strain magnitudes at the cement mantle interfaces (stem-cement and cement-bone) can be used to predict mechanical failure. The aseptic loosening scenario in cemented hip replacements is currently not fully understood, and methods of evaluating medical devices must be developed to improve clinical performance. Different results and conclusions concerning the cement micro-cracking mechanism have been reported.The aim of this study was to verify the in vitro behavior of two cemented femoral stems with respect to fatigue crack formation. Fatigue crack damage was assessed at the medial, lateral, anterior and posterior sides of the Lubinus SPII and Charnley stems. All stems were loaded and tested in stair climbing fatigue loading during one million cycles at 2 Hz. After the experiments each implanted synthetic femur was sectioned and analyzed. We observed more damage (cracks per area) for the Lubinus SPII stem, mainly on the proximal part of the cement mantle. The micro-cracking formation initiated in the stem–cement interface and grew towards the direction of cortical bone of the femur.Overall, the cement–bone interface seems to be crucial for the success of the hip replacement. The Charnley stem provoked more damage on the cement–bone interface. A failure index (maximum length of crack/maximum thickness of cement) considered was higher for the cement–stem interface of the Lubinus SPII stem. For a cement mantle thickness higher than 5 mm, cracking initiated at the cement–bone interface and depended on the opening canal process (reaming procedure and instrumentation). The analysis also showed that fatigue-induced damage on the cement mantle, increasing proximally, and depended on the axial position of the stem. The cement thickness is an important factor for the success of THR and this study evidenced that cement thickness higher than 2 mm apparently does not affect the mechanical behavior of the cement mantel and induce more crack formation on the cement–bone interface.  相似文献   

3.
Long-term clinical follow-up studies have shown that radiolucent lines at the cement interfaces of total hip replacement femoral components develop gradually, ultimately leading to loosening. In this experimental study, 32 synthetic femurs implanted with cemented femoral components were cyclically loaded with a dynamic joint reaction force, torque, and muscle force, to assess the relative effects of surface finish and collars on interface fixation. Four each of four otherwise identical straight femoral stems, varying only in surface finish and presence or lack of collars were used. Specimens were tested under two conditions: (1) with intact interfaces simulating immediate post-operative conditions and (2) with a thin-film at the stem-cement interface, simulating conditions several weeks to months post-operative when fibrous tissue has formed with the implant still stable. Micromotion was measured at both interfaces in three directions. Surface finish had a larger relative effect than collars, regardless of whether or not a thin-film was present. For example, a proximal grit-blasted finish enhanced fixation at the stem-cement interface by 7-12 μm per-cycle (p<0.05) and decreased early cement mantle loosening by 7-13 μm. For straight stems, rougher surfaces provided greater stability than polished, even with a thin film at the stem-cement interfaces, contradicting the theory that once debonded, rough stems are less stable than polished at the stem-cement interface. The findings of this experimental study exemplify the need to take advantage of all available tools for the preclinical evaluation of orthopaedic implants, including long-term clinical observations of related devices, analytical and numeric models, and experimental bench-top simulations.  相似文献   

4.
The initial fixation of a cemented hip implant relies on the strength of the interface between the stem, bone cement and adjacent bone. Bone cement is used as grouting material to fix the prosthesis to the bone. The curing process of bone cement is an exothermic reaction where bone cement undergoes volumetric changes that will generate transient stresses resulting in residual stresses once polymerization is completed. However, the precise magnitude of these stresses is still not well documented in the literature. The objective of this study is to develop an experiment for the direct measurement of the transient and residual radial stresses at the stem-cement interface generated during cement polymerization. The idealized femoral-cemented implant consists of a stem placed inside a hollow cylindrical bone filled with bone cement. A sub-miniature load cell is inserted inside the stem to make a direct measurement of the radial compressive forces at the stem-cement interface, which are then converted to radial stresses. A thermocouple measures the temperature evolution during the polymerization process. The results show the evolution of stress generation corresponding to volumetric changes in the cement. The effect of initial temperature of the stem and bone as well as the cement-bone interface condition (adhesion or no adhesion) on residual radial stresses is investigated. A maximum peak temperature of 70 degrees C corresponds to a peak in transient stress during cement curing. Maximum radial residual stresses of 0.6MPa in compression are measured for the preheated stem.  相似文献   

5.
The clinical success of polished tapered stems has been widely reported in numerous long term studies. The mechanical environment that exists for polished tapered stems, however, is not fully understood. In this investigation, a collarless, tapered femoral total hip stem with an unsupported distal tip was evaluated using a 'physiological' three-dimensional (3D) finite element analysis. It was hypothesized that stem-cement interface friction, which alters the magnitude and orientation of the cement mantle stress, would subsequently influence stem 'taper-lock' and viscoelastic relaxation of bone cement stresses. The hypothesis that creep-induced subsidence would result in increases to stem-cement normal (radial) interface stresses was also examined. Utilizing a viscoelastic material model for the bone cement in the analysis, three different stem-cement interface conditions were considered: debonded stem with zero friction coefficient (mu=0) (frictionless), debonded stem with stem-cement interface friction (mu=0.22) ('smooth' or polished) and a completely bonded stem ('rough'). Stem roughness had a profound influence on cement mantle stress, stem subsidence and cement mantle stress relaxation over the 24-h test period. The frictionless and smooth tapered stems generated compressive normal stress at the stem-cement interface creating a mechanical environment indicative of 'taper-lock'. The normal stress increased with decreasing stem-cement interface friction but decreased proximally with time and stem subsidence. Stem subsidence also increased with decreasing stem-cement interface friction. We conclude that polished stems have a greater potential to develop 'taper-lock' fixation than do rough stems. However, subsidence is not an important determinant of the maintenance of 'taper-lock'. Rather subsidence is a function of stem-cement interface friction and bone cement creep.  相似文献   

6.
Cemented femoral stems have shown decreased longevity compared to cementless implants in hip revision arthroplasty. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of an amphiphilic bonder on bone cement stability in a biomechanical femur expulsion test. A simplified hip simulator test setup with idealised femur stem specimens was carried out. The stems were implanted into bovine femurs (group 1: no bonder, n=10; group 2: bonder including glutaraldehyde, n=10; group 3: bonder without glutaraldehyde, n=10). A dynamic loading (maximum load: 800 N; minimum load: 100 N; frequency: 3 Hz; 105 cycles) was performed. Subsequently, the stem specimens were expulsed axially out of their implant beds and maximum load at failure was recorded. The static controls showed a mean maximum load to failure of 4123 N in group 1, 8357.5 N in group 2 and 5830.8 N in group 3. After dynamic loading, the specimens of group 2 reached the highest load to failure (8191.5 N), followed by group 3 (5649.5 N) and group 1 (3462 N), respectively. In group 2, we observed nine periprosthetic fractures at a load of 8400 N without signs of interface loosening. Application of an amphiphilic bonder led to a significant improvement of bonding stability, especially when glutaraldehyde was added to the bonder. This technique might offer an increased longevity of cemented femur revision stems in total hip replacement.  相似文献   

7.
Probabilistic analyses allow the effect of uncertainty in system parameters on predicted model performance measures to be determined. Furthermore, using performance functions to describe a failure event, the probability of failure can be quantified. The effect of three-dimensional prosthesis shape optimization on the probabilistic response and failure probability of a cemented hip prosthesis system is investigated. Random variables include joint and muscle loading, cortical and cancellous bone and PMMA bone cement elastic properties, and strength parameters describing failure of the bone cement and the prosthesis-bone cement interface. Several performance functions describing the bone cement and prosthesis-cement interface are used to compute the probability of failure. When evaluated deterministically, most performance functions indicated a safe design, with the exception of interface tensile failure. However, when evaluated probabilistically, finite probabilities of failure were computed, some significant. The most likely mode of failure before shape optimization was prosthesis-bone cement interface tensile failure with a predicted probability of failure of 97.9%. Deterministic prosthesis shape optimization reduced the probability of failure for all performance functions and reduced prosthesis-bone cement interface tensile failure by 31.7%. Probability sensitivity factors indicate that the uncertainty in the joint loading, cement strength, and implant-cement interface strength have the greatest effect on the computed probability of failure. Implant shape optimization results in a more robust implant design that is less sensitive to uncertainties in joint loading, which cannot be easily controlled, and more sensitive to cement and interface properties, which are easier to modify.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of this study is to define stem design related factors causing both gaps in the metal-bone cement interface and cracks within the cement mantle. Six different stem designs (Exeter; Lubinus SP II; Ceraver Osteal; Mueller-straight stem; Centega; Spectron EF) (n=15 of each design) were cemented into artificial femur bones. Ten stems of each design were loaded, while five stems served as an unloaded control. Physiologically adapted cyclical loading (DIN ISO 7206-4) was performed with a hip simulator. After loading both interfaces and the bone cement itself were analysed regarding gaps and cracks in the cement mantle. Significant differences between the stem designs concerning gaps in the metal-bone cement interface and cracks in the cement mantle became apparent. Additionally, a high correlation between gaps in the metal-bone cement interface and cracks within the cement mantle could be proven. Gaps in the metal-bone cement interface but no cracks within the cement mantle were seen in the unloaded specimens. Differences between the unloaded control groups and the cyclical loaded stems regarding the longitudinal extension and width of gaps in the metal-bone cement interface were obvious. The designs of cemented femoral stems have an influence on both the quality of the metal-bone cement contact and the failure rate of the cement mantle. Less interface gaps and less cement defects were found with anatomically formed, collared, well-rounded stem designs without undercuttings.  相似文献   

9.
The long-term clinical success of cemented hip stems is influenced both by the implant design, and by the surgical procedure. A methodology is proposed for discriminating between implant designs with different clinical outcomes. The protocol was designed with industrial pre-clinical validation in mind.Two cemented stem types were tested, one (Lubinus SPII) having good and the other (Müller Curved) having poor clinical outcomes. Three implants for each type were subjected to a mechanical in vitro test of one million loading cycles. Each cycle reproduced the load components of stair climbing. Interface shear micromotion was measured during the test in the direction of rotation and along the stem axis. The stem roughness before and after the test was compared. After the test, the cement mantles were retrieved and inspected through dye penetrants to detect evidences of micro-damage. For each specimen, the events of the loosening process were examined, based on the in vitro data available, so as to analyze the whole failure mechanism.The protocol developed was sensitive to the implant design, with significantly different results being found for the two stem types, both in terms of stem-cement micromotions, surface roughness alteration, and cement mantle damage. The information yielded by the three different investigation techniques was consistent for each of the two groups of specimens tested, allowing a better understanding of the failure process. In vitro inducible micromotion and permanent migration measurements, together with cement-stem interface fretting damage and cement fatigue damage, can help predicting the clinical performance of cemented stems.  相似文献   

10.
Stability of a cemented implant, once the stem-cement interface has debonded, is reliant upon stem geometry and surface finish. There are relatively few studies addressing the effect of cross-sectional stem shape on cemented implant fixation. The purpose of this investigation was to compare the torsional stability of five different stem cross-sectional shapes-circular, oval, triangular, rectangular with rounded edges, and rectangular with sharp edges-under monotonically increasing and cyclic loading conditions. Seven samples of each stem geometry were tested. Stems were potted in bone cement and loaded to 5 deg of rotation. For monotonic loading, torque was applied at a constant rate of 2.5 deg/min. For cyclic loading, a sine wave torque pattern was applied, with a maximum magnitude that began at 4.5 Nm for 1500 cycles and then increased by 2.25 Nm every 1500 cycles until 5 deg of rotation. The rectangular stem with the sharp edges always provided the greatest resistance to torque, followed by the rectangular with rounded edges, triangular, oval, and circular. These results, including the effects of sharp corners, may differ for modes of loading other than torsion. These experimental results support the findings of earlier finite element models, indicating stem shape has a significant effect on resistance to torsional loading.  相似文献   

11.
目的:探讨骨水泥型与生物型髋关节置换术治疗股骨颈骨折对术后患者关节疼痛的影响。方法:回顾性分析2012年2月-2013年8月我院收治的股骨颈骨折患者的临床病历资料,按照假体类型将其分为骨水泥型髋关节置换术(A组)和生物型髋关节置换术(B组),通过Harris与分项百分制髋关节疼痛评分比较两组患者术后髋关节的疼痛情况。结果:两组患者的手术时间、术中出血量以及术后引流量比较,差异无统计学意义(P0.05),A组的住院时间短于B组,差异有统计学意义(P0.05)。A组术后3、6个月的髋关节疼痛率均低于B组,术后12、24个月则高于B组,差异有统计学意义(P0.05);经x2趋势分析,A组患者术后髋关节疼痛率随时间增加呈逐渐上升趋势,差异有统计学意义(x2=10.837,P=0.001),B组患者术后髋关节疼痛率随时间增加呈逐渐下降趋势,差异有统计学意义(x2=9.842,P=0.002)。A组患者术后3、6个月的髋关节疼痛评分高于B组,术后12、24个月则低于B组,差异有统计学意义(P0.05);A组术后3、6个月的髋关节疼痛评分高于术后12、24个月,B组3、6个月的髋关节疼痛评分低于术后12、24个月,差异有统计学意义(P0.05)。结论:骨水泥型假体缓解髋关节疼痛近期效果优于生物型假体,而生物型假体远期效果优于骨水泥型假体。  相似文献   

12.
The long-term success of a cementless total hip arthroplasty depends on the implant geometry and interface bonding characteristics (fit, coating and ingrowth) and on stem stiffness. This study evaluates the influence of stem geometry and fitting conditions on the evolution and distribution of the bone–stem contact, stress and strain during and after the hip stem insertion, by means of dynamic finite element techniques. Next, the influence of the mechanical state (bone–stem contact, stress and strain) resulted from the insertion process on the stem initial resistance to subsidence is investigated. In addition, a study on the influence of bone–stem interface conditions (friction) on the insertion process and on the initial stem stability under physiological loading is performed. The results indicate that for a stem with tapered shape the contact in the proximal part of the stem was improved, but contact in the calcar region was achieved only when extra press-fit conditions were considered. Changes in stem geometry towards a more tapered shape and extra press fit and variation in the bone–stem interface conditions (contact amount and high friction) led to a raise in the total insertion force. A direct positive relationship was found between the stem resistance to subsidence and stem geometry (tapering and press fit), bone–stem interface conditions (bone–stem contact and friction interface) and the mechanical status at the end of the insertion (residual stress and strain). Therefore, further studies on evaluating the initial performance of different stem types should consider the parameters describing the bone–stem interface conditions and the mechanical state resulted from the insertion process.  相似文献   

13.
The long-term behavior of the stem-cement interface is one of the most frequent topics of discussion in the design of cemented total hip replacements, especially with regards to the process of damage accumulation in the cement layer. This effect is analyzed here comparing two different situations of the interface: completely bonded and debonded with friction. This comparative analysis is performed using a probabilistic computational approach that considers the variability and uncertainty of determinant factors that directly compromise the damage accumulation in the cement mantle. This stochastic technique is based on the combination of probabilistic finite elements (PFEM) and a cumulative damage approach known as B-model. Three random variables were considered: muscle and joint contact forces at the hip (both for walking and stair climbing), cement damage and fatigue properties of the cement. The results predicted that the regions with higher failure probability in the bulk cement are completely different depending on the stem-cement interface characteristics. In a bonded interface, critical sites appeared at the distal and medial parts of the cement, while for debonded interfaces, the critical regions were found distally and proximally. In bonded interfaces, the failure probability was higher than in debonded ones. The same conclusion may be established for stair climbing in comparison with walking activity.  相似文献   

14.
Primary stability and in consequence osteointegration are commonly related to the stem anchorage but also to the complex musculoskeletal loading of the hip region. This study investigated the influence of metaphyseal and meta-diaphyseal anchorage on the primary stability of cementless stems under physiological-like loading in vitro. Metaphyseal and meta-diaphyseal anchoring stems (n=6 each) were implanted into composite femora. Musculoskeletal loads, validated by in vivo data (peak joint force 2348 N), were applied using a mechanical set-up. Interface movements were recorded by seven displacement transducers and primary stability was compared. Both stems exhibited similar movement patterns and principally moved distally with a retroversional twist. Although elastic movements were comparable, the metaphyseal stem exhibited higher plastic deformations than the meta-diaphyseal stem, particularly for the metaphyseal, medio-lateral and antero-posterior components. Under physiological-like loading, the metaphyseal stem allowed higher interface movements and tended to initially migrate faster than the meta-diaphyseal stem and then stabilized. Elastic movements were comparable and seemed to be less influenced by the anchoring concept than by the mechanical properties of the bone. The analyses emphasize the importance of metaphyseal bone in proximal anchorage and the necessity of an accurate canal preparation to prevent excessive initial migration.  相似文献   

15.
The accurate estimation of the hip joint centre (HJC) in gait analysis and in computer assisted orthopaedic procedures is a basic requirement. Functional methods, based on rigid body localisation, assessing the kinematics of the femur during circumduction movements (pivoting) have been used for estimating the HJC. Localising the femoral segment only, as it is usually done in total knee replacement procedure, can give rise to estimation errors, since the pelvis, during the passive pivoting manoeuvre, might undergo spatial displacements. This paper presents the design and test of an unscented Kalman filter that allows the estimation of the HJC by observing the pose of the femur and the 3D coordinates of a single marker attached to the pelvis. This new approach was validated using a hip joint mechanical simulator, mimicking both hard and soft tissues. The algorithm performances were compared with the literature standards and proved to have better performances in case of pelvis translation greater than 8 mm, thus satisfying the clinical requirements of the application.  相似文献   

16.
Although hip simulators for in vitro wear testing of prosthetic materials used in total hip arthroplasty (THA) have been available for a number of years, similar equipment has yet to appear for endurance testing of fixation in cemented THA, despite considerable evidence of late aseptic loosening as one of the most significant failure mechanisms in this type of replacements. An in vitro study of fatigue behavior in cemented acetabular replacements has been carried out, utilizing a newly developed hip simulator. The machine was designed to simulate the direction and the magnitude of the hip contact force under typical physiological loading conditions, including normal walking and stair climbing, as reported by Bergmann et al. (2001, Hip 98, Freie Universitaet, Berlin). A 3D finite element analysis has been carried out to validate the function of the hip simulator and to evaluate the effects of boundary conditions and geometry of the specimen on the stress distribution in the cement mantle. Bovine pelvic bones were implanted with a Charnley cup, using standard manual cementing techniques. Experiments were carried out under normal walking and descending stairs loading conditions with selected load levels from a body weight of 75-125 kg. Periodically, the samples were removed from the test rigs to allow CT scanning for the purpose of monitoring damage development in the cement fixation. The hip simulator was found to be satisfactory in reproducing the hip contact force during normal walking and stair climbing, as reported by Bergmann et al. Finite element analysis shows that the stress distributions in the cement mantle and at the bone-cement interface are largely unaffected by the geometry and the boundary conditions of the model. Three samples were tested up to 17 x 10(6) cycles and sectioned post-testing for microscopic studies. Debonding at the bone-cement interface of various degrees in the posterior-superior quadrant was revealed in these samples, and the location of the failures corresponds to the highest stressed region from the finite-element analysis. Preliminary experimental results from a newly developed hip simulator seem to suggest that debonding at the bone-cement interface is the main failure mechanism in cemented acetabular replacements, and descending stairs seem to be more detrimental than normal walking or ascending stairs with regard to fatigue integrity of cement fixation.  相似文献   

17.
Total hip arthroplasty represents a major surgical achievement for pain relief and restoration of lifestyle quality due to the joint disease of osteoarthritis. Total hip replacement has evolved over the past 30 years utilising a variety of biocompatible materials, geometric shapes and fixation techniques. The main objective of this study is to investigate the long-term effects of strain adaptive bone remodelling due to the influence of a novel titanium cementless femoral hip replacement. The period of on-growth has been taken into account and the simulation has been run to predict the remodelling behaviour for a 36-month period. The main conclusion from this analysis is that the implant does shield the calcar to a similar degree as other cementless femoral hip designs. It does, however, tend to cause bone to be laid down along its length. This may, in part, be due to the novel geometry of the implant interlocking with and loading the bone.  相似文献   

18.
Damage development in cemented acetabular replacements has been studied in bovine pelvic bones under long-term physiological loading conditions, including normal walking, stair climbing and a combined block loading with representative routine activities. The physiological loading conditions were achieved using a specially designed hip simulator for fixation endurance testing. Damage was detected and monitored using micro-CT scanning at regular intervals of the experiments, and verified by microscopic studies post testing. The results show that debonding at the bone–cement interface defined the failure of cement fixation in all cases, and debondings initiated near the dome of the acetabulum in the superior–posterior quadrant, consistent with the high-stress region identified from the finite element analysis of implanted acetabular models Zant, N.P., Heaton-Adegbile, P., Hussell, J.G., Tong, J., 2008b. In-vitro fatigue failure of cemented acetabular replacements—a hip simulator study. Journal of Biomechanical Engineering, Transactions of the ASME, 130, 021019-1–9]; [Tong, J., Zant, N.P., Wang, J-Y., Heaton-Adegbile, P., Hussell, J.G., 2008. Fatigue in cemented acetabulum. International Journal of Fatigue, 30(8), 1366–1375].  相似文献   

19.
Large interfacial gaps between the stem and the bone in cementless total hip arthroplasty may prevent successful bone ingrowth at the sites, and can also be a passage for wear particles. Furthermore, interfacial gaps between the stem and the bone are believed to compromise the primary stability of the implant. Thus, a broaching method that serves to reduce gaps is expected to give clinically preferable results. A modified broach system with a canal guide is introduced to enhance the accuracy of femoral canal shaping in comparison with the conventional broach system for a Versys fibermetal taper stem. The primary stability of the hip systems and the ratios of the stem surface in contact with the femur were measured in a composite femur model. With the conventional method, an average of 67% of the stem surface was shown to be in contact with the bone, and an average stem micromotion/migration of 35 microm 290 microm was observed under 1000 cycles of stair climbing loads. With the modified method, the stem-bone contact ratio significantly increased to 82% (p<0.05), and the average micromotion/migration reduced to 29 microm 49 microm, respectively (p<0.05 for migration). Our finite element models of the hip systems supported that the difference in micromotion could be attributed to the difference in interfacial contact. Interfacial gaps occurring with the conventional broach system were effectively reduced by the proposed method, resulting in improved primary stability.  相似文献   

20.
Bone morphology and density changes are commonly observed following joint replacement, may contribute to the risks of implant loosening and periprosthetic fracture and reduce the available bone stock for revision surgery. This study was presented in the ‘Bone and Cartilage Mechanobiology across the scales’ WCCM symposium to review the development of remodelling prediction methods and to demonstrate simulation of adaptive bone remodelling around hip replacement femoral components, incorporating intrinsic (prosthesis) and extrinsic (activity and loading) factors. An iterative bone remodelling process was applied to finite element models of a femur implanted with a cementless total hip replacement (THR) and a hip resurfacing implant. Previously developed for a cemented THR implant, this modified process enabled the influence of pre- to post-operative changes in patient activity and joint loading to be evaluated. A control algorithm used identical pre- and post-operative conditions, and the predicted extents and temporal trends of remodelling were measured by generating virtual X-rays and DXA scans. The modified process improved qualitative and quantitative remodelling predictions for both the cementless THR and resurfacing implants, but demonstrated the sensitivity to DXA scan region definition and appropriate implant–bone position and sizing. Predicted remodelling in the intact femur in response to changed activity and loading demonstrated that in this simplified model, although the influence of the extrinsic effects were important, the mechanics of implantation were dominant. This study supports the application of predictive bone remodelling as one element in the range of physical and computational studies, which should be conducted in the preclinical evaluation of new prostheses.  相似文献   

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