The twelve matte and twelve polished surfaces of hemi-arthroplasties were contaminated with Tremendous suffering is associated with infection following total joint arthroplasty. To reduce infection risk, some surgeons use pulse irrigation prior to wound closure. This practice is based on the assumption that pulse irrigation will more effectively remove adherent bacteria. However, there has been no study of the effectiveness of pulse irrigation in clearing bacteria from prosthetic surfaces. The hypothesis of this study is that pulse irrigation is more effective than bulb irrigation in removing intra-operative bacterial contaminants from prosthetic surfaces. The matte and polished surfaces of hemiarthroplasties were studied separately. Each surface was contaminated with Twelve matte and twelve polished surfaces were examined using both irrigation types with corresponding non-irrigation reference values. Results are expressed as the percentage of contaminant bacteria recovered. The matte finish groups showed median values of 1.46 and 2.88x10−2 while the polished finish groups showed 1.49x10−3 and 2.83x10−6 with bulb and pulse irrigation, respectively. The difference between irrigation types is significant ( Pulse irrigation was more effective than bulb irrigation in removing contaminant bacteria from the prosthetic surfaces studied.