scholarly journals The choice of the femoral center of rotation affects material loss in total knee replacement wear testing – A parametric finite element study of ISO 14243-3

2019 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 104-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven P. Mell ◽  
Markus A. Wimmer ◽  
Hannah J. Lundberg
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morshed Khandaker ◽  
Onur Can Kalay ◽  
Fatih Karpat ◽  
Amgad Haleem ◽  
Wendy Williams ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Steven P Mell ◽  
Spencer Fullam ◽  
Markus A Wimmer ◽  
Hannah J Lundberg

Current treatment for end-stage osteoarthritis is total knee replacement. Given that the number of total knee replacement surgeries is expected to approach 3.48 million by 2030, understanding long-term failure is important. One of the preclinical tests for total knee replacements is carried out using mechanical wear testing under generic walking conditions. Used for this purpose is the International Standards Organization’s generic walking profile. Recently this standard was updated by reversing the direction of anterior/posterior translation and internal/external rotation. The effects of this change have not been investigated, and therefore, it is unknown if comparisons between wear tests utilizing the old and new version of the standard are valid. In this study, we used a finite element model along with a frictional energy–based wear model to compare the kinematic inputs, contact conditions, and wear from the older and newer versions of the ISO standard. Simulator-tested components were used to validate the computational model. We found that there were no visible similarities in the contact conditions between the old and new versions of the standard. The new version of the standard had a lower wear rate but covered a larger portion of the articular surface. Locations of wear also varied considerably. The results of the study suggest that major differences between the old and new standard exist, and therefore, historical wear results should be compared with caution to newly obtained results.


1992 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 1413-1424 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.L. Rakotomanana ◽  
P.F. Leyvraz ◽  
A. Curnier ◽  
J.H. Heegaard ◽  
P.J. Rubin

2018 ◽  
Vol 77 ◽  
pp. 146-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liming Shu ◽  
Ko Yamamoto ◽  
Jiang Yao ◽  
Prabhav Saraswat ◽  
Yao Liu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Morshed Khandaker ◽  
Onur Can Kalay ◽  
Fatih Karpat ◽  
Amgad Haleem ◽  
Wendy Williams ◽  
...  

Abstract A method to improve the mechanical fixation of a total knee replacement (TKR) implant is clinically important and is the purpose of this study. More than one million joint replacement procedures are performed in people each year in the United States, and experts predict the number to increase six-fold by the year 2030. Whether cemented or uncemented, joint prostheses may destabilize over time and necessitate revision. Approximately 40,000 hip arthroplasty surgeries have to be revised each year and the rate is expected to increase by approximately 140% (and by 600% for total knee replacement) over the next 25 years. In veterinary surgery, joint replacement has a long history and the phenomenon of surgical revision is also well recognized. For the betterment of both people and animals, improving the longevity of arthroplasty devices is of the utmost clinical importance, and towards that end, several strategies are under investigation. One approach that we explore in the present research is to improve the biomechanical performance of cemented implant systems by altering the implant surface architecture in a way that facilitates its cement bonding capacity. Beginning with the Charnley system, early femoral stems were polished smooth, but a number of subsequent designs have featured a roughened surface — created with bead or grit blasting — to improve cement bonding. Failure at the implant-cement interface remains an issue with these newer designs, leading us to explore in this present research an alternate, novel approach to surface alteration — specifically, laser microgrooving. This study used various microgrooves architectures that is feasible using a laser micromachining process on a tibia tray (TT) for the goat TKR. Developing the laser microgrooving (LM) procedure, we hypothesized feasibility in producing parallel microgrooves of precise dimensions and spacing on both flat and round metallic surfaces. We further hypothesized that laser microgrooving would increase surface area and roughness of the cement interface of test metallic implants and that such would translate into an improved acute mechanical performance as assessed in vitro under both static and cyclic loads. The objective was to develop a computational model to determine the effect of LIM on the tibial tray to the mechanical stimuli distributions from implant to bone using the finite element method. This study designed goat TT 3D solid model from a computer topography (CT) images, out of which three different laser microgrooves were engraved on TT sample by varying depth, height and space between two adjacent grooves. The simulation test results concluded that microgrooves acchitecures positively influence microstrain behavior around the implant/bone interfaces. There is a higher amount of strain observed for microgroove implant/bone samples compared to non-groove implant/bone samples. Thus, the laser-induced microgrooves have the potential to be used clinically in TKR components.


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (03) ◽  
pp. 242-246
Author(s):  
James W. Pritchett

AbstractThis study reviewed the early use of polyurethane for total knee resurfacing, the long-term results of polycarbonate urethane (PCU) for total knee replacement and conducted wear simulator testing of PCU. In 1959 and 1960, 10 patients underwent total articular polyurethane knee replacement (polyethylene was not available). The polyurethane was placed on the articular surface of the femur with metal surfaces on the tibia and patella. In 1996 and 1997, four patients received a newer PCU tibial insert in revision procedures; all had well-fixed prostheses, but no revision polyethylene implants were available. In addition, this study evaluated six new PCU tibial inserts in a 10-million cycle (Mc) wear simulator. All 10 of the early knees performed well clinically and 2 knees were functional for more than 30 years. Of the four more recent patients, all knees remain functional at more than 20 years' follow-up with no signs of wear or osteolysis. Wear simulator testing found mean material loss of 14.2 mg/Mc which equates to a volumetric wear of 11.9 mg/Mc, similar to the wear of conventional polyethylene. Polyurethane performs well as conventional polyethylene but not better than current cross-linked polyethylene tibial inserts. Its large wear particles (mean, 11 µm) and biocompatibility are less likely to cause an inflammatory response leading to pain and bone loss. Newer, superior polyurethanes can again be considered a candidate material for the tibial insert of a total knee replacement. A larger study may be able to validate polyurethane as an alternative material for joint replacement.


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