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VALIDATION OF THE THREE DIMENSIONAL (POLYWARE™) TECHNIQUE FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF POLYETHYLENE WEAR IN TOTAL HIP ARTHROPLASTY



Abstract

Introduction: Ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) wear debris generated at the articulating interface of total hip arthroplasties continues to be the major cause of early failure of these implants.

Aim: To validate the accuracy and reproducibility of the three-dimensional technique (3D) of in vivo measurement of UHMWPE wear using PolyWare ™ when applied to digitised radiographs. The aim was to keep the cumulative errors below the accepted annual linear wear rate of 0.15 mm.

Method: Using precision phantoms with known cup and head sizes and known deviation simulating wear, series of x-rays were taken simulating a number of variables. These variables were grouped into: patient variables (centering, exposure, motion artefact, prosthesis orientation), image acquisition variables (film and cassette type, x-ray exposure, non-circularity of the projected image, magnification, image sharpness), digitisation variables (input resolution, sharpness), and errors inherent to the PolyWare™ software analytical process.

Results: Patient factors contributed the largest errors to the process – these were highly variable. Exposure and input resolution also contributed errors to a lesser extent. No significant error introduction was found with regard to any of the other above-mentioned factors, in particular the PolyWare™ analysis.

Conclusions: The three dimensional method (PolyWare™) is accurate and highly reproducible. Apart from patient factors, which directly and indirectly introduce errors, this method is a satisfactory means of estimating the in vivo wear of UHMWPE.

The abstracts were prepared by Professor Alan Thurston. Correspondence should be addressed to him at the New Zealand Orthopaedic Association, PO Box 7451, Wellington, New Zealand.