Hardison Andy, Lewis Gladius, Daniels A U Dan, Smith Richard A
Department of Biomedical Engineering, The University of Memphis, Memphis, TN 38152, USA.
Biomaterials. 2003 Dec;24(28):5145-51. doi: 10.1016/s0142-9612(03)00461-7.
Exothermic heat flow rates (Q=microW=microJ/s), as a function of elapsed time, were measured by isothermal heat-conduction microcalorimetry (IHCMC) in order to study the aggregate rate of physico-chemical change in specimens of unsterilized and sterilized ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE). Standard protocols for performing the IHCMC tests were developed and are described. Use of the standard protocols yielded the desired results-data that were not significantly different among either replicate sets of unsterilized specimens or as a function of which calorimeter test well was used. Heat flow rates measured in air at 20 degrees C, 25 degrees C, 35 degrees C, and 45 degrees C yielded estimates of activation energies of 47, 11, and 41 kJ/mol for unsterilized, gamma-radiation sterilized, and ethylene oxide gas (EtO) sterilized polymer, respectively. These results support the ideas that (a). initial exothermic degradation takes place much more easily in the radiation-sterilized material, due to direct oxidation of readily available free radicals, and (b). the much slower degradation process in EtO-sterilized UHMWPE is not appreciably different than in unsterilized polymer. Comparison with other activation energy data suggests that the rate-limiting process in EtO- or un-sterilized polymer is oxygen diffusion into the polymer. For shelf storage in air, for periods up to 8 months, the mean exothermic heat flow in air, at 25 degrees C (Q(m)) [determined from the Q values averaged over the time period between 15 and 20 h after test start], from UHMWPE gamma-radiation sterilized in air was significantly higher than for unsterilized material (2.91+/-0.11 vs. 0.73+/-0.11 microW). The higher rate can be attributed to oxidation of radiation-induced free radicals in the polymer near its surface. For the gamma-irradiated polymer, the decline in Q(m) with shelf storage time suggests that, eventually, degradation might become oxygen diffusion limited in this case also. However, in vivo, surface wear of an UHMWPE articular component may continue to expose unoxidized free radicals, keeping the exothermic reaction rate high and, possibly, continuing to produce an oxidized UHMWPE surface prone to wear.
通过等温热传导微量量热法(IHCMC)测量放热热流率(Q = 微瓦 = 微焦/秒)作为经过时间的函数,以研究未灭菌和灭菌的超高分子量聚乙烯(UHMWPE)样品中物理化学变化的总速率。制定并描述了进行IHCMC测试的标准方案。使用标准方案产生了所需的结果——在未灭菌样品的重复组之间或作为使用哪个量热计测试孔的函数的数据没有显著差异。在20℃、25℃、35℃和45℃的空气中测量的热流率分别给出了未灭菌、γ辐射灭菌和环氧乙烷气体(EtO)灭菌聚合物的活化能估计值为47、11和41 kJ/mol。这些结果支持以下观点:(a)。由于易于获得的自由基的直接氧化,初始放热降解在辐射灭菌材料中更容易发生,以及(b)。EtO灭菌的UHMWPE中慢得多的降解过程与未灭菌聚合物中的降解过程没有明显差异。与其他活化能数据的比较表明,EtO或未灭菌聚合物中的限速过程是氧气扩散到聚合物中。对于在空气中长达8个月的货架储存,在25℃下空气中的平均放热热流(Q(m))[根据测试开始后15至20小时时间段内的Q值平均确定],空气中γ辐射灭菌的UHMWPE明显高于未灭菌材料(2.91±0.11对0.73±0.11微瓦)。较高的速率可归因于聚合物表面附近辐射诱导的自由基的氧化。对于γ辐照的聚合物,Q(m)随货架储存时间的下降表明,最终,在这种情况下降解也可能变得受氧气扩散限制。然而,在体内,UHMWPE关节部件的表面磨损可能会继续暴露未氧化的自由基,保持放热反应速率高,并可能继续产生易于磨损的氧化UHMWPE表面。