## Abstract Femoral fractures within resurfacing implants have been associated with bone necrosis, possibly resulting from heat generated by cement polymerization. The amount of heat generated depends on cement mantle volume and type of cement. Using finite element analysis, the effect of cement ty
Femoral cementing technique for hip resurfacing arthroplasty
β Scribed by Rudi G. Bitsch; Christian Heisel; Mauricio Silva; Thomas P. Schmalzried
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 448 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The resurgence of metalβmetal bearings has renewed interest in hip resurfacing, but a paucity of information exists regarding femoral cementing technique. We developed a laboratory model in which 72 openβcell foam specimens were used to simulate bone. Analyses of two cement viscosities, two foam porosities, and six cementing techniques were performed: manual cement application only, manual application and filling of one quarter of the component with cement, filling of half of the component, manual application and half component filling, full component filling, and manual application and full component filling. For manual application, cement was pressurized into the foam by rolling the finger tips. For component filling, a defined quantity of cement was poured into the component before pressing it onto the foam. Specimens were cut into quarters, and cement penetration was quantified in seven areas: top, chamfer, wall, interior area, and proximal, medial, and distal stem. The manual technique showed a 3βmm thick, even cement penetration of the outer fixation surface (topβ=β26βΒ±β0 mm^2^, chamferβ=β14.9βΒ±β0.2 mm^2^, wallβ=β55.6βΒ±β5.2 mm^2^). None of the other techniques showed a significantly higher penetration in these areas. Large differences were found between all techniques at the medial stem (27.7βΒ±β17.5 mm^2^, pβ<β0.001) and the interior area (128.5βΒ±β69.6 mm^2^, pβ=β0.013). An increasing degree of penetration occurred from manual cement application to manual application and full component filling. Sixteen specimens showed incomplete seating, which occurred with all techniques except the manual technique. The manual technique consistently gave an approximately 3βmm thick even cement penetration over the outer fixation area. Pouring any cement into the shell resulted in variable degrees of deeper penetration and a risk of incomplete seating, which have been associated with bone necrosis and early fracture. Β© 2007 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 25:423β431, 2007
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## Abstract In clinical outcome studies, small component sizes, female gender, femoral shape, focal bone defects, bad bone quality, and biomechanics have been associated with failures of resurfacing arthroplasties. We used a wellβestablished experimental setup and human bone specimens to analyze th
The occlusion and stability of five synthetic plugs used to restrict the femoral canal prior to cemented arthroplasty was assessed. A model was employed consisting of a hollow wooden dowel to simulate the canal, with adapters fixed to both ends to accommodate cement insertion and pressurization, and