پژوهشگران جوان علوم زیستی- دانشگاه آزاد رودهن (Biology young researcher club- Islamic Azad University, Roudehen Branch.)
زندگی فاصله آمدن و رفتن ماست, شاید آن خنده كه امروز دریغش كردی، آخرین فرصت همراهی ماست.
Bone cements have been used very successfully to anchor artificial joints (hip joints, knee joints, shoulder and elbow joins)
for more than half a century. Artificial joints (referred to as
prostheses) are anchored with bone cement. The bone cement fills the
free space between the prosthesis and the bone
and plays the important role of an elastic zone. This is necessary
because the human hip is acted on by approximately 10-12 times the body
weight and therefore the bone cement must absorb the forces acting on
the hips to ensure that the artificial implant remains in place over
the long term. Bone cement chemically is nothing more than Plexiglas (i.e. polymethyl methacrylate or PMMA). PMMA was used clinically for the first time in the 1940s
in plastic surgery to close gaps in the skull. Comprehensive clinical
tests of the compatibility bone cements with the body were conducted
before their use in surgery. The excellent tissue compatibility of PMMA allowed bone cements to be used for anchorage of head prostheses in the 1950s Today several million procedures of this type are conducted every
year all over the world and more than half of them routinely use bone
cements - and the proportion is increasing. Bone cement is considered a
reliable anchorage material with its ease of use in clinical practice
and particularly because of its proven long survival rate with
cemented-in prostheses. Hip and knee
registers for artificial joint replacements such as those in Sweden and
Norway clearly demonstrate the advantages of cemented-in anchorage. A
similar endoprosthesis is expected to be introduced in Germany in 2009 Bone cements are provided as two-component materials. Bone cements
consist of a powder (i.e., pre-polymerized PMMA and or PMMA or MMA
co-polymer beads and or amorphous powder, radio-opacifer, initiator)
and a liquid (MMA monomer, stabilizer, inhibitor). The two components
are mixed and a free radical polymerization occurs of the monomer when the initiator is mixed with the accelerator. The bone cement viscosity
changes over time from a runny liquid into a dough like state that can
be safely applied and then finally hardens into solid hardened
material. The set time can be tailored to help the physician safely
apply the bone cement into the bone bed to either anchor metal or
plastic prosthetic device to bone or used alone in the spine to treat
osteoporotic compression fractures. During the exothermic
free-radical polymerization process of the cement heats up. This
polymerization heat reaches temperatures of around 42-46°C in the body.
This temperature is below the critical level for the protein
in the body. The cause of the low polymerization temperature in the
body is the relatively thin cement coating, which should not exceed
5 mm, and the temperature dissipation via the large prosthesis surface
and the flow of blood. The individual components of the bone cement are also known in the area of dental filler materials. Acrylate-based
plastics are also used in these applications. While the individual
components are not always perfectly safe as pharmaceutical additives
and active substances per se, as bone cement the individual substances
are either converted or fully enclosed in the cement matrix during the
polymerization phase from the increase in viscosity to curing. From
current knowledge, cured bone cement can now be classified as safe, as
originally demonstrated during the early studies on compatibility with
the body conducted in the 1950s. More recently bone cement has been use in the spine in either vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty procedures What is referred to as bone cement syndrome is described in the
literature. For a long time it was believed that the incompletely
converted monomer released from bone cement was the cause of
circulation reactions and embolism. However, it is now known that this monomer (residual monomer) is metabolized by the respiratory chain and split into carbon dioxide
and water and excreted. Embolisms can always occur during anchorage of
artificial joints when material is inserted into the previously cleared
thigh bone cavity. The result is intramedullary pressure increase, which can be regulated by the anesthetist. If the patient is known to have any allergies to constituents of the
bone cement, according to current knowledge bone cement should not be
used to anchor the prosthesis. Anchorage without cement - cement-free
implant placement - is the alternative. Revision is the replacement of a prosthesis. This means that a
prosthesis previously implanted in the body is removed and replaced by
a new prosthesis. Compared to the initial operation revisions are often
more complex and more difficult, because every revision involves the
loss of healthy bone substance. Revision operations are also more
expensive for a satisfactory result. The most important goal is
therefore to avoid revisions by using a good surgical procedure and
using products with good (long-term) results. Unfortunately, it is not always possible to avoid revisions. There
can also be different reasons for revisions and there is a distinction
between septic or aseptic revision. If it is necessary to replace an
implant without confirmation of an infection - i.e. aseptic - now the
cement is not necessarily removed completely. However, if the implant
has loosened for septic reasons, the cement must be fully removed. In
the current state of knowledge it is easier to remove cement than to
release a well-anchored cement-free prosthesis from the bone site.
Ultimately it is important for the stability of the revised prosthesis
to detect possible loosening of the initial implant early to be able to
retain as much healthy bone as possible. A prosthesis fixed with bone cement offers very high primary
stability combined with fast remobilization of patients. The
cemented-in prosthesis can be fully loaded very soon after the
operation. The necessary rehabilitation is comparatively simple for
patients who have had a cemented-in prosthesis implanted. The joints
can be loaded again very soon after the operation, but the use of
crutches is still required for a reasonable period for safety reasons.Composition
Important information for the use of bone cement
Revisions
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