New Mechanism of Hip Endoprosthesis Damage Caused by High-frequency Electrocautery

ºÚÁÏÍø

Journal of Medical Implants & Surgery
Make the best use of Scientific Research and information from our 700+ peer reviewed, ºÚÁÏÍø Journals that operates with the help of 50,000+ Editorial Board Members and esteemed reviewers and 1000+ Scientific associations in Medical, Clinical, Pharmaceutical, Engineering, Technology and Management Fields.
Meet Inspiring Speakers and Experts at our 3000+ Global Events with over 600+ Conferences, 1200+ Symposiums and 1200+ Workshops on Medical, Pharma, Engineering, Science, Technology and Business
  • Short Communication   
  • J Med Imp Surg, Vol 1(1)

New Mechanism of Hip Endoprosthesis Damage Caused by High-frequency Electrocautery

Christian Konrads*, Hoberg M and Rudert M
Orthopaedic Clinic Koenig-Ludwig-Haus, Center for Musculoskeletal Research, Julius-Maximilians-University Wuerzburg, Wuerzburg, Germany
*Corresponding Author: Dr. Christian Konrads, Orthopaedic Clinic Koenig-Ludwig-Haus, Center for Musculoskeletal Research, Julius-Maximilians-University Wuerzburg, Brettreichstr. 11, 97074 Wuerzburg, Germany, Tel: +49 931 310, Email: christian.konrads@gmail.com

Received: 18-Nov-2015 / Accepted Date: 12-Dec-2015 / Published Date: 19-Dec-2015

78838

Introduction

Primary total hip arthroplasty has become the most successful orthopaedic operation since introduction by the British surgeon, Sir John Charnley, in the 1960s [1,2]. Numbers of hip endoprosthesis revisions are growing worldwide. In revision surgery of joints, highfrequency electrocauterization instruments are used for homeostasis and soft tissue dissection. If there is contact of these instruments with the metal implants, flashover might occur. This can lead to thermal microstructural changes in the material and as a consequence may reduce the fatigue strength of the implant.

Four cases of hip revision surgeries were analyzed [3,4]. In all cases flashovers occurred and secondarily, the non-modular titanium hip endoprosthesis stem broke in the neck section of the prosthesis. The fractures occurred 7 to 142 months (range 135 months) after single revision surgery without revising the stem. In three of four cases an extra long head was used. After breakage during normal walking in all four cases the damaged stem was explanted and changed to a revision stem.

The explants underwent failure analysis. In all four cases no signs of material or product defects of the titanium wrought alloys (ISO 5832-3) were found. The conducted investigations showed that contact between the high-frequency instrument and the anterolateral aspect of the endoprosthesis neck had occurred. A fatigue fracture pattern started in the contact location. Electrothermal implant damage was found in the broken area.

If in hip revision surgery the stem is not to be replaced, contact and flashovers between high-frequency instruments and the metal implant should be avoided. Due to the high relevance of this topic we are going to start a controlled biomechanical laboratory study. Based on the material analysis shortly communicated here, we hypothesize that flashovers from an electrocautery knife to the lateral aspect of a titanium hip endoprosthesis neck can reduce the implant’s fatigue strength.

78840

References

Citation: Christian K, Hoberg M, Rudert M (2015) New Mechanism of Hip Endoprosthesis Damage Caused by Highfrequency Electrocautery. J Med Imp Surg 1:102.

Copyright: © 2015 Christian K, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Post Your Comment Citation
Share This Article
Recommended Conferences

Madrid, Spain

Vancouver, Canada

Vancouver, Canada

Toronto, Canada

Toronto, Canada
Article Usage
  • Total views: 10151
  • [From(publication date): 5-2016 - Nov 25, 2024]
  • Breakdown by view type
  • HTML page views: 9457
  • PDF downloads: 694
Share This Article
International Conferences 2024-25
 
Meet Inspiring Speakers and Experts at our 3000+ Global

Conferences by Country

Medical & Clinical Conferences

Conferences By Subject

Top