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This study presents a method for measuring the low volumetric wear expected in ceramic total disc replacements, which can be used to replace intervertebral discs in the spine, using non-contacting optical methods. Alumina-on-alumina ball-on-disc tests were conducted with test conditions approximating those of cervical (neck region of the spine) total disc replacement wear tests. The samples were then scanned using a three-dimensional non-contacting optical profilometer and the data used to measure surface roughness and develop a method for measuring the wear volume. The method was able to successfully measure wear volumes which would have been undetectable using the gravimetric method. A further advantage of this method is that with one scan the user can measure changes in surface topography, volumetric wear and the location of the wear on the implant surface. This method could also be applied to more severe wear, other types of orthopaedic implants and different materials.

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This page is a summary of: Assessment of non-contacting optical methods to measure wear and surface roughness in ceramic total disc replacements, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Part H Journal of Engineering in Medicine, March 2015, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0954411915577119.
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