Pre-heating of components in cemented total hip arthroplasty

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Abstract

Fatigue fractures which originate at stress-concentrating voids located at the implant-cement interface are a potential cause of septic loosening of cemented femoral components. Heating of the component to 44°C is known to reduce the porosity of the cement-prosthesis interface. The temperature of the cement-bone interface was recorded intra-operatively as 32.3°C. A simulated femoral model was devised to study the effect of heating of the component on the implant-cement interface. Heating of the implant and vacuum mixing have a synergistic effect on the porosity of the implant-cement interface, and heating also reverses the gradients of microhardness in the mantle. Heating of the implant also reduces porosity at the interface depending on the temperature. A minimum difference in temperature between the implant and the bone of 3°C was required to produce this effect. The optimal difference was 7°C, representing a balance between maximal reduction of porosity and an increased risk of thermal injury. Using contemporary cementing techniques, heating the implant to 40°C is recommended to produce an optimum effect. © 2004 British Editorial Society of Bone and Joint Surgery.

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APA

Jafri, A. A., Green, S. M., Partington, P. F., McCaskie, A. W., & Muller, S. D. (2004). Pre-heating of components in cemented total hip arthroplasty. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery - Series B, 86(8), 1214–1219. https://doi.org/10.1302/0301-620X.86B8.14660

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