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General Orthopaedics

HIP CORROSION TEST ON VARIED TAPER SURFACE ROUGHNESS

The International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA), 29th Annual Congress, October 2016. PART 1.



Abstract

Introduction

The corrosion of modular taper junctions in hip implants is becoming an area of increased research focus. Many design factors have been hypothesized to contribute to this kind of corrosion. The authors' previous research indicated femoral stem taper roughness may influence taper corrosion. The purpose of this study is to determine whether taper roughness significantly affects taper performance.

Methods

A 22 design of experiment was conducted with Ti6Al4V 12/14 taper coupons coupled with CoCrMo 12/14 taper 28mm+12 heads (DePuy Synthes, Warsaw, IN) with n=3 samples per test run for a total of 12 samples. The femoral heads and taper coupons were manufactured with “smooth” finishes ranging from Rt 100–200 µin and “rough” finishes ranging from Rt 900–1000 µin. Test components were assembled wet (dipped in saline solution and drained) and pressed together with a 4400 N assembly force. The assemblies were immersed in phosphate buffered saline and a potentiostat was used to maintain the potential of the specimen at −50mV vs. Ag/AgCl. Incrementally larger cyclic loads were applied vertically to the head at 3Hz until a 4000N maximum load was reached, then this cyclic load was maintained for an additional 1 million cycles.

Results

The long-term average corrosion test results ranged from 0.26 to 2.98 µA among the groups. The “Rough Head – Rough Stem” (Group 1) resulted in the highest average corrosion currents of 1.53 ± 0.75 µA. The “Smooth Head – Smooth Stem” (Group 4) showed the lowest average corrosion currents of 0.20 ± 0.05 µA. ANOVA analysis revealed significant differences between the groups (p>0.05), Tukey-Kramer post-hoc analysis showed a significant difference between groups 1 and 4 only.

Discussion

Femoral heads and femoral stems with a smoother taper roughness specification resulted in less measured corrosion compared to components with higher taper roughness specifications under the specified test conditions.

Significance

This study demonstrates taper surface roughness is a relevant design factor which could influence taper corrosion.


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