Na. Ramaniraka et al., The fixation of the cemented femoral component - Effects of stem stiffness, cement thickness and roughness of the cement-bone surface, J BONE-BR V, 82B(2), 2000, pp. 297-303
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Ortopedics, Rehabilitation & Sport Medicine","da verificare
After cemented total hip arthroplasty (THA) there may be failure at either
the cement-stem or the cement-bone interface. This results from the occurre
nce of abnormally high shear and compressive stresses within the cement and
excessive relative micromovement.
We therefore evaluated micromovement and stress at the cement-bone and ceme
nt-stem interfaces for a titanium and a chromium-cobalt stem. The behaviour
of both implants was similar and no substantial differences were found in
the size and distribution of micromovement on either interface with respect
to the stiffness of the stem.
Micromovement was minimal with a cement mantle 3 to 4 mm thick but then inc
reased with greater thickness of the cement. Abnormally high micromovement
occurred when the cement was thinner than 2 mm and the stem was made of tit
anium.
The relative decrease in surface roughness augmented slipping but decreased
debonding at the cement-bone interface. Shear stress at this site did not
vary significantly for the different coefficients of cement-bone friction w
hile compressive and hoop stresses within the cement increased slightly.