Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P50502 (
Hip
)
7,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is concern that modularity in a total hip arthroplasty system increases serum cobalt and
chromium
ion levels. This study measures the serum cobalt and
chromium
levels in patients with an Oxford Universal
Hip
(Corin, Cirencester, United Kingdom), which has a modular sliding mechanism; patients with a similarly manufactured hip with no sliding mechanism; and a control group. Loosening was excluded clinically and radiologically. Arthroplasty patients had statistically higher levels of serum cobalt and
chromium
than controls, but there was no significant difference in levels between the implanted groups.
...
PMID:Serum levels of cobalt and chromium in a complex modular total hip arthroplasty system. 1237 49
The first generation, metal-on-metal articulation from cobalt-
chromium
-molybdenum alloy produced by Sulzer Ltd. has been in use for 40 years. Former drawbacks concerning geometry, tolerance or metallurgy have been eliminated in the second generation METASUL components used since 1988. These are also free of disadvantages, such as potential fracture, shown by other hard-on-hard bearing couples. For 14 years now METASUL components have not been responsible for any repeat operation due to loosening. Both clinical and experimental outcomes show that yearly wear has been negligible (in the order of microns) and this allows us to expect the metal-on-metal coupling to function for periods not a achieved so far by any other hip prosthesis.
Hip
replacements based on METASUL are better than those involving metal-on-polyethylene or ceramic-on-polyethylene. Up to now the need for repeat operations has not been associated with the MATASUL coupling system. Loosening has always been due to other reasons. It can therefore be expected that, in choosing prosthetic devices and surgical techniques, METASUL hip replacements will play a leading role.
...
PMID:[The history of Metasul]. 1255 97
Hip
simulator tests of femoral balls of cobalt-
chromium
alloy or zirconia against acetabular cups of UHMW polyethylene were run with and without a coolant circulated inside the femoral balls. Without cooling, the wear of polyethylene against zirconia was about 48% lower than with cobalt-
chromium
alloy, but the steady-state temperature of the zirconia ball was higher (55 degrees C vs. 41 degrees C), and there was more precipitation of protein from the serum, which sometimes formed an adherent layer on the surface of the zirconia. Circulating coolant at 1-20 degrees C markedly reduced the bearing temperatures and the protein precipitation. With coolant at 4 degrees C, wear of the polyethylene against cobalt-
chromium
alloy was about 26% lower than against zirconia, but the macroscopic and microscopic appearance of the worn polyethylene surfaces were unlike that typically generated in vivo. With or without coolant, the morphology of the polyethylene wear debris was comparable to that generated in vivo, but the ratio of fibrillar to granular debris was higher at the reduced temperature. These results suggested that circulating coolant at an appropriate temperature could avoid overheating (due to non-stop running of the simulator), preventing excessive protein precipitation while providing wear surfaces and wear debris with morphologies closely comparable to those generated in vivo.
...
PMID:The effect of frictional heating and forced cooling on the serum lubricant and wear of UHMW polyethylene cups against cobalt-chromium and zirconia balls. 1289 77
Highly cross-linked ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) decreases wear at the hip by more than 50% compared with conventional UHMWPE. However, melted highly cross-linked polyethylene may be susceptible to fatigue cracking, and annealed highly cross-linked polyethylene may be susceptible to in vivo oxidation. The second-generation highly cross-linked UHMWPE (X3 HXPE) uses a sequential irradiation and annealing process. It preserves mechanical strength properties and has the highest survivorship in functional fatigue testing. The free radical content is low, and its performance under accelerated aging is the same as virgin UHMWPE.
Hip
simulator studies with 32-mm acetabular components demonstrated 97% wear reduction compared with conventional UHMWPE, and 62% compared with a clinically successful first-generation annealed highly cross-linked polyethylene. The crystallinity, density, and tensile strength of the X3 HXPE material was unchanged by oxidative challenge. X3 HXPE material articulating on cobalt-
chromium
alloy yields a volumetric wear rate very similar to that of metal-on-metal articulations, but eliminates the concerns of metal ion release. Wear particles generated from the X3 HXPE were the same size as those produced from conventional UHMWPE. Preliminary results suggest X3 HXPE can be used for cups larger than 36 mm.
...
PMID:The basis for a second-generation highly cross-linked UHMWPE. 1701 28
We assessed 106 total hip arthroplasties performed with a new metal-on-metal hip system; the patients were monitored for at least 5 years. The average Harris
Hip
Score of the patients was 39.5 points before surgery and 87.8 points at final follow-up evaluation. Radiographically, the acetabular component was stable in 103 hips and possibly unstable in 3 hips. The femoral component was bone ingrown in 97 hips and stable and fibrous in 9. After surgery, 6 hips dislocated. The polyethylene liner dissociated in one patient. No patient exhibited clear signs of loosening, migration, or osteolysis. Distal femoral cortical hypertrophy was seen in 35.8% of the cases. Survival at the mean follow-up point (6.4 years) was 99.1%. There was no significant difference in serum
chromium
concentration between metal-on-metal bearings and polyethylene-on-metal bearings (control subjects). This study found that metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty produces excellent midterm results.
...
PMID:Midterm results of Metasul metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty. 1716 68
High levels of cobalt and
chromium
ions are detected in the blood and urine of patients with metal-on-metal (MoM) hip replacement. These elements are released as a result of wear at the bearing surfaces. Wear rates depend on a multitude of factors, which include the bearing geometry, carbon content, manufacturing processes, lubrication, speed and direction of sliding of the surfaces, pattern of loading, and orientation of the components. In-vivo wear of MoM bearings cannot be reliably measured on X-rays because no distinction can be made between the bearing surfaces.
Hip
simulator studies have shown that wear rates are higher during the initial bedding-in phase and subsequently drop to very low levels. Accordingly, metal ion levels would be expected to decrease with the use of the bearing, measured as implantation time following surgery. However, several clinical studies have found that metal ion levels either gradually rise or fluctuate instead of decreasing to lower levels. Moreover, hip simulator studies predict that large-diameter bearings have lower wear rates than small-diameter bearings. In clinical studies, however, metal levels in patients with large-diameter bearings are unexpectedly higher than those in patients with small-diameter bearings. As a consequence, high cobalt ion levels in patients do not necessarily imply that their MoM bearings produce much wear debris at the time that their levels were measured; it may simply be due to accumulation of wear debris from the preceding time. Exercise-related cobalt rise may overcome this limitation and give a better assessment of the current wear status of a MoM bearing surface than a measure of cobalt levels only.
...
PMID:Can cobalt levels estimate in-vivo wear of metal-on-metal bearings used in hip arthroplasty? 1816 Dec 53
Hip
simulator studies have been carried out extensively to understand and test artificial hip implants in vitro as an efficient alternative to obtaining long-term results in vivo. Recent studies have shown that a ceramic-on-metal material combination lowers the wear by up to 100 times in comparison with a typical metal-on-metal design. The reason for this reduction remains unclear and for this reason this study has undertaken simple tribometer tests to understand the fundamental material loss mechanisms in two material combinations: metal-on-metal and ceramic-on-ceramic. A simple-configuration reciprocating pin-on-plate wear study was performed under open-circuit potential (OCP) and with applied cathodic protection (CP) in a serum solution using two tribological couples: firstly, cobalt-
chromium
(Co-Cr) pins against Co-Cr plates; secondly, Co-Cr pins against alumina (Al2O3) plates. The pin and plate surfaces prior to and after testing were examined by profilometry and scanning electron microscopy. The results showed a marked reduction in wear when CP was applied, indicating that total material degradation under the OCP condition was attributed to corrosion processes. The substitution of the Co-Cr pin with an Al2O3 plate also resulted in a dramatic reduction in wear, probably due to the reduction in the corrosion-wear interactions between the tribological pair.
...
PMID:Understanding the differences between the wear of metal-on-metal and ceramic-on-metal total hip replacements. 1849 98
The most appropriate blood fraction for the measurement of metal ions in patients with metal-on-metal implants is controversial. We compared
chromium
(Cr) and cobalt (Co) ion levels in 29 patients after unilateral hip resurfacing with a size 54-mm femoral Birmingham
Hip
Resurfacing Prosthesis (Smith and Nephew, London, UK). All had well-functioning arthroplasties between 5 and 59 months after implantation. Ion levels were measured in serum, plasma, red cells, and whole blood in each patient. Our results indicate that only very minor amounts of Cr and Co are associated with red blood cells, with most being associated with serum/plasma. Previous studies using corrosion to produce the ion load have showed a predominance of Cr in the red blood cells. They have also shown that the cellular uptake of Cr is an indicator of its valence. This difference in distribution with our results is indirect evidence that the Cr released from wear of this implant is probably in the more benign trivalent form. It also suggests that most of the metal loss from a normally wearing bearing may be from wear rather than corrosion. If blood is to be used to assess rates of wear and systemic ion levels, then serum gives a better reflection of the true levels than red blood cells.
...
PMID:Distribution of chromium and cobalt ions in various blood fractions after resurfacing hip arthroplasty. 1853 45
A cup inclination angle greater than 45 degrees is associated with increased wear rates of metal on polyethylene (MOP) hip replacements. The same maybe true for metal on metal (MOM) hips yet this has not been clearly shown. We measured the acetabular inclination angle from plain radiographs, and whole blood metal ion levels using Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry of 26 patients (mean Harris
Hip
Score 94 and mean time post op of 22 months) with Birmingham
Hip
Resurfacings. We identified a threshold level of 50 degrees cup inclination. Below this threshold, the mean whole blood cobalt and
chromium
were 1.6 ppb and 1.88 ppb respectively; above this threshold, the mean blood cobalt and
chromium
were 4.45 ppb and 4.3 ppb respectively. These differences were significant cobalt (p<0.01) and
chromium
(p=0.01). All patients above the threshold had metal levels greater than any of the patients below the threshold. For 14 patients, who returned one year later for a repeat blood metal level measurement, cobalt and
chromium
levels were very similar. The effect of an acetabular inclination angle of greater than 50 degrees on wear rates of MOM hips, as measured through blood metal ion levels, appears to be similar to that seen with MOP hips. Additionally, our new analytical methods may allow blood metal levels to be used as a realistic biomarker of in vivo wear rate of MOM hips. The implication is that metal levels can be minimised with optimal orientation of the acetabular component.
Hip
Int
PMID:Cup inclination angle of greater than 50 degrees increases whole blood concentrations of cobalt and chromium ions after metal-on-metal hip resurfacing. 1892 77
Concerns now exist about the long-term biological effects of exposure to orthopaedic metal alloys, particularly serum cobalt and
chromium
ions derived from metal-on-metal wear debris in these patients. A pseudotumour mass complicating metal-on-metal resurfacing arthroplasty has been recognized by orthopaedic oncologists and specialist hip units. Pseudotumours may also present with a major nerve palsy. Two cases of femoral neuropathy due to pseudotumour masses caused by metal-on-metal resurfacing arthroplasty are presented. Preoperative neurophysiological studies showed severe and irreversible pathological changes to nerve function with neurohistopathological evidence of complete nerve destruction with a previously unreported pathological appearance. This may represent a previously unrecognized pathological process, possibly 'toxic' in nature, resulting from metal-on-metal wear debris. Prolonged follow-up and detailed clinical assessment of patients after hip resurfacing arthroplasty is advocated with planned and expeditious revision of any patient in whom evidence of femoral neuropathy develops.
Hip
Int
PMID:The treatment of femoral neuropathy due to pseudotumour caused by metal-on-metal resurfacing arthroplasty. 1909 10
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Next >>