AI Article Synopsis

  • Part I of the analysis focuses on the physicochemical characteristics of wear particles from cobalt-chromium (CoCr) metal-on-metal hip implants, comparing well-functioning implants with those that are surgically misaligned.
  • Well-functioning implants generate minimal wear debris (<1mm³ per million cycles) mostly consisting of oxidized chromium nanoparticles (<100nm), while misaligned implants can produce up to 100mm³ of wear debris containing larger particles (up to 1000nm) and higher cobalt content.
  • Future studies need to investigate particle characteristics relevant to human patients to support risk assessments regarding the toxic effects of wear debris from MoM hip implants.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: The objective of Part I of this analysis was to identify the relevant physicochemical characteristics of wear particles from cobalt-chromium alloy (CoCr) metal-on-metal (MoM) hip implant patients and simulator systems. For well-functioning MoM hip implants, the volumetric wear rate is low (<1mm(3) per million cycles or per year) and the majority of the wear debris is composed of oxidized Cr nanoparticles (<100nm) with minimal or no Co content. For implants with surgical malpositioning, the volumetric wear rate is as high as 100mm(3) per million cycles or per year and the size distribution of wear debris can be skewed to larger sizes (up to 1000nm) and contain higher concentrations of Co. In order to obtain data suitable for a risk assessment of wear debris in MoM hip implant patients, future studies need to focus on particle characteristics relevant to those generated in patients or in properly conducted simulator studies.

From The Clinical Editor: Metallic implants are very common in the field of orthopedics. Nonetheless, concerns have been raised about the implications of nano-sized particles generated from the wear of these implants. In this two-part review, the authors first attempted to identify and critically evaluate the relevant physicochemical characteristics of CoCr wear particles from hip implant patients and simulator systems. Then they evaluated in vitro and animal toxicology studies with respect to the physicochemistry and dose-relevance to metal-on-metal implant patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nano.2014.12.005DOI Listing

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