Effect of liner offset and inclination on cement retention strength of metal‐in‐metal acetabular constructs: A biomechanical study

Cementing metallic liners into well‐fixed acetabular shells facilitates utilizing dual‐mobility cups in revision total hip arthroplasty without shell replacement. The current biomechanical study investigated the effect of increasing cemented liner (a) inclination; and (b) offset on the cement retent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of orthopaedic research 2021-04, Vol.39 (4), p.813-820
Hauptverfasser: Emara, Ahmed K., Peterson, Jennifer, Piuzzi, Nicolas S., Klika, Alison, Rajaravivarma, Raga, Higuera‐Rueda, Carlos, Roy, Shammodip
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cementing metallic liners into well‐fixed acetabular shells facilitates utilizing dual‐mobility cups in revision total hip arthroplasty without shell replacement. The current biomechanical study investigated the effect of increasing cemented liner (a) inclination; and (b) offset on the cement retention strength measured as the lever‐out moment at cement failure. Eighteen metallic liner prototypes were cemented into cluster‐hole acetabular shells at variable inclinations (0°, 10°, and 20°) and offsets (0 and 10 mm) relative to the enclosing acetabular shell (6 groups; n = 3 constructs per group). The constructs were connected to a material testing frame, and lever‐out failure moments were tested through an established protocol. Failure occurred at the liner‐cement interface (18/18). There was no correlation between liner inclination and the lever‐out failure moment (r = −0.327, P = .185). Liner offset demonstrated a strong negative correlation to mean lever‐out failure moments (r = −0.788, P 
ISSN:0736-0266
1554-527X
DOI:10.1002/jor.24807