Zirconia ageing is related to total hip arthroplasty aseptic loosening. A study of 45 retrieved zirconia heads - 10/09/24
Abstract |
Background |
Y-TZP zirconia heads were recalled by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2001 and zirconia alone was no longer used in orthopedics. Tunnel furnace sintering was suspected of producing defects responsible for early material failure. As Zirconia Toughened Alumina (ZTA) matrices are widely used as bearing material and contain zirconia grains, there remains a need to better understand the in vivo ageing process of zirconia and its clinical implications when the material is produced by batch furnace sintering, the validated sintering process.
Questions/objectives |
Is there an association between the ageing of batch furnace produced zirconia and THA revision?
Methods |
45 retrieved femoral heads, batch furnace sintered only, were analyzed. Roughness was measured by 3D profilometry, phase transfer by μRaman spectroscopy.
Clinical data were compared with material characteristics.
Results |
Irrespective of the cause of revision, all heads showed a crystallographic phase transition from tetragonal to monoclinic over 19.5%. A correlation was found between the phase change, roughness increase and aseptic loosening, with a threshold set at 24.5% of monoclinic phase.
Conclusions |
The ageing process of zirconia may lead to aseptic loosening, which, in the absence of contrary evidence, prohibits its use as the sole component of orthopedic materials. ZTA matrices should be clinically monitored, especially in young patients, and better in vitro modelling needs to be performed.
Level of evidence |
IV; Case series.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Zirconia, Batch furnace, Total hip arthroplasty, Retrieval analysis, Roughness, Phase transfer, Aseptic loosening
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