Al-Hajjar Mazen, Fisher John, Tipper Joanne L, Williams Sophie, Jennings Louise M
Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering, School of Mechanical Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
Proc Inst Mech Eng H. 2013 May;227(5):535-42. doi: 10.1177/0954411912474613. Epub 2013 Feb 8.
Ceramic-on-ceramic bearings have become of great interest due to the substantial improvements in the manufacturing techniques and material properties and due to polyethylene wear debris-induced osteolysis and the issues with metal wear debris and ion release by metal-on-metal bearings. Edge loading conditions due to translational malpositioning (microseparation conditions) have been shown to replicate clinically relevant wear mechanisms and increase the wear of ceramic-on-ceramic bearings; thus, it was necessary to test new bearing materials and designs under these adverse conditions. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of increasing head size on the wear of BIOLOX(®) delta ceramic-on-ceramic bearings under edge loading conditions due to rotational (steep cup inclination angle) and translational (microseparation) malpositioning. In this study, six 36-mm ceramic-on-ceramic bearings (BIOLOX delta, CeramTec, Germany) were tested under standard and edge loading conditions using the Leeds II hip simulator and compared to the 28-mm bearings tested and published previously under identical conditions. The mean wear rate under standard gait conditions was below 0.1 mm(3)/million cycles for both the 28-mm and the 36-mm ceramic-on-ceramic bearings, and increasing the inclination angle did not affect the wear rates. The introduction of microseparation to the gait cycle increased the wear rate of ceramic-on-ceramic bearing and resulted in stripe wear on the femoral heads. Under microseparation conditions, the wear rate of size 36-mm bearings (0.22 mm(3)/million cycles) was significantly higher (p = 0.004) than that for size 28-mm bearings (0.13 mm(3)/million cycles). This was due to the larger contact area for the larger bearings and deprived lubrication under edge loading conditions. The wear rate of BIOLOX delta ceramic-on-ceramic bearings under microseparation conditions was still very low (<0.25 mm(3)/million cycles) compared to earlier generation ceramic-on-ceramic bearings (BIOLOX forte, 1.84 mm(3)/million cycles) and other bearing materials such as metal-on-metal bearings (2-8 mm(3)/million cycles).
由于制造技术和材料性能的显著改进,以及聚乙烯磨损颗粒导致的骨溶解问题和金属对金属轴承的金属磨损颗粒及离子释放问题,陶瓷对陶瓷轴承已引起了极大关注。已表明,平移位置不当(微分离情况)导致的边缘加载条件会重现临床相关的磨损机制,并增加陶瓷对陶瓷轴承的磨损;因此,有必要在这些不利条件下测试新的轴承材料和设计。本研究的目的是评估在旋转(髋臼杯倾斜角度大)和平移(微分离)位置不当导致的边缘加载条件下,增大股骨头尺寸对BIOLOX® delta陶瓷对陶瓷轴承磨损的影响。在本研究中,使用利兹II型髋关节模拟器在标准和边缘加载条件下对六个36毫米陶瓷对陶瓷轴承(BIOLOX delta,德国CeramTec公司)进行了测试,并与之前在相同条件下测试和发表的28毫米轴承进行了比较。在标准步态条件下,28毫米和36毫米陶瓷对陶瓷轴承的平均磨损率均低于0.1立方毫米/百万次循环,增大倾斜角度并未影响磨损率。在步态周期中引入微分离会增加陶瓷对陶瓷轴承的磨损率,并导致股骨头出现条纹磨损。在微分离条件下,36毫米尺寸轴承的磨损率(0.22立方毫米/百万次循环)显著高于(p = 0.004)28毫米尺寸轴承的磨损率(0.13立方毫米/百万次循环)。这是由于较大尺寸轴承的接触面积更大,以及在边缘加载条件下润滑不足。与早期的陶瓷对陶瓷轴承(BIOLOX forte,1.84立方毫米/百万次循环)和其他轴承材料(如金属对金属轴承,2 - 8立方毫米/百万次循环)相比,微分离条件下BIOLOX delta陶瓷对陶瓷轴承的磨损率仍然非常低(<0.25立方毫米/百万次循环)。