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In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design

Recently, concerns have been raised about the potential effect of head-neck junction damage products at the local and systemic levels. Factors that may affect this damage process have not been fully established yet. This study investigated the possible correlations among head-neck junction damage le...

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Autores principales: Baleani, Massimiliano, Erani, Paolo, Bordini, Barbara, Zuccheri, Federica, Mąkosa, Mateusz Kordian, De Pasquale, Dalila, Beraudi, Alina, Stea, Susanna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5551776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28773095
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma10070733
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author Baleani, Massimiliano
Erani, Paolo
Bordini, Barbara
Zuccheri, Federica
Mąkosa, Mateusz Kordian
De Pasquale, Dalila
Beraudi, Alina
Stea, Susanna
author_facet Baleani, Massimiliano
Erani, Paolo
Bordini, Barbara
Zuccheri, Federica
Mąkosa, Mateusz Kordian
De Pasquale, Dalila
Beraudi, Alina
Stea, Susanna
author_sort Baleani, Massimiliano
collection PubMed
description Recently, concerns have been raised about the potential effect of head-neck junction damage products at the local and systemic levels. Factors that may affect this damage process have not been fully established yet. This study investigated the possible correlations among head-neck junction damage level, implant design, material combination, and patient characteristics. Head-neck junctions of 148 retrieved implants were analysed, including both ceramic-on-ceramic (N = 61) and metal-on-metal (N = 87) bearings. In all cases, the male taper was made of titanium alloy. Damage was evaluated using a four-point scoring system based on damage morphology and extension. Patient age at implantation, implantation time, damage risk factor, and serum ion concentration were considered as independent potential predicting variables. The damage risk factor summarises head-neck design characteristics and junction loading condition. Junction damage correlated with both implantation time and damage factor risk when the head was made of ceramic. A poor correlation was found when the head was made of cobalt alloy. The fretting-corrosion phenomenon seemed mainly mechanically regulated, at least when cobalt alloy components were not involved. When a component was made of cobalt alloy, the role of chemical phenomena increased, likely becoming, over implantation time, the damage driving phenomena of highly stressed junctions.
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spelling pubmed-55517762017-08-11 In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design Baleani, Massimiliano Erani, Paolo Bordini, Barbara Zuccheri, Federica Mąkosa, Mateusz Kordian De Pasquale, Dalila Beraudi, Alina Stea, Susanna Materials (Basel) Article Recently, concerns have been raised about the potential effect of head-neck junction damage products at the local and systemic levels. Factors that may affect this damage process have not been fully established yet. This study investigated the possible correlations among head-neck junction damage level, implant design, material combination, and patient characteristics. Head-neck junctions of 148 retrieved implants were analysed, including both ceramic-on-ceramic (N = 61) and metal-on-metal (N = 87) bearings. In all cases, the male taper was made of titanium alloy. Damage was evaluated using a four-point scoring system based on damage morphology and extension. Patient age at implantation, implantation time, damage risk factor, and serum ion concentration were considered as independent potential predicting variables. The damage risk factor summarises head-neck design characteristics and junction loading condition. Junction damage correlated with both implantation time and damage factor risk when the head was made of ceramic. A poor correlation was found when the head was made of cobalt alloy. The fretting-corrosion phenomenon seemed mainly mechanically regulated, at least when cobalt alloy components were not involved. When a component was made of cobalt alloy, the role of chemical phenomena increased, likely becoming, over implantation time, the damage driving phenomena of highly stressed junctions. MDPI 2017-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5551776/ /pubmed/28773095 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma10070733 Text en © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Baleani, Massimiliano
Erani, Paolo
Bordini, Barbara
Zuccheri, Federica
Mąkosa, Mateusz Kordian
De Pasquale, Dalila
Beraudi, Alina
Stea, Susanna
In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design
title In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design
title_full In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design
title_fullStr In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design
title_full_unstemmed In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design
title_short In Vivo Damage of the Head-Neck Junction in Hard-on-Hard Total Hip Replacements: Effect of Femoral Head Size, Metal Combination, and 12/14 Taper Design
title_sort in vivo damage of the head-neck junction in hard-on-hard total hip replacements: effect of femoral head size, metal combination, and 12/14 taper design
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5551776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28773095
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma10070733
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