Surface adhered titanium particles on 3D printed off‐the‐shelf acetabular cups

Author:

Nicum Arya1ORCID,Di Laura Anna23,Hothi Harry23ORCID,Henckel Johann2,Schlueter‐Brust Klaus4,Hart Alister125

Affiliation:

1. The Institute of Orthopaedics and Musculoskeletal Science University College London London Stanmore UK

2. The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust Stanmore UK

3. The Department of Mechanical Engineering University College London London Stanmore UK

4. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery St. Franziskus Hospital Köln Köln Germany

5. Cleveland Clinic London London Stanmore UK

Abstract

Abstract3D printing is a rapidly growing manufacturing method of medical implants. In orthopedics, this method enables the construction of complex porous structures with the aim of improved bone fixation. A known by‐product of the 3D printing process is surface adhered particles which are often challenging to remove from the strut surfaces of the porous region. This study investigates the presence of these particles in the porous region of unused 3D printed off‐the‐shelf acetabular cup from five manufacturers. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and image analysis software were used to determine the frequency and diameters of particles present on these implants. Surface adhered particles were found in the porous structures of all implants with some exhibiting more particles at the subsurface level than the surface level. Implants manufactured via Selective Laser Melting (SLM) exhibited a higher number of surface adhered particles per mm2 at both the surface and subsurface levels than those manufactured by Electron Beam Melting (EBM). Additionally, and consistent with previous literature, the particle diameter of the SLM cups was found to be smaller than those on the EBM cups, as well as having a visually lower level of adherence which could raise concern about the likelihood of breakage of these particles in‐vivo.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference17 articles.

1. SandbergJ.Orthopedic 3D printed devices market size to grow by USD 1.35 billion from 2023 to 2028 | North America to account for 40% of market growth—Technavio—Ortho Spine News. December 2023. Accessed January 30 2024https://orthospinenews.com/2023/12/14/orthopedic-3d-printed-devices-market-size-to-grow-by-usd-1-35-billion-from-2023-to-2028-north-america-to-account-for-40-of-market-growth-technavio/

2. Can custom 3D printed implants successfully reconstruct massive acetabular defects? A 3D‐CT assessment

3. Comparative analysis of current 3D printed acetabular titanium implants

4. A review on the state-of-the-art of surface finishing processes and related ISO/ASTM standards for metal additive manufactured components

5. High-Quality Surface Finishing of Industrial Three-Dimensional Metal Additive Manufacturing Using Electrochemical Polishing

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