Corrosion of titanium-based metals inside the human body has long been considered a potential health risk. There is an ever-increasing number of spine surgeries performed around the world, and a notable 9% to 45% reported reoperation rate due to spine implant (instrumentation) failure. Instrumentation failure in medicine is not a catastrophic breakage. It is when a patient can no longer biologically or physiologically tolerate the implant; thus, the instrumentation has failed in its function. Most spine reoperations (revisions) are due to a continued progression of spine degeneration or other conditions not associated with infection or breakage. This situation allows the study of how orthopedic implant alloys fare in the human body beyond mechanical failures. Optical inspection is a proven method for area quantification of metallic surface corrosion and wear. Spine instrumentation was retrieved during spine revision procedures under an institution-approved research protocol. Patients who never had any metal implants (n = 6) had an adjacent average Ti tissue concentration of 13.12 μg/g, while patients who had instrumentation (n = 20) had a significantly higher average Ti concentration of 113.73 μg/g. On a per-patient basis (n = 33), the average surface area corrosion was 45.14% while the overall average surface area wear was 6.00%. The presence of a clinically diagnosed infection had a slight but insignificant effect on the overall area of corrosion measured with an increase of corrosion of 38.54% for patients with a clinically diagnosed infection compared to 36.96% for patients with no diagnosed infection. While the 3D scanning with colometric measurements used herein cannot quantify pitting corrosion volume, when combined with gravimetric methods, it may yield a more robust understanding of human in vivo mechanisms of spine rod degradation. The presence of corrosion on all rods in comparison to in vitro studies showing minimal corrosion suggests that our understanding of the human in vivo corrosion environment is still extremely limited.
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1 July 2025
Research Article|
June 12 2025
Structured Light Three-Dimensional Scanning Enables Quantification of Surface Corrosion on Retrieved Spine Rods from Revision Patients Available to Purchase
Mitchell Hutchings;
Mitchell Hutchings
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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Michael Rogers;
Michael Rogers
**University of Colorado, Denver. Department of Physics, Campus Box 157, PO Box 173364, Denver, Colorado, 80217-3364.
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Jackson Albright;
Jackson Albright
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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Christopher Kleck;
Christopher Kleck
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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David Ou-Yang;
David Ou-Yang
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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Evalina Burger;
Evalina Burger
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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Nolan Wessell;
Nolan Wessell
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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Vikas Patel;
Vikas Patel
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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Cheryl Ackert-Bicknell
;
Cheryl Ackert-Bicknell
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
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Reed Ayers
Reed Ayers
‡
*University of Colorado, Anschutz. Department of Orthopedics, Academic Office One, 12631 East 17th Avenue 4602, Aurora, Colorado, 80045.
‡Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected].
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‡Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected].
Received:
January 21 2025
Revision Received:
June 12 2025
Accepted:
June 12 2025
Online ISSN: 1938-159X
Print ISSN: 0010-9312
© 2025, AMPP
2025
CORROSION (2025) 81 (7): 707–713.
Article history
Received:
January 21 2025
Revision Received:
June 12 2025
Accepted:
June 12 2025
Citation
Mitchell Hutchings, Michael Rogers, Jackson Albright, Christopher Kleck, David Ou-Yang, Evalina Burger, Nolan Wessell, Vikas Patel, Cheryl Ackert-Bicknell, Reed Ayers; Structured Light Three-Dimensional Scanning Enables Quantification of Surface Corrosion on Retrieved Spine Rods from Revision Patients. CORROSION 1 July 2025; 81 (7): 707–713. https://doi.org/10.5006/4708
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