Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 Thanks for all the info - some food for thought. One point about allergies. I was told (by Mr Treacy) that there is no known link between surface allergies and deep allergies. I have a surface metal allergy but he didn't hesitate to resurface my hip. He also told me that numerous m/m THR have been implanted in people with surface allergies. By this time I'd developed a kind of numbing trust in the man so I didn't bother asking for the data! Kathy LBHR dysplasia June 2002 > Like everyone else here, from the moment I heard about resurfacing, I > also began to hear concerns about metal ion (and specifically chromium) > exposure due to wear of the metal-on-metal implant. I thought I'd see > if I could make a rough calculation of how severe this possible exposure > might be, based on publicly available information. This back-of-the > envelope assessment follows. > > First, some background chemistry: > Chromium ions come in two flavors: hexavalent (missing 6 electrons) Chromium, > which is extremely toxic, and trivalent (missing 3 electrons) Chromium, which > is comparatively benign stuff. All the ions shed by the implants are > trivalent chromium, to which the following data apply. > > Wear tests of the Corin Cormet 2000 resurfacing implant show the following > (see www.cormet.com/wear.asp): > > During the initial breakin period, the Cormet implant (the only one for > which I could locate detailed wear simulation data on the net) > experiences an average volumetric wear rate of approximately 2.4 cubic > mm per million cycles (steps), dropping to 0.4 cubic mm/Mcycle > thereafter. > > According to a 1998 paper in the _Journal of Bone and Joint > Surgery_(1), the average hip or knee replacement patient patient puts > 900,000 cycles/year on the hip/knee after surgery. Let's call it 1 > million cycles, just to simplify things later. I should note that the > most active subject in this study did 3.2 million cycles, and the least > active did a mere 70,000, so there's an awful lot of variability in > this data. > > The alloy (F75) used for these implants is 66% Cobalt, 28% Chromium, > and 6% Molybdenum so this wear debris is about 28% Chromium. This isn't > strictly accurate, since the alloy is 28% Chromium by weight, rather > than by volume, but this is close enough for government work. > > The density of chromium is 7140 kg/cubic meter, or 7.14 mg/cu mm. > > So, by my calculation, the amount of chromium being dumped into your > system is, roughly: > > 2.4 cu mm/megacycle * 7.14 mg/ cu mm * 1 megacycle/year = 17.136 mg/year = > 46.95 micrograms/day. > > This drops to 7.83 micrograms/day after the breakin period. > > To put this in perspective, a CentrumĀ® multivitamin tablet contains > 120 micrograms, which happens to be the RDA for chromium. This is nearly > 2.6 times the amount produced by the implant during the breakin phase, > and 15 times the dose delivered by the implant thereafter. This isn't > a fair comparison, because your gut doesn't absorb chromium real > well, but I'll deal with that later. > > One measure of long-term toxicity is the " chronic reference dose " , > which is defined as " an estimate of a daily exposure level for the > human population, including sensitive subpopulations, that is likely to > be without an appreciable risk of deleterious effects during a > lifetime " (http://www.nbc-med.org/SiteContent/glossary.asp). > > According to the toxicity profile for chromium in the Oak Ridge > National Laboratory Risk Assessment Information System > (http://risk.lsd.ornl.gov/tox/profiles/Chromium_ragsa.shtml) the > chronic reference dose for trivalent chromium is 1.5mg/kg-day, which in > my case (~75kg mass) is 112.5 mg/day, or roughly 2400 times the amount > shed by the implant during the breakin period, and 14377 times the > amount produced thereafter. However, according to the same toxicity > profile, only 0.5% of orally ingested trivalent chromium makes it into > your bloodstream. Correcting for this, a Cormet implant should give me > the equivalent of 8.3% of the chronic reference dose during the breakin > period and 1.4% thereafter if every last bit of chromium it produces > dissolves and goes into my bloodstream (this isn't the case, but it's the > absoloute worst scenario). I should note that there's a factor of > 10 uncertainty in the chronic reference dose, and that some people > are allergic to chromium (so these figures don't apply to them - > if you're allergic to metals, you probably shouldn't have any kind > of metal-on-metal joint replacement). > > So, even though there's no long-term data on the safety of resurfacing > (and it's important to remember that there isn't), I'm personally not > real worried about the issue. I'm not going to take a multivitamin > containing chromium after surgery, but I'm not going to worry about it. > > Steve > > (1) Schmalzried, Szuszczewicz, Northfield, Akizuki, el, Belcher, > and Amstutz; " Quantitative Assessment of Walking Activity after > Total Hip or knee Replacement " , JBJS 80:54-9(1998). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.