Comparison of the Primary Stability of Porous Tantalum and Titanium Acetabular Revision Constructs.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
32290103
Description
Adequate primary stability of the acetabular revision construct is necessary for long-term implant survival. The difference in primary stability between tantalum and titanium components is unclear. Six composite hemipelvises with an acetabular defect were implanted with a tantalum augment and cup, using cement fixation between cup and augment. Relative motion was measured at cup/bone, cup/augment and bone/augment interfaces at three load levels; the results were compared to the relative motion measured at the same interfaces of a titanium cup/augment construct of identical dimensions, also implanted into composite bone. The implants showed little relative motion at all load levels between the augment and cup. At the bone/augment and bone/cup interfaces the titanium implants showed less relative motion than tantalum at 30% load (p < 0.001), but more relative motion at 50% (p = n.s.) and 100% (p < 0001) load. The load did not have a significant effect at the augment/cup interface (p = 0.086); it did have a significant effect on relative motion of both implant materials at bone/cup and bone/augment interfaces (p < 0.001). All interfaces of both constructs displayed relative motion that should permit osseointegration. Tantalum, however, may provide a greater degree of primary stability at higher loads than titanium. The clinical implication is yet to be seen.
Date of Publication
2020-04-10
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
acetabular revision acetabulum hip arthroplasty hip replacement porous implants primary stability revision hip arthroplasty tantalum titanium
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Bitsch, Rudi G | |
Schonhoff, Mareike | |
Schwarze, Martin | |
Jaeger, Sebastian |
Additional Credits
Series
Materials
Publisher
MDPI
ISSN
1996-1944
Access(Rights)
open.access