Evaluation of an accelerated aging medium for acrylic bone cement based on analysis of nanoindentation measurements on laboratory-prepared and retrieved specimens
Abstract
The thrust of the study was a critical evaluation of the efficacy of a medium (30% v/v H2O2, at 60°C) that has been suggested in a literature report as being suitable for simulating the oxidative aging process, seen in vivo, in the acrylic bone cement mantles of total hip and knee joint replacements. For this purpose, quasi-static and dynamic nanoindentation measurements were used to obtain material properties - elastic modulus, E; hardness, H; and the variation of the storage and loss moduli with the frequency of the applied indenting force - of Palacos®R acrylic bone cement specimens after various periods of immersion (7, 14, 21, and 28 days) in the aging solution, and of specimens prepared from cement mantles retrieved from cemented total hip joint replacements after various times in vivo (0.92-21 years). Also, best-fit relationships were obtained between E and time in the H 2O2 solution (t), H and t, E and in vivo time (T), and H and T. This body of results points to the possibility that the aging solution is effective, although the evidence is not conclusive. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Publication Title
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part B Applied Biomaterials
Recommended Citation
Lewis, G., Xu, J., Dunne, N., Daly, C., & Orr, J. (2007). Evaluation of an accelerated aging medium for acrylic bone cement based on analysis of nanoindentation measurements on laboratory-prepared and retrieved specimens. Journal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part B Applied Biomaterials, 81 (2), 544-550. https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.b.30695