Comparison of two methods of fatigue testing bone cement |
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Authors: | K.E. Tanner Jian-Sheng Wang Fred Kjellson Lars Lidgren |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Orthopaedic surgery, Stavanger University Hospital, Stavanger, Norway;2. Orthopaedic Research Centre, Trondheim University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway;3. Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Biomaterials, University of Bergen, Norway;1. Department of Traumatology and Orthopaedic Surgery, General University Hospital Gregorio Marañón, Madrid, Spain;2. Institute for Research in Technology/Mechanical Engineering Department, Universidad Pontificia Comillas, Madrid, Spain;3. Materials Performance Group, Materials Science and Engineering Department, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain;4. Faculty of Medicine, Universidad San Pablo CEU, Madrid, Spain |
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Abstract: | Two different methods have been used to fatigue test four bone cements. Each method has been used previously, but the results have not been compared. The ISO 527-based method tests a minimum of 10 samples over a single stress range in tension only and uses Weibull analysis to calculate the median number of cycles to failure and the Weibull modulus. The ASTM F2118 test regime uses fewer specimens at various stress levels tested in fully reversed tension–compression, and generates a stress vs. number of cycles to failure (S–N) or Wöhler curve. Data from specimens with pores greater than 1 mm across is rejected. The ISO 527-based test while quicker to perform, provides only tensile fatigue data, but the material tested includes pores, thus the cement is closer to cement in clinical application. The ASTM regime uses tension and compression loading and multiple stress levels, thus is closer to physiological loading, but excludes specimens with defects obviously greater than 1 mm, so is less representative of cement in vivo. The fatigue lives between the cements were up to a factor 15 different for the single stress level tension only tests, while they were only a factor of 2 different in the fully reversed tension–compression testing. The ISO 527-based results are more sensitive to surface flaws, thus the differences found using ASTM F2118 are more indicative of differences in the fatigue lives. However, ISO 527-based tests are quicker, so are useful for initial screening. |
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