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Ceramic‐On‐Metal for Total Hip Replacement: Mixing and Matching Can Lead to High Wear
Authors:Saverio Affatato  Michele Spinelli  Mara Zavalloni  Francesco Traina  Simone Carmignato  Aldo Toni
Institution:1. Laboratorio di Tecnologia Medica, Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna;2. Dipartimento di Meccanica e Tecnologie Industriali, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Firenze;3. I° Divisione—Dipartimento di Ortopedia e Traumatologia, Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna;4. and;5. DTG, Università di Padova, Padova, Italy
Abstract:Ceramic‐on‐ceramic and metal‐on‐metal bearing surfaces are often employed for total hip replacement because of their resistance to wear. However, they have some limits: brittleness is a major concern for ceramic, and ion release is a drawback for metal. To reduce the effect of these limitations, a hybrid coupling of ceramic‐on‐metal has been proposed. The theoretical advantage of this new coupling might lead orthopedic surgeons to use it indiscriminately. We asked whether the wear rate of this innovative solution was comparable with that of ceramic‐on‐ceramic, which is considered to be the gold standard for wear resistance. In a hip simulator study, we tested the wear pattern of a hybrid ceramic‐on‐metal coupling supplied by the same distributor; in particular, three different configurations were tested for 5 million cycles: 36‐mm ceramic‐on‐ceramic, 32‐mm and 36‐mm ceramic‐on‐metal. These combinations were gravimetrically and geometrically evaluated. After 5 million cycles, the volumetric loss for the metal acetabular cups (Φ 36‐mm) was 20‐fold greater than that of the ceramic cups of the same size (Φ 36‐mm); a volumetric loss of 4.35 mm3 and 0.26 mm3 was observed, respectively, for ceramic‐on‐metal and ceramic‐on‐ceramic combinations. Significant statistical differences were observed between all 36‐mm different combinations (P < 0.0001). The increased diameter of the 36‐mm ceramic‐on‐metal configuration resulted in a lower volumetric loss compared with that of the 32‐mm ceramic‐on‐metal configuration. Our findings showed an increase in wear for the proposed hybrid specimens with respect to that of the ceramic‐on‐ceramic ones. This confirms that even in the case of ceramic‐on‐metal bearings, mixing and matching could not prove effective wear behavior, not even comparable with that of the ceramic‐on‐ceramic gold standard.
Keywords:Ceramic‐on‐metal  Roundness  Wear rate  Ceramic‐on‐ceramic  Head‐cup mismatch
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