The early failure and revision of bimodular primary
total hip arthroplasty prostheses requires the identification of the
risk factors for material loss and wear at the taper junctions through
taper wear analysis. Deviations in taper geometries between revised
and pristine modular neck tapers were determined using high resolution
tactile measurements. A new algorithm was developed and validated
to allow the quantitative analysis of material loss, complementing
the standard visual inspection currently used.
The algorithm was applied to a sample of 27 retrievals (in
situ from 2.9 to 38.1 months) of the withdrawn Rejuvenate
modular prosthesis. The mean wear volumes on the flat distal neck
piece taper was 3.35 mm3 (0.55 to 7.57), mainly occurring
in a characteristic pattern in areas with high mechanical loading.
Wear volume tended to increase with time to revision (r² = 0.423,
p = 0.001). Implant and patient specific data (offset, stem size,
patient’s mass, age and body mass index) did not correlate with
the amount of material loss observed (p >
0.078). Bilaterally revised
implants showed higher amounts of combined total material loss and
similar wear patterns on both sides. The consistent wear pattern
found in this study has not been reported previously, suggesting
that the device design and materials are associated with the failure
of this prosthesis.
Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015;97-B:1350–7.