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Dive into the research topics where Joel Weisenburger is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel Weisenburger.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 2012

Does Vitamin E–Stabilized Ultrahigh-Molecular-Weight Polyethylene Address Concerns of Cross-Linked Polyethylene in Total Knee Arthroplasty?

Hani Haider; Joel Weisenburger; Steven M. Kurtz; Clare M. Rimnac; Jordan H. Freedman; David W. Schroeder; Kevin L. Garvin

Concerns about reduced strength, fatigue resistance, and oxidative stability of highly cross-linked and remelted ultrahigh-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) have limited its clinical acceptance for total knee arthroplasty. We hypothesized that a highly cross-linked UHMWPE stabilized with vitamin E would have less oxidation and loss of mechanical properties. We compared the oxidation, in vitro strength, fatigue-crack propagation resistance, and wear of highly cross-linked UHMWPE doped with vitamin E to γ-inert-sterilized direct compression-molded UHMWPE (control). After accelerated aging, the control material showed elevated oxidation, loss of small-punch mechanical properties, and loss of fatigue-crack propagation resistance. In contrast, the vitamin E-stabilized material had minimal changes and exhibited 73% to 86% reduction in wear for both cruciate-retaining and posterior-stabilized total knee arthroplasty designs. Highly cross-linked vitamin E-stabilized UHMWPE performed well in vitro.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2016

Using a surrogate contact pair to evaluate polyethylene wear in prosthetic knee joints.

Anthony P. Sanders; Carly A. Lockard; Joel Weisenburger; Hani Haider; Bart Raeymaekers

With recent improvements to the properties of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) used in joint replacements, prosthetic knee and hip longevity may extend beyond two decades. However, it is difficult and costly to replicate such a long in vivo lifetime using clinically relevant in vitro wear testing approaches such as walking gait joint simulators. We advance a wear test intermediate in complexity between pin-on-disk and knee joint simulator tests. The test uses a surrogate contact pair, consisting of a surrogate femoral and tibial specimen that replicate the contact mechanics of any full-scale knee condyle contact pair. The method is implemented in a standard multi-directional pin-on-disk wear test machine, and we demonstrate its application via a two-million-cycle wear test of three different UHMWPE formulations. Further, we demonstrate the use of digital photography and image processing to accurately quantify fatigue damage based on the reduced transmission of light through a damage area in a UHMWPE specimen. The surrogate contact pairs replicate the knee condyle contact areas within -3% to +12%. The gravimetric wear test results reflect the dose of crosslinking radiation applied to the UHMWPE: 35 kGy yielded a wear rate of 7.4 mg/Mcycles, 55 kGy yielded 1.0 mg/Mcycles, and 75 kGy (applied to a 0.1% vitamin E stabilized UHMWPE) yielded 1.5 mg/Mcycles. A precursor to spalling fatigue is observed and precisely measured in the radiation-sterilized (35 kGy) and aged UHMWPE specimen. The presented techniques can be used to evaluate the high-cycle fatigue performance of arbitrary knee condyle contact pairs under design-specific contact stresses, using existing wear test machines. This makes the techniques more economical and well-suited to standardized comparative testing.


Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine | 2016

Simultaneous measurement of friction and wear in hip simulators

Hani Haider; Joel Weisenburger; Kevin L. Garvin

We propose and have evaluated a method to measure hip friction during wear testing on a popular multi-station hip simulator. A 6-degree-of-freedom load cell underneath the specimen sensed forces and torques during implant wear testing of simulated walking. This included internal–external and adduction–abduction rotations which are often neglected during friction testing on pendulum-type machines. Robust mathematical analysis and data processing provided friction estimates in three simultaneous orthogonal rotations, over extended multi-million cycle wear tests. We tested various bearing couples including metal-on-plastic, ceramic-on-plastic, and metal-on-metal material couples. In one test series, new and intentionally scratched CoCrMo 40-mm-diameter femoral heads were tested against conventional ultrahigh-molecular-weight polyethylene, highly cross-linked, and highly cross-linked with vitamin E versions. The scratching significantly increased friction and doubled the wear of all groups. Before scratching, friction levels for the aforementioned plastic groups were 0.056 ± 0.0060, 0.062 ± 0.0080, and 0.070 ± 0.0045, respectively, but after scratching increased to 0.088 ± 0.018, 0.076 ± 0.0066, and 0.082 ± 0.0049, respectively, all statistically significant increases (p = 0.00059, 0.00005, 0.0115, respectively). In another test series of 44-mm femoral head diameter hips, metal-on-plastic hips with conventional ultrahigh-molecular-weight polyethylene showed the lowest friction at 0.045 ± 0.0085, followed by highly cross-linked with 0.046 ± 0.0035 (not significantly different). In a ceramic-on-plastic design with conventional ultrahigh-molecular-weight polyethylene, higher friction 0.079 ± 0.0070 was measured likely due to that ceramic surface being rougher than usual. Metal-on-metal hips were compared without and with a TiN coating, resulting in 0.049 ± 0.014 and 0.097 ± 0.020 friction factors, respectively (statistically significant, p < 0.001), and the coating wore away on all coated hips eventually. Higher friction mostly correlated with higher wear or damage to femoral heads or implant coatings, except for the highly cross-linked wear resistant ultrahigh-molecular-weight polyethylene which had slightly higher friction, confirming the same finding in other independent studies. This type of friction measurements can help screen for clamping and elevated wear of metal-on-metal and resurfacing total hip replacements, surgical malpositioning, and abraded and otherwise damaged surfaces.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2016

ON-TOOL TRACKING (OTT) SYSTEM FOR NAVIGATED FREEHAND CUTTING (NFC)

Hani Haider; Ibrahim Al-Shawi; O. Andres Barrera; Alvaro Pinto; Karam Shaya; Joel Weisenburger; Kevin L. Garvin


Operative Techniques in Orthopaedics | 2017

Why Coating Technologies for Hip Replacement Systems, and the Importance of Testing Them In Vitro

Hani Haider; Joel Weisenburger; Fereydoon Namavar; Kevin L. Garvin


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2017

WEAR OF UNICOMPARTMENTAL KNEE REPLACEMENTS: STANDARD AND REVERSED MATERIAL COUPLES

Hani Haider; P. Walker; Joel Weisenburger; Kevin L. Garvin


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2017

FRICTION AND WEAR IN PHOSPHOLIPID POLYMER SURFACE-TREATED CERAMIC-ON-POLYETHYLENE TOTAL HIP REPLACEMENTS

Joel Weisenburger; M. Kyomoto; R. Siskey; S. Kurtz; Kevin L. Garvin; Hani Haider


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2017

AN EXCURSION TO IN VITRO HIP WEAR TESTING AND STANDARDS

Hani Haider; Joel Weisenburger; Kevin L. Garvin


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2013

A Novel Method to Produce Scratches on Metallic Orthopaedic Implants Similar to Those Seen on Retrievals

Joel Weisenburger; Kevin L. Garvin; Hani Haider


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2013

Friction Factors of Various Metal on Plastic Hip Replacement Designs With Scratched Femoral Heads Captured During Testing on a Multi-Station Hip Simulator

Joel Weisenburger; Kevin L. Garvin; Hani Haider

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Hani Haider

University College London

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Kevin L. Garvin

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Hani Haider

University College London

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Alvaro Pinto

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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