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Morphological and biomechanical aspects of Al2O3 ceramic joint replacement. Experimental results and design considerations for human endoprostheses

✍ Scribed by Griss, Peter ;Heimke, G�nther ;von Andrian-Werburg, Hanns ;Krempien, Burkhard ;Reipa, Susanne ;Lauterbach, Hans J. ;Hartung, Hans J.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1975
Tongue
English
Weight
629 KB
Volume
9
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9304

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Four different acetabular replacement designs and 2 femoral head replacement designs made out of high density alumina ceramic have been tested in sheep with postoperative survival times of up to 11 months (Frialit 99: Al~2~O~3~ 99.6%, MgO 0.4%).

It can be concluded from these experiments that a cement free implantation technique with alumina requires a primary rigid fixation of the implant to bone, with the possibility for new bone growth along the ceramic and into grooves and macroscopic holes for further interdigitation. Three different solutions for the acetabular component can be recommended for human application.

In addition, an all ceramic femoral prosthesis has been tested for bending strength in its neck region. Twenty prostheses have been fractured, all of which showed values for bending strength far higher than the physiological neck fracture level (900 kp/cm^2^). The present state of development of all ceramic prostheses is discussed. Up to now, the development of fibrous tissue between the bone and the ceramic implant has caused reservations with human implantation. The direct definite anchorage problem has to be resolved first.


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Biomechanically induced tissue reactions
✍ Griss, P. ;Silber, R. ;Merkle, B. ;Haehner, K. ;Heimke, G. ;Krempien, B. 📂 Article 📅 1976 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 583 KB

## Abstract A biomechanical concept of interface maturation around cement‐free implanted alumina–ceramic hip endoprostheses in sheep is explained. Provided there is rigid primary stability of the implant within the bone bed, hard tissue formation along the support areas of the implant is mainly dep