Systematic Review of Incidence of Cold-Welding Phenomenon in Use of Implants for Fracture Fixation and Collation of Removal Techniques
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Literature Search Strategy
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
- Case reports, systematic reviews, retrospective case series and prospective cohort studies specific to the phenomenon of cold welding or cold fusion of metal or titanium implants in humans.
- Reported cold welding or cold fusion in the context of the use of implants for fracture fixation.
- Any paper describing methods of removal of cold-welded or fused implants in adults and children.
- Animal or non-human studies.
- Dental/oral surgery studies.
- Any other metalwork removal issue such as cross-threading, screw head stripping or equipment failure.
- Articles not written in the English language.
2.3. Assimilation of Data
2.4. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Risk of Bias
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
MEDLINE 22 October 2024 | Google Scholar 22 October: 2024 |
---|---|
1. cold-welding/ | 1. “cold-welding”/ |
2. cold welding/ | 2. “cold welding”/ |
3. cold fusion/ | 3. “cold fusion” |
4. 1 or 2 or 3 | 4. 1 or 2 or3 |
5. metalwork removal/ | 5. “metalwork removal”/ |
6. metal implant | 6. “metal implant”/ |
7. titanium implant | 7. “titanium implant” |
8. 5 or 6 or 7 | 8. 5 or 6 or 7 |
9. 4 and 8 | 9. 4 and 8 |
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Paper | Study Design | Number of Subjects in Study | Date of Metalwork Removal (a) | Reason for Metalwork Removal | Number of Incidences of ‘Cold Welding’ (%) | Anatomical Location of Cold-Welded Screws | Type of Plate/Screw | Material of plate/screw | Removal Technique | Complications |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Raja et al. (2012) [13] | Retrospective case series | 37 | 5–588 days (mean 507.8 days) | Painful/palpable implant (n = 17), non-union (n = 9), implant failure (n = 3), avascular necrosis (n = 3), patient demand (n = 2), facilitate other procedure (n = 2), infection (n = 1) | 10 (no total screw number given), 8 cases affected (22.2% of cases) | Proximal tibia (5) Distal tibia (1) Femur (1) Humerus (1) | Locking plates Proximal tibial LISS plate Distal femoral LISS plate Distal tibial LCP plate PHILOS plate | Not stated | Pneumatic high-speed metal cutting burr to cut around screw |
Complication rate 47% (no detail given) All cold-welded screws removed—one still attached to plate |
Gopinathan (2013) [17] | Case report | 1 | 1 year | Skin tenting | 5/6 screws (83.3%) | Clavicle | Locking recon plate | Titanium | Bolt cutter to divide plate into sections, screws removed with plate attached | |
Nortwick et al. (2012) [18] | Case series | 2 | 5 years | Painful implant | 3/10 screws, 1 case affected (30%) | Distal radius screw removal from plates | DVR Volar locking plate | Titanium | High-speed cutter (Midas Rex) used to divide plate into sections, screws removed with plate attached | Incomplete removal of titanium debris from soft tissues |
Bakane et al. (2023) [19] | Retrospective case series | 30 | Not stated | Further trauma or disease (41.7), painful implant (28.6) and patient preference (11.9) | Not stated | Femoral, humerus, clavicle and tibia | LCP—locking plates | Titanium | Carbide drill to drill out the head then extract the shaft Cut the plate around the screw, releasing it. Cut the plate into sections and remove the plate screw in combination anticlockwise | |
Suzuki et al. (2010) [20] | Retrospective case series | 33 | Average 13.2 months | Symptomatic implants (n = 21), non-union (n = 12), ‘loss of fixation’ (n = 2), peri-implant fracture (n = 1) | 37/349 (10.6%) referred to as ‘difficult removals’ requiring cutting of the plate. “Screw stripping” attributed to cold welding in this paper | Femur (n = 21) Tibia (n = 15) | LISS locking plates | Titanium | Carbide/diamond tipped burr, bolt-cutter, to divide plate into sections, screws removed with plate attached. Conical reverse-threaded extraction device to remove screw |
Postoperative infection (n = 2) Peroneal nerve palsy (n = 1) Complication rate reported as 38.9% |
Lehmen et al. (2011) [21] | Case report | 1 | Not stated | Painful implant | 6 screws cold welded—total number of screws not stated | Distal tibial | LISS tibial plate—locking screws | Titanium | First 3 cold welded screw heads removed with carbide burr. Subsequent 3 screws removed with Jacob’s T-handle chuck connected to Synthes star driver shaft, screwdriver placed into screw head, and incarcerated, then turned | Significant metal debris with first technique |
Singh et al. (2015) [22] | Case report | 1 | 3 years | Non-healing ulcer | 4/5 ‘jammed’ screws (80%). Not specifically termed as ‘cold-welded’ | Distal tibia | Distal tibial locking plate | Not stated | Stainless steel metal cutting blades used to cut the screw between the plate and the bone leaving threaded part of screw in situ | Threaded parts of 4 screws left in bone, unable to remove after removal of plate |
Garg et al. (2011) [23] | Retrospective case series | 27 | Mean time 2.3 years | Not listed | None mentioned as ‘cold-welded’ but referred to as ‘jammed’ 15/248 screws (6.04%) | Not specified correctly—numbers do not add up or specify whether cold welded or not | Range of locking plates | Titanium | Cutting plate into sections using saw initially to weaken it, then remaining portion with metal cutter (to avoid bone damage), screw removed with plate attached | Postoperative infection (n = 2), postoperative fracture (n = 1) |
Sreenivasan et al. (2016) [24] | Case Report | 1 | 10 years | Peri-implant fracture | 1 | Proximal femur | Sliding hip screw | Stainless steel | Rotation of plate-screw construct as a whole like a spanner | |
Agrawal et al. (2018) [25] | Case report | 1 | 3 years | Painful implant | 1/6 (16.7%) | Clavicle | Clavicle plate | Not stated | Plate cut and bent then rotated anticlockwise | |
Dimock et al. (2019) [26] | Case report | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | Distal femoral screw removal from plate | Locking plate but not specified | Titanium | Presentation of a new technique—a high-speed carbide burr used to divide plate into sections, screws removed with plate attached then twisting them anticlockwise they coined the ‘helicopter technique’ | |
Kumar et al. (2020) [27] | Expert opinion | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | Not stated | Locking plates but not specified | Not stated | Retrograde—locates the tip of the screw and uses a novel device—T handle with a shaft 2 mm larger than the screw threads to rotate it out of the plate | This is a presentation of a novel device to combat cold welding, no real-life examples given |
Dehghan et al. (2024) [28] | Retrospective case series | 157 | Mean time 467 days | Irritation (66%), infection (20%), failure/revision (10%) | 8/1274 (0.6%) | Upper and lower extremities included | Variety of locking and non-locking plates | Titanium | No technique just observation of cold welding | |
Yanagisawa et al. (2021) [29] | Case report | 1 | 18 months | Loosening of femoral lag screw | 1 | Proximal femur | Trigen Meta-Tan nail | Titanium | Carbide drill to cut lag screw and outer surface of nail |
Paper | Technique Described |
---|---|
Kumar et al. [27] | Novel device—T handle with a shaft 2 mm larger than the screw threads to rotate it out of the plate |
Dimock et al. [26], Suzuki et al. [20] | High-speed carbide drill used to divide plate into sections. Screw/plate mobilized as single unit by turning anticlockwise |
Agrawal et al. [25], Sreenivasan et al. [24], Gopinathan [17] | Plate cut, bent and rotated anticlockwise as one plate/screw construct |
Garg et al. [23] | Plate cut into sections initially with saw, remaining portion cut with metal cutter. Screw/plate construct mobilized as one |
Singh et al. [22] | Stainless steel metal cutting blades cut screw between the plate and the bone leaving threaded part of screw in situ |
Lehmen et al. [21] | Jacob’s T-handle chuck connected to Synthes star driver shaft, screwdriver placed into screw head, incarcerated, then turned |
Bakane et al. [19] | Carbide drill, drill out head, extract shaft. Cut the plate around the screw to release |
Nortwick et al. [18] | High-speed cutter (Midas Rex) divide plate into sections, screws removed with plate attached |
Raja et al. [13] | Pneumatic high-speed metal cutting burr to cut around screw |
Yanagisawa et al. [29] | Carbide drill to cut lag screw and outer surface of nail |
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Shiers-Gelalis, F.; Matthews, H.; Rodham, P.; Giannoudis, V.P.; Giannoudis, P.V. Systematic Review of Incidence of Cold-Welding Phenomenon in Use of Implants for Fracture Fixation and Collation of Removal Techniques. J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14, 4564. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14134564
Shiers-Gelalis F, Matthews H, Rodham P, Giannoudis VP, Giannoudis PV. Systematic Review of Incidence of Cold-Welding Phenomenon in Use of Implants for Fracture Fixation and Collation of Removal Techniques. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2025; 14(13):4564. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14134564
Chicago/Turabian StyleShiers-Gelalis, Fleur, Hannah Matthews, Paul Rodham, Vasileios P. Giannoudis, and Peter V. Giannoudis. 2025. "Systematic Review of Incidence of Cold-Welding Phenomenon in Use of Implants for Fracture Fixation and Collation of Removal Techniques" Journal of Clinical Medicine 14, no. 13: 4564. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14134564
APA StyleShiers-Gelalis, F., Matthews, H., Rodham, P., Giannoudis, V. P., & Giannoudis, P. V. (2025). Systematic Review of Incidence of Cold-Welding Phenomenon in Use of Implants for Fracture Fixation and Collation of Removal Techniques. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 14(13), 4564. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14134564