A biomechanical analysis of polyethylene liner cementation into a fixed metal acetabular shell.

J Bone Joint Surg Am

Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Iowa, 2181 Westlawn Building, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.

Published: June 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates ways to enhance the mechanical strength of cemented liners in secure cementless acetabular shells, focusing on variables like shell and liner texturing and cement mantle thickness.
  • Results showed that most failures occurred at the cement-liner interface, highlighting the importance of having a textured shell to improve strength and prevent this failure.
  • A textured liner enhances both torsional and lever-out strength, and the orientation of liner grooves matters; a thicker cement mantle slightly improves torsional strength but not significantly impacts lever-out strength.

Article Abstract

Background: A common clinical scenario encountered by an orthopaedic surgeon is a patient with a secure cementless acetabular shell and a failed polyethylene liner. One treatment option is to cement a new liner into the fixed shell. The purpose of this study was to evaluate technical variables to improve the mechanical strength of such cemented liner constructs.

Methods: The contributions of shell texturing, liner texturing, and cement mantle thickness (between the liner and the shell) were evaluated by comparing torsional strength (among nine groups of constructs) and lever-out strength (among eight groups of constructs).

Results: Failure almost always occurred at the cement-liner interface. The two exceptions (failure at the shell-cement interface) occurred with a polished, untextured shell with no screw-holes. This finding indicates that if a shell has existing texturing (such as holes), further intraoperative scoring of the shell is unnecessary, but some sort of texturing is necessary to avoid construct failure at the shell-cement interface. Textured liners had significantly (a = 0.05) greater torsional and lever-out strength than untextured liners. The greatest construct strength occurred when liner grooves were oriented so as to oppose the applied loading. A 4-mm-thick cement mantle resulted in slightly greater torsional strength than a 2-mm-thick cement mantle, and a 2-mm-thick cement mantle resulted in considerably greater lever-out strength than a 4-mm-thick cement mantle, but these differences were not significant.

Conclusions: When cementing a liner into a well-fixed shell, a surgeon should ensure that both the shell and the liner are textured, as interdigitation of the cement with the shell and the liner is crucial to the mechanical strength of this construct.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2106/00004623-200306000-00019DOI Listing

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