A dual-mobility (DM) bearing system in total hip arthroplasty features a standard small femoral head that is permanently captured within a much larger, mobile polyethylene liner, which itself articulates freely within a highly polished, fixed metal acetabular shell. What is the fundamental biomechanical advantage of this complex tribological design?

A dual-mobility (DM) bearing system in total hip arthroplasty features a standard small femoral head that is permanently captured within a much larger, mobile polyethylene liner, which itself articulates freely within a highly polished, fixed metal acetabular shell. What is the fundamental biomechanical advantage of this complex tribological design?

A It completely abolishes the generation of nanoscale volumetric polyethylene wear debris.
B It massively increases the effective 'jump distance' required for the head to escape the socket, drastically reducing the overall risk of postoperative dislocation.
C It physically prevents any metallic micro-motion, completely eliminating the risk of trunnionosis.
D It relies entirely on aggressive biological ingrowth directly into the mobile polyethylene liner for ultimate structural fixation.
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