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A858. ACCELERATED AGING OF NEXT GENERATION CROSS-LINKED MATERIALS: STABILITY CONCERNS?



Abstract

Irradiation cross-linking of UHMWPE has been shown to reduce wear while generating free radicals that oxidise in the presence of oxygen or oxidising species. Various methods have been used to minimise or eliminate the effect of these free radicals including below-melt annealing, remelting, Vitamin E infusion, or the use of other antioxidants. Each method has benefits and drawbacks with respect to wear properties, mechanical properties, and chemical properties. Accelerated aging techniques are used to evaluate the efficacy of new methods in stabilising free radicals in highly cross-linked UHMWPE.

Various procedures have been described for aging standard gamma-air sterilised UHMWPE to produce oxidation levels that represent shelf-aged bearings. An important factor in evaluating and comparing these aging techniques is validating that they reproduce the profile of oxidation (depth and magnitude) seen both in gamma-air, shelfaged polyethylene and in clinical retrievals. Moreover, the resulting oxidation level in the aged UHMWPE should predict the fatigue and/or wear damage seen in retrieved gamma-air inserts and liners.

The present study compared clinically relevant UHMWPE samples aged with ASTM 2003-00, (Method B: 70°C, 5 atm O2, 14 days) and a published lower temperature, lower oxygen-pressure environment (63° C, 3 atm O2, 28 days). Longer aging times (35 to 42 days) were also tested to examine oxidation rate and time to onset of mechanical degradation.

Both published methods result in oxidation of gamma-air and gamma-barrier sterilised polyethylene, but have little effect on remelted or antioxidant stabilised crosslinked polyethylene. These aging protocols, however, did not bring standard polyethylene to the critical oxidation level necessary for the fatigue damage that is seen in retrieved inserts and liners.

Oxidation of gamma-air and gamma-barrier sterilised UHMWPE increases exponentially with time on the shelf or in the two aging environments. Of note, longer aging times (35 to 42 days) that bring standard UHMWPE to sufficiently high oxidation levels for fatigue to occur also cause increased oxidation levels in remelted UHMWPE.

Oxidation increases were the smallest in antioxidant UHMWPE, though still detectable.

While this oxidation is not high enough in remelted material or antioxidant material to cause the fatigue damage seen in gamma-air sterilised UHMWPE, it does raise concerns about the published aging techniques and the long term stability of the new materials in vivo.

Relying on artificial aging techniques that do not adequately challenge even gamma-air polyethylene may conceal unforeseen weaknesses of new materials. Using longer aging times for existing techniques or novel aging approaches may be necessary to effectively evaluate the long term stability of new bearing materials.

Correspondence should be addressed to Diane Przepiorski at ISTA, PO Box 6564, Auburn, CA 95604, USA. Phone: +1 916-454-9884; Fax: +1 916-454-9882; E-mail: ista@pacbell.net