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Effect of terminal sterilization with gas plasma or gamma radiation on wear of polyethylene liners. The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume. [J Bone Joint Surg Am] Journal article

 
TitleEffect of terminal sterilization with gas plasma or gamma radiation on wear of polyethylene liners.
Author(s)Hopper RH, Young AM, Orishimo KF, Engh CA 
InstitutionAnderson Orthopaedic Research Institute, Alexandria, Virginia 22307, USA. research@aori.org
SourceJ Bone Joint Surg Am 2003 Mar; 85-A(3):464-8.
MeSHComparative Study
Gamma Rays
Gases
Hip Prosthesis
Humans
Polyethylene
Prosthesis Failure
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Retrospective Studies
Sterilization
AbstractBACKGROUND: Although terminal sterilization with gamma radiation in air promotes cross-linking, which improves wear resistance, it also results in free radicals, which can oxidize and degrade the mechanical properties of polyethylene liners used for total hip arthroplasty. For this reason, non-cross-linked polyethylene components have also been sterilized with chemical surface treatments, such as gas plasma. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that conventional polyethylene liners cross-linked by sterilization with gamma radiation in air had better in vivo wear performance than non-cross-linked liners sterilized with gas plasma.
METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the wear rates in a series of hips treated with a Duraloc 100 cup, a 28-mm femoral head, and an Enduron liner that had been sterilized with either gamma radiation (sixty-one hips followed for a mean of 5.2 years) or gas plasma (sixty-three hips followed for a mean of 3.9 years). The irradiated liners had been stored with access to ambient oxygen for an average of 1.0 year (range, 0.05 to 5.72 years) prior to implantation. Multiple linear regression was used to assess the effect of the sterilization method on the wear rate while accounting for the possible influence of other factors, including liner geometry, femoral head material, patient gender, cup abduction angle, and age at surgery.
RESULTS: The polyethylene liners that had been sterilized with gamma radiation in air had a significantly lower wear rate than did the gas-plasma-sterilized liners (0.097 compared with 0.19 mm/yr, p < 0.001). The sterilization method (p < 0.001) and age at surgery (p = 0.001) were the only factors that we analyzed that correlated with the wear rate.
CONCLUSIONS: The in vivo wear of conventional polyethylene liners that had been sterilized with gamma radiation in air was, on the average, 50% less than that of non-cross-linked liners sterilized with gas plasma. LEVEL OF
EVIDENCE: Therapeutic study, Level III-2 (retrospective cohort study). See Instructions to Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
PubMed ID12637432
  
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