Publication detail
Analysis of Friction in Total Knee Prosthesis during a Standard Gait Cycle
RANUŠA, M. WIMMER, M. FULLAM, S. VRBKA, M. KŘUPKA, I.
English title
Analysis of Friction in Total Knee Prosthesis during a Standard Gait Cycle
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
en
Original abstract
Total knee arthroplasty is on the rise worldwide. Despite its success, revision surgeries are also increasing. According to the American Joint Replacement Registry 2020, 3.3% of revision surgeries are due to wear, and 24.2% are due to mechanical loosening. The combination of shear stresses and wear particles occurring at the bone/implant interface can lead to local osteolysis. Although the shear stresses are partially driven by joint friction, relatively little is known about the evolution of the coefficient of friction (CoF) during a gait cycle in total knee replacement. Here we describe the CoF during a gait cycle and investigate its association with kinematics (slide–roll-ratio), applied load, and relative velocity. The artificial knee was simulated by cobalt–chromium condyle on a flat ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) tibial plateau, lubricated by either water or proteinaceous solution. We found that the CoF is not a constant but fluctuates between the values close to 0 and 0.15. Cross-correlation suggested that this is primarily an effect of the slide–roll ratio and the contact pressure. There was no difference in the CoF between water and proteinaceous solution. Knowledge about the CoF behavior during a gait cycle will help to increase the accuracy of future computational models of total knee replacement.
English abstract
Total knee arthroplasty is on the rise worldwide. Despite its success, revision surgeries are also increasing. According to the American Joint Replacement Registry 2020, 3.3% of revision surgeries are due to wear, and 24.2% are due to mechanical loosening. The combination of shear stresses and wear particles occurring at the bone/implant interface can lead to local osteolysis. Although the shear stresses are partially driven by joint friction, relatively little is known about the evolution of the coefficient of friction (CoF) during a gait cycle in total knee replacement. Here we describe the CoF during a gait cycle and investigate its association with kinematics (slide–roll-ratio), applied load, and relative velocity. The artificial knee was simulated by cobalt–chromium condyle on a flat ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) tibial plateau, lubricated by either water or proteinaceous solution. We found that the CoF is not a constant but fluctuates between the values close to 0 and 0.15. Cross-correlation suggested that this is primarily an effect of the slide–roll ratio and the contact pressure. There was no difference in the CoF between water and proteinaceous solution. Knowledge about the CoF behavior during a gait cycle will help to increase the accuracy of future computational models of total knee replacement.
Keywords in English
lubrication; knee prostheses; friction measurement/testing; gait analysis; UHMWPE
Released
03.04.2021
Publisher
MDPI
Location
4052 Basel, Switzerland
ISSN
2075-4442
Volume
9
Number
4
Pages from–to
1–14
Pages count
14
BIBTEX
@article{BUT172490,
author="Matúš {Ranuša} and Markus A. {Wimmer} and Spencer {Fullam} and Martin {Vrbka} and Ivan {Křupka},
title="Analysis of Friction in Total Knee Prosthesis during a Standard Gait Cycle",
year="2021",
volume="9",
number="4",
month="April",
pages="1--14",
publisher="MDPI",
address="4052 Basel, Switzerland",
issn="2075-4442"
}