The biochemical characteristics of wear testing lubricants affect polyethylene wear in orthopaedic pin-on-disc testing

被引:9
作者
Guenther, Leah E. [1 ]
Turgeon, Thomas R. [2 ]
Bohm, Eric R. [2 ]
Brandt, Jan-M [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manitoba, Dept Mech & Mfg Engn, Fac Engn, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
[2] Concordia Joint Replacement Grp, Winnipeg, MB R2K 2M9, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
Wear; pin-on-disc; polyethylene; lubricant; tribology; orthopaedic; MOLECULAR-WEIGHT POLYETHYLENE; PROSTHETIC JOINT MATERIALS; CROSS-LINKED POLYETHYLENE; TOTAL KNEE REPLACEMENT; HUMAN SYNOVIAL-FLUID; TOTAL HIP; COUNTERFACE ROUGHNESS; CLINICAL-PERFORMANCE; BOVINE SERUM; ARTHROPLASTY;
D O I
10.1177/0954411914567930
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Lubricant protein concentration is known to affect crosslinked polyethylene wear in in vitro testing; however, the biochemical nature of these lubricants may also have a significant effect on wear and dictate its clinical relevance. A modified approach to pin-on-disc testing was implemented to explore the effect of four biochemically different lubricants on the wear of two types of crosslinked polyethylene materials (XLK and Marathon; DePuy Synthes, Warsaw, IN, USA). XLK was associated with higher wear rates than Marathon. In comparison to lubricants containing deionized water, lubricants containing phosphate buffered saline solution and hyaluronic acid increased osmolality by up to 1.2 times and thermal stability by up to 1.4 times. This biochemical change reduced wear by up to 12.5 times. Wear rates for XLK and Marathon differed by a factor of 3.2 using lubricants with phosphate buffered saline solution as the dilutive media, but only 2.0 for lubricants with deionized water. Interestingly, varying the concentration of hyaluronic acid did not have a significant effect on wear, and differences between XLK and Marathon wear rates were not found to be statistically significant when hyaluronic acid was added to the lubricant. The findings of this study showed that increasing the osmolality and thermal stability of lubricants to more clinical levels decreased wear; however, the effect of hyaluronic acid on wear may not be apparent in simplistic pin-on-disc testing. It was suggested that phosphate buffered saline solution be used as the dilutive media of choice in order to better differentiate the ranking of materials while maintaining some clinical relevance.
引用
收藏
页码:77 / 90
页数:14
相关论文
共 55 条
[1]   Wear of prosthetic joint materials in various lubricants [J].
Ahlroos, T ;
Saikko, V .
WEAR, 1997, 211 (01) :113-119
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1997, Geometrical Product Specifications (GPS)-Surface texture: Profile method
[3]  
AOA, 2010, ANN REP 2010 AOA
[4]  
ASTM, 2012, F202506 ASTM INT
[5]  
ASTM International, 2011, F73200 ASTM INT
[6]   Wear testing of crosslinked polyethylene: Wear rate variability and microbial contamination [J].
Brandt, J. -M. ;
Vecherya, A. ;
Guenther, L. E. ;
Koval, S. F. ;
Petrak, M. J. ;
Bohm, E. R. ;
Wyss, U. P. .
JOURNAL OF THE MECHANICAL BEHAVIOR OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS, 2014, 34 :208-216
[7]   Performance assessment of femoral knee components made from cobalt-chromium alloy and oxidized zirconium [J].
Brandt, J. -M. ;
Guenther, L. ;
O'Brien, S. ;
Vecherya, A. ;
Turgeon, T. R. ;
Bohm, E. R. .
KNEE, 2013, 20 (06) :388-396
[8]   Antimicrobial agents and low-molecular weight polypeptides affect polyethylene wear in knee simulator testing [J].
Brandt, J. -M. ;
Mahmoud, K. K. ;
Koval, S. F. ;
MacDonald, S. J. ;
Medley, J. B. .
TRIBOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2013, 65 :97-104
[9]   Biochemical comparisons of osteoarthritic human synovial fluid with calf sera used in knee simulator wear testing [J].
Brandt, J. -M. ;
Briere, L. K. ;
Marr, J. ;
MacDonald, S. J. ;
Bourne, R. B. ;
Medley, J. B. .
JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH PART A, 2010, 94A (03) :961-971
[10]  
Brandt J.-M., 2009, Wear and Boundary Lubrication in Modular Total Knee Replacements