Abstract
Wear tests were undertaken in which ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) was rubbed against itself. Tests primarily employed a pin-on-plate wear test machine, with distilled water, Ringer solution and dilute bovine serum being used as the lubricants. Loads of 10N and 40N were employed, and some test pins had a rotational motion added. In all cases wear was high, with mean wear factors of up to 91 × 106mm3/Nm being measured, but the addition of rotation reduced the amount of material worn from the test plates. In the presence of bovine serum and under reciprocation only, pin wear was relatively low. With bovine serum as the lubricant, total mean wear factors for the UHMWPE couples were calculated to be in the range of 35 to 58 × 106mm3/Nm. Therefore the pin-on-plate tests showed that the choice of lubricant as well as the motion applied to the test pin had a significant influence on the wear volumes measured. A two-piece UHMWPE ‘prosthesis’ with matching hemispherical faces was fabricated and tested on a finger simulator. Distilled water was used as the lubricant and wear factors were found to be greater for the metacarpal component, 21 × 106mm3/Nm, than the phalangeal component, 3 × 106mm3/Nm, after ten million cycles of testing. This result paralleled the greater wear seen by the plate than by the pin in the pin-on-plate tests under reciprocating motion. (Journal of Applied Biomaterials & Biomechanics 2004; 2: 29–34)
