The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 62, Issue 8 1315-1323, Copyright © 1980 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc
The effect of calcar contact on femoral component micromovement. A mechanical study
KL Markolf, HC Amstutz and DL Hirschowitz
Extra-long-neck, large-stem Trapezoidal-28 femoral components with standard
and modified large flanges were cemented into fresh cadaver femora and
measurements were made of the movement of the prostheses relative to the
bone as load was applied to the head of the prosthesis. In the presence of
collar-calcar femoral contact, the prosthesis subsided very little under
load; displacements for a load of 2000 newtons were less than 0.1
millimeter. Removal of bone and acrylic support beneath the undersurface of
the flange by sawing a thin gap caused no increase in the displacement of
the stem tip in most specimens, but the displacements of the collar
relative to bone for the standard flange design increased by an average of
0.014 millimeter (8 to 28 per cent) under a 2000-newton force when contact
was removed, while the displacements for the prostheses with a modified
large flange that extended to the cortical rim of the resected neck
increased 0.047 to 0.060 millimeter (56 to 432 per cent), indicating
greater support from the collar due to the increased area of contact. An
increase of the stem-flange angle of 22 degrees (from 30 to 52 degrees),
making the flange more horizontal, had no significant effect on the results
for large-flanged units. Prostheses with a standard flange and a one to
two-millimeter Silastic liner between cement and bone subsided as much as
twenty times more than rigidly cemented units. In the presence of the
liner, removal of collar-calcar contact increased the collar displacement
by 29 to 75 per cent, indicating a possibly important function of the
flange for components cemented in soft bone or components that may become
loose or be surrounded by a fibrous membrane. Repacking of the gap between
the collar and bone with acrylic after removal of part of the calcar
femoral reduced subsidence in one specimen, while the acrylic in a second
specimen cracked out during reloading. Based on our laboratory experience
with sixteen specimens, we believe that it would be extremely difficult to
achieve an effective degree of uniform calcar femorale-collar contact at
operation and that one or two localized contact areas would be the more
common situation after total hip replacement.