Impact of degeneration and material pairings on cartilage friction: Cartilage versus glass

Author:

de Roy Luisa1,Schlickenrieder Klaus2,Rüger Matthias34,Faschingbauer Martin5,Ignatius Anita1,Seitz Andreas M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Orthopedic Research and Biomechanics Ulm University Medical Center Ulm Germany

2. Faculty of Production Engineering and Management Ulm University of Applied Sciences Ulm Germany

3. Department of Pediatric Orthopedics and Traumatology, University Children's Hospital University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

4. Institute for Biomechanics ETH Zurich Zurich Switzerland

5. Department of Orthopedic Surgery RKU, Ulm University Medical Center Ulm Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe association of knee joint osteoarthritis and altered frictional properties of the degenerated cartilage remains ambiguous, because previous in vitro studies did not consider the characteristic loads and velocities during gait. Therefore, the aim of this study was to quantify the friction behavior of degenerated human cartilage under characteristic stance and swing phase conditions. A dynamic pin‐on‐plate tribometer was used to test the tribological systems of cartilage against cartilage and cartilage against glass, both with synthetic synovial fluid as lubricant. Using the International Cartilage Repair Society classification, the cartilage samples were assigned to a mildly or a severely degenerated group before testing. Friction coefficients were calculated under stance and swing phase conditions at the beginning of the test and after 600 s of testing. The most important finding of this study is that cartilage against glass couplings displayed significantly higher friction for the severely degenerated samples compared to the mildly degenerated ones, whereas cartilage against cartilage couplings only indicated slight tendencies under the observed test conditions. Consequently, care should be taken when transferring in vitro findings from cartilage against cartilage couplings to predict the friction behavior in vivo. Therefore, we recommend in vitro tribological testing methods which account for gait‐like loading conditions and to replicate physiological material pairings, particularly in preclinical medical device validation studies.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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