The measurement of creep in ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene: a comparison of conventional versus highly cross-linked polyethylene
- PMID: 15902864
- DOI: 10.1016/j.arth.2004.08.008
The measurement of creep in ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene: a comparison of conventional versus highly cross-linked polyethylene
Abstract
Quantification of creep of highly cross-linked polyethylene would enable separation of creep from wear when evaluating femoral head penetration into polyethylene. We compared creep magnitude of a highly cross-linked versus conventional polyethylene in the laboratory. Twelve acetabular liners of each material were tested, 6 of which had a 32-mm inner diameter (ID) and 6 had 28-mm ID. Creep was measured using coordinate measuring machines during loading at 2 Hz without motion to 4 million cycles. Penetration into 32-mm ID conventional liners reached 97 microm versus 107 microm for highly cross-linked material, not significant. Penetration into 28-mm conventional liners was 132 microm versus 155 microm for highly cross-linked material (P = .017). Ninety percent of the creep had occurred by 2.5 million cycles.