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Bone and Joint Research Laboratory, VA Medical Center, Salt Lake City, UT 84148, USA.
The objective of this investigation was to conduct a postmortem analysis of 8 porous-coated asymmetric tibial components to measure the extent of radiolucencies and bone ingrowth. With the use of radiographic, electron microscope, and histologic analysis techniques, a quantitative postmortem study of 8 consecutively retrieved porous-coated tibial components was conducted. Time in situ averaged 47+/-36 months. The components were secured with 4 pegs and 2 screws. Autograft bone chips were applied to the resected tibia during implantation. Contact radiographs of an average of 8 3-mm sections from each implant revealed that 73%+/-17% of the porous coating had no apparent radiolucencies present between the host bone and porous coating for the series. Backscattered electron imaging showed that the bone ingrowth averaged 6%+/-2%. Histologic analysis was unable to demonstrate any adverse cellular response. The analysis suggested that this asymmetric implant design is stable and biocompatible and has potential for long-term clinical durability.
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