Ankle fusion (AF), a durable intervention for ankle arthritis, has been the management of choice but restricts mobility. Recently, total ankle replacement (TAR) has been offered to patients looking to maintain mobility. The aim was to compare the biomechanics of AF and TAR while walking on inverted and everted slopes which create a greater demand for complex foot mobility than level walking. A ten-camera motion detection setup captured trials as patients walked in both directions over a 5⁰ lateral slope with embedded force plates. Moments (Nm/Kg) across the knee and ankle were exported from Visual 3D in the sagittal and frontal plane, and data were reported as means with 95% confidence intervals. 15 patients were recruited (6 TAR, 9 AF). The median age, follow-up and BMI was 67 years, 4 years and 35.8 kg/m² in AF, and 73 years, 7 years and 28.1 kg/m² in TAR, respectively. During inverted slope walking (4 TAR, 7 AF), abduction moments across (i) the knee: TAR 0.38 (0.37–0.39) vs AF 0.37 (0.27–0.52) and (ii) the ankle: TAR 0.20 (0.13–0.27) vs AF 0.25 (0.18–0.32), and extension moments across (i) the knee: TAR 0.68 (0.38–0.97) vs AF 0.85 (0.69–1.01) and (ii) the ankle: TAR 1.46 (1.30–1.62) vs AF 1.30 (1.08–1.52). During everted walking (5 TAR, 7 AF), abduction moments across (i) the knee: TAR 0.41 (0.30–0.52) vs AF 0.46 (0.27–0.66) and (ii) the ankle: TAR 0.24 (0.11–0.38) vs AF 0.26 (0.18–0.33), and extension moments across (i) the knee: TAR 0.76 (0.54–0.99) vs AF 0.93 (0.72–1.14) and (ii) the ankle: TAR 1.39 (1.19–1.59) vs AF 1.26 (1.04–1.48). There were no differences in abduction moments during inverted or everted slope walking. However, patients with AF had increased extension moments across the knee, particularly on inverted slopes, suggesting that AF creates a greater demand for knee compensation than TAR.
The aim of this work was to compare the different techniques and the different fluid permeability of the tissue following each technique through assessing the flow of radiopaque contrast agent using μCT image analysis and 3D modelling. Donated human tali specimens (n=12) were prepared through creating a 10mm diameter chondral defect in three different regions of each talus. Each region then underwent one of three surgical techniques: 1) Fine wire drilling, 2) Nanofracture or 3) Microfracture, equidistant sites in each defect to ensure even distribution. Each region then had an addition of 0.1 ml radiopaque contrast agent (Omnipaque™ 300), imaged using a clinical μCT scanner (SCANCO Medical AG, 73.6 μm resolution). Each μCT scan was segmented using Slicer 3D software (The Slicer Community, 2023 3D Slicer (5.2.2)). The segmentation package was used to segment the bone and contrast agent regions in each different surgical site of each sample. Each defect site was created into a cylinder and the ratio of segmented pixels of contrast agent against bone.Abstract
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Methods
The fidelity of a 3D model created using image segmentation must be precisely quantified and evaluated for the model to be trusted for use in subsequent biomechanical studies such as finite element analysis. The bones within the ankle joint vary significantly in size and shape. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the accuracy and reliability of a segmented bone geometry is independent of the particular bone being measured. Computed tomography (CT) scan data (slice thickness 1 mm, pixel size 808±7 µm) from three anonymous patients was used for the development of the ankle geometries (consisting of the tibia, fibula, talus, calcaneus, and navicular bones) using Simpleware Scan IP software (Synopsys, Exeter, UK). Each CT scan was segmented 4 times by an inexperienced undergraduate, resulting in a total of 12 geometry assemblies. An experienced researcher segmented each scan once, and this was used as the ‘gold standard’ to quantify the accuracy. The solid bone geometries were imported into CAD software (Inventor 2023, Autodesk, CA, USA) for measurement of the surface area and volume of each bone, and the distances between bones (tibia to talus, talus to navicular, talus to calcaneus, and tibia to fibula) were carried out. The intra-class coefficient (ICC) was used to assess intra-observer reliability. Bland Altman plots were employed as a statistical measure for criteria validity (accuracy) [1].Abstract
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Methods
The syndesmosis joint, located between the tibia and fibula, is critical to maintaining the stability and function of the ankle joint. Damage to the ligaments that support this joint can lead to ankle instability, chronic pain, and a range of other debilitating conditions. Understanding the kinematics of a healthy joint is critical to better quantify the effects of instability and pathology. However, measuring this movement is challenging due to the anatomical structure of the syndesmosis joint. Biplane Video Xray (BVX) combined with Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) allows direct measurement of the bones but the accuracy of this technique is unknown. The primary objective is to quantify this accuracy for measuring tibia and fibula bone poses by comparing with a gold standard implanted bead method. Written informed consent was given by one participant who had five tantalum beads implanted into their distal tibia and three into their distal fibula from a previous study. Three-dimensional (3D) models of the tibia and fibula were segmented (Simpleware Scan IP, Synopsis) from an MRI scan (Magnetom 3T Prisma, Siemens). The beads were segmented from a previous CT and co-registered with the MRI bone models to calculate their positions. BVX (125 FPS, 1.25ms pulse width) was recorded whilst the participant performed level gait across a raised platform. The beads were tracked, and the bone position of the tibia and fibula were calculated at each frame (DSX Suite, C-Motion Inc.). The beads were digitally removed from the X-rays (MATLAB, MathWorks) allowing for blinded image-registration of the MRI models to the radiographs. The mean difference and standard deviation (STD) between bead-generated and image-registered bone poses were calculated for all degrees of freedom (DOF) for both bones.Abstract
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This abstract provides an update on the Open Ankle Models being developed at the University of Bath. The goal of this project is to create three fully open-source finite element (FE) ankle models, including bones, ligaments, and cartilages, appropriate musculoskeletal loading and boundary conditions, and heterogeneous material property distribution for a standardised representation of ankle biomechanics and pre-clinical ankle joint analysis. A computed tomography (CT) scan data (pixel size of 0.815 mm, and slice thickness of 1 mm) was used to develop the 3D geometry of the bones (tibia, talus, calcaneus, fibula, and navicular). Each bone was given the properties of a heterogeneous elastic material based on the CT greyscale. The density values for each bone element were calculated using a linear empirical relation, ρ= 0.0405 + (0.000918) HU and then power law equations were utilised to get the Young's Modulus value for each bone element [1]. At the bone junction, a thickness of cartilage ranging from 0.5–1 mm, and was modelled as a linear material (E=10 MPa, ν=0.4 [2]). All ligament insertions and positions were represented by four parallel spring elements, and the ligament stiffness and material attributes were applied in accordance with the published literature [2]. The ankle model was subjected to static loading (balance standing position). Four noded tetrahedral elements were used for the discretization of bones and cartilages. All degrees of freedom were restricted at the proximal ends of the tibia and fibula. The ground reaction forces were applied at the underneath of the calcaneus bone. The interaction between the cartilages and bones was modelled using an augmented contact algorithm with a sliding elastic contact between each cartilage. A tied elastic contact was used between the cartilages and the bone. FEbio 2.1.0 (University of Utah, USA) was used to construct the open-source ankle model.Abstract
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Methods
Ligament integrity is directly associated with ankle stability. Nearly 40% of ankle sprains result in chronic ankle instability, affecting biomechanics and potentially causing osteoarthritis. Ligament replacement could restore stability and avoid this degenerative pathway, but a greater understanding of ankle ligament behaviour is required. Additionally, autograft or allograft use is limited by donor-site morbidity and inflammatory responses respectively. Decellularised porcine grafts could address this, by removing cellular material to prevent acute immune responses, while preserving mechanical properties. This project will characterise commonly injured ankle ligaments and damage mechanisms, identify ligament reconstruction requirements, and investigate the potential of decellularised porcine grafts as a replacement material. Several porcine tendons were evaluated to identify suitable candidates for decellularisation. The viscoelastic properties of native tissues were assessed using dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), followed by ramp to ‘sub-rupture’ at 1% strain/s, and further DMA. Multiple samples (n=5) were taken along the graft to assess variation along the tendon. When identifying suitable porcine tendons, a lack of literature on human ankle ligaments was identified. Inconsistencies in measurement methods and properties reported makes comparison between studies difficult. Preliminary testing on porcine tendons suggested there is little variation in viscoelastic properties along the length of tendon. Testing also suggested strain rates of 1%/s sub-rupture was not large enough to affect viscoelastic properties (no changes in storage or loss moduli or tanẟ). Further testing is underway to improve upon low initial sample numbers and confirm these results, with varying strain rates to identify suitable sub-rupture sprain conditions. This work highlights need for new data on human ankle ligaments to address knowledge gaps and identify suitable replacement materials. Future work will generate this data and decellularise porcine tendons of similar dimensions. Collagen damage will be investigated using histology and lightsheet microscopy, and viscoelastic changes through DMA.
Decellularised porcine superflexor tendon (pSFT) has been demonstrated to be a suitable scaffold for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction[1]. While the role of collagen in tendons is well known, the mechanical role of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) is less clear and may be altered by the decellularisation process. To determine the effects of decellularisation on pSFT GAG content and mechanical function and to investigate the consequences of GAG loss in tensile and compressive loading. pSFTs were decellularised following previous techniques [2]. For GAG removal, native pSFTs were treated with chondroitinase ABC (ChABC; 0.1U/mL, 72h). Cell and GAG removal was validated using histology and quantitative assays. Native, decellularised and ChABC treated groups (n=6) were biomechanically characterised. In tension, specimens underwent stress relaxation and strength testing using previous protocols [1]. Stress relaxation data was fitted to a modified Maxwell-Weichert model to determine time-dependent (E1 & E2) and time-independent moduli (E0). The toe and linear region moduli (Etoe, Elinear), in addition to tensile strength (UTS) and failure strain were determined from strength testing. In compression, specimens underwent confined loading conditions (ramp at 10 s-1 to 10% strain and hold). The aggregate modulus (HA) and zero-strain permeability (k0) were determined using previous techniques [3]. Data was analysed by one-way ANOVA with Tukey post-hoc test to determine significant differences between test groups (p<0.05). Quantitative assays showed no GAG reduction post-decellularisation, but a significant reduction after ChABC treatment. HA was only significantly reduced in the ChABC group. k0 was significantly higher for the ChABC group compared to decellularised. E0 was significantly reduced in the decellularised group compared to native and ChABC groups, while E1 and E2 were not different between groups. Etoe, Elinear, UTS and failure strain were not different between groups. Decellularisation does not affect GAG content or impair mechanical function in pSFT. GAG loss adversely affects pSFT compressive properties, revealing major mechanical contribution under compression, but no significant role under tension.
To be able to assess the biomechanical and functional effects of ankle injury and disease it is necessary to characterise healthy ankle kinematics. Due to the anatomical complexity of the ankle, it is difficult to accurately measure the Tibiotalar and Subtalar joint angles using traditional marker-based motion capture techniques. Biplane Video X-ray (BVX) is an imaging technique that allows direct measurement of individual bones using high-speed, dynamic X-rays. The objective is to develop an in-vivo protocol for the hindfoot looking at the tibiotalar and subtalar joint during different activities of living. A bespoke raised walkway was manufactured to position the foot and ankle inside the field of view of the BVX system. Three healthy volunteers performed three gait and step-down trials while capturing Biplane Video X-Ray (125Hz, 1.25ms, 80kVp and 160 mA) and underwent MR imaging (Magnetom 3T Prisma, Siemens) which were manually segmented into 3D bone models (Simpleware Scan IP, Synopsis). Bone position and orientation for the Talus, Calcaneus and Tibia were calculated by manual matching of 3D Bone models to X-Rays (DSX Suite, C-Motion, Inc.). Kinematics were calculated using MATLAB (MathWorks, Inc. USA). Pilot results showed that for the subtalar joint there was greater range of motion (ROM) for Inversion and Dorsiflexion angles during stance phase of gait and reduced ROM for Internal Rotation compared with step down. For the tibiotalar joint, Gait had greater inversion and internal rotation ROM and reduced dorsiflexion ROM when compared with step down. The developed protocol successfully calculated the in-vivo kinematics of the tibiotalar and subtalar joints for different dynamic activities of daily living. These pilot results show the different kinematic profiles between two different activities of daily living. Future work will investigate translation kinematics of the two joints to fully characterise healthy kinematics.
This study aims to assess the changes in mechanical behaviour over time in ‘haemarthritic’ articular cartilage compared to ‘healthy’ articular cartilage. Pin-on-plate and indentation tests were used to determine the coefficient of friction (COF) and deformation of ‘healthy’ and ‘haemarthritic articular cartilage. Osteochondral pins (8 mm) were extracted from porcine tali and immersed in exposure fluid for two hours prior to test. Pins were articulated against a larger bovine femoral plate for 3600 seconds under a load of 50 N. Osteochondral pins (8 mm) were loaded during indentation testing for 3600 seconds under a load of 0.25 N. To mimic the effect of a joint bleed in vitro; serum, whole blood and 50% v/v were used as exposure and lubricant fluids. COF and deformation were expressed as mean (n=3) and statistically analysed using a one-way ANOVA and post-hoc Tukey test (p>0.05). The serum condition yielded a COF of 0.0428 ± 0.02 with 0.08mm ± 0.04 deformation. The 50% v/v condition produced a higher COF of 0.0485 ± 0.02 and 0.21mm ± 0.04 deformation. The lowest COF and deformation were produced by the whole blood condition (0.0292 ± 0.02 and 0.06mm ± 0.006 respectively). Statistical analysis indicated no significant difference across the friction test conditions but a significant difference across all indentation test conditions (ANOVA, p>0.05). Combination of creep deformation and wear was observed on the articular surface up to 24 hours post-test in 50% v/v and whole blood conditions. The average haemophilia patient can experience multiple joint bleeds per year of which this study demonstrates the effect of just one joint bleed. This study has provided evidence of potential reversible and irreversible mechanical changes to articular cartilage surface during a joint bleed.
Decellularised porcine superflexor tendon (pSFT) provides an off-the-shelf, cost-efficient option for ACL reconstruction (ACLR). During decellularisation, phosphate buffered saline (PBS) is used for washing out cytotoxic solutes and reagents, maintaining tissue hydration. It has been shown to increase water content in tendon, swelling the tissue reducing mechanical properties. End stage PBS washes in the standard protocol were substituted with alternative solutions to study tissue swelling and its impact on the mechanical behaviour and matrix composition of pSFTs. 25%, 100% Ringers and physiological saline test groups were used (n=6 for all groups). pSFTs were subject to tensile and confined compression testing. Relative hydroxyproline (HYP), glycosaminoglycan (GAG) and denatured collagen content (DNC) were quantified. Modified decellularised tendon groups were compared to tendons decellularised using the standard protocol and native tendons. Specimen dimensions reduced (p=0.004) post-decellularisation only in 25% Ringers group. In all other modified groups, less swelling was apparent but not statistically different from standard group. Only 25% Ringers group had higher linear modulus (p=0.0035) and UTS (p=0.013) compared to standard group. All decellularised groups properties were reduced compared to native pSFTs. Stress relaxation properties showed a significant reduction in decellularised groups compared to native. Compression testing showed no significant differences in peak stress for modified decellularised groups compared to native. A reduction (p=0.036) was observed in standard group. Quantification of GAGs and DNC showed no significant differences between groups. HYP content was higher (p<0.0001) for saline group. A significant reduction in tissue swelling could be related to improved mechanical properties of decellularised pSFTs. Alternative solutions in end stage washes had no significant effect on quantities of matrix components, but altered structure/function could explain the differences in tensile and compressive behaviour, and should be further studied. In all decellularised groups, pSFTs retained suitable mechanical properties for ACLR.Abstract
The aim of this study was to develop an open-source finite element model of the ankle for identification of the best clinical treatment to restore stability to the ankle after injury. The ankle geometry was defined from the Visible Human Project Female CT dataset available from the National Library of Medicine, and segmented using Dragonfly software (Object Research Systems, 2020). The finite element model was created with FEBio (University of Utah, 2021) using the dynamic nonlinear implicit solver. Linear isotropic material properties were assigned to the bones (E=7300MPa, ν=0.3, ρ=1730kg/m3) and cartilage (E=10MPa, ν=0.4, ρ=1100kg/m3). Spring elements were used to represent the ligaments and material properties were taken from Mondal et al. [1]. Lagrangian contact was defined between the cartilaginous surfaces with μ=0.003. A standing load case was modelled, assuming even distribution of load between the feet. A reaction force of 344.3N was applied to the base of the foot, a muscle force of 252.2N, and the proximal ends of the tibia and fibula were fully constrained.Abstract
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Methods
Flattening of the talar dome is observed clinically in haemarthropathy as structural and functional changes advance but has not been quantified yet. In order to confirm clinical observation, and assess the degree of change, morphological measurements were derived from MR images. Four measurements were taken, using ImageJ (1.52v), from sagittal MRI projections at three locations – medial, lateral and central: Trochlear Tali Arc Length (TaAL), Talar Height (TaH), Trochlear Tali Length (TaL), and Trochlear Tali Radius (TaR). These measurements were used to generate three ratios of interest: TaR:TaAL, TaAL:TaL, and TaL:TaH. With the hypothesis of a flattening of the talar dome with haemarthropathy, it was expected that TaR:TaAL and TaL:TaH should be greater for haemophilic ankles, and TaAL:TaL should be smaller. A total of 126 MR images (ethics: MEEC 18–022) were included to assess the difference in those ratios between non-diseased ankles (33 images from 11 volunteers) and haemophilic ankles (93 images from 8 patients’ ankles). Non-diseased control measurements were compared to literature to assess the capacity of doing measurements on MRI instead of radiographs or CT.Abstract
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METHODS
Over 1% of the global population suffers with ankle osteoarthritis (OA), yet there is limited knowledge on the changes to subchondral bone with OA. In other joints, it has been shown that bone becomes osteosclerotic, with fewer, thicker trabeculae that become hypomineralised, causing an increased apparent bone volume fraction (BV/TV). Microstructural alterations reduce overall joint strength, which may impact the success of late-stage surgical interventions, such as total ankle arthroplasty (TAA). Previous ankle studies have evaluated changes to cartilage, bone plate and bone morphology with OA, hence this study aimed to characterise changes to trabecular architecture. Three ankle joints were isolated from non-diseased cadaveric feet (three males: 43, 50 and 57 years, MEEC 18-027). Cylindrical subchondral bone specimens (N=6, 6.5 mm Ø) were extracted from the tibial plafond. Osteoarthritic bone samples (N=6, distal tibia) were sourced from local patients (three males: 65, 58 and 68 years, NREC 07/Q1205/27) undergoing TAA surgery. Specimens were imaged using µCT at a 16 µm isotropic resolution (µCT-100 ScanCo Medical). Virtual cores of bone (6.5 mm Ø) were extracted from the image data of the osteoarthritic specimens and trimmed to a height of 4 mm. BoneJ was used to evaluate key morphological indices: BV/TV; anisotropy (DA); trabecular thickness (Tb.Th); trabecular density (Conn.D) and ellipsoid factor (EF) which characterises rod/plate geometry. Differences between the two groups of specimens were evaluated using a t-test with Bonferroni correction.Abstract
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Implant loosening remains a common cause of total ankle replacement (TAR) revision, and has been associated with wear-mediated osteolysis. Limited pre-clinical studies for TARs have been reported and the variety of experiment settings make it difficult to compare wear rates. Factors such as simulator control mechanism; whether pneumatic or electromechanical, may influence the integrity of the simulator outputs with respect to input profiles. This study compares the wear of a TAR, tested in electromechanical and pneumatic experimental simulators under identical input conditions. Twelve medium BOX® (MatOrtho Ltd) TARs (n=6 for each simulator) were tested in an electromechanical and pneumatic knee simulator (Simulation Solutions, UK) for 3 million cycles (Mc). Standard ‘Leeds’ displacement-controlled inputs were used. Kinematic performance was investigated by comparing the output profiles against the maximum demanded input values. The lubricant used was 25% new-born calf serum and wear was determined gravimetrically.Abstract
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Ankle arthritis is estimated to affect approximately 72 million people worldwide. Treatment options include fusion and total ankle replacement (TAR). Clinical performance of TAR is not as successful as other joint replacement and failure is poorly understood. Finite element analysis offers a method to assess the strain in bone implanted with a TAR. Higher strain has been associated with microfracture and alters the bone-implant interface. The aim of this study was to explore the influence of implant fixation on strain within the tibia when implanted with a TAR through subject-specific models. Five cadaveric ankles were scanned using a Scanco Xtreme CT. The Tibia and Talus were segmented from each scan and virtually implanted with a Zenith TAR (Corin, UK) according to published surgical technique. Patient specific models were created and run at five different positions of the gait cycle corresponding to peak load and flexion values identified from literature. Bone material properties were derived from CT greyscale values and all parts were meshed with linear tetrahedral elements. The implant-bone interface was adjusted to fully-fixed or frictionless contact, representing different levels of fixation post-surgery. Strain distributions around the tibial bone fixation were measured.Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Skeletal kinematics are traditionally measured by motion analysis methods such as optical motion capture (OMC). While easy to carry out and clinically relevant for certain applications, it is not suitable for analysing the ankle joint due to its anatomical complexity. A greater understanding of the function of healthy ankle joints could lead to an improvement in the success of ankle-replacement surgeries. Biplane video X-ray (BVX) is a technique that allows direct measurement of individual bones using highspeed, dynamic X-Rays. To develop a protocol to quantify in-vivo foot and ankle kinematics using a bespoke High-speed Dynamic Biplane X-ray system combined with OMC. Two healthy volunteers performed five level walks and step-down trials while simultaneous capturing BVX and synchronised OMC. participants undertook MR imaging (Magnetom 3T Prisma, Siemens) which was manually segmented into 3D bone models (Simpleware Scan IP, Synopsis). Bone position and orientation for the Talus, Tibia and Calcaneus were calculated by manual matching of 3D Bone models to X-Rays (DSX Suite, C-Motion, Inc.). OMC markers were tracked (QTM, Qualisys) and processed using Visual 3D (C-motion, Inc.).Abstract
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Total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) is an alternative to ankle arthrodesis, replacing the degenerated joint with a mechanical motion-preserving alternative. Implant loosening remains a primary cause of TAA revision, and has been associated with wear-mediated osteolysis. Differing implant designs have a major influence on the wear performance of joint replacements. Providing a range of implant sizes allows surgeons a greater intra-operative choice for varying patient anatomy and potential to minimise wear. Minimal pre-clinical testing exists in the literature that investigates the effect of implant size on the wear behaviour. The aim of this study therefore was to investigate the effect of two different implant sizes on the wear performance of a TAA. Six ‘medium’ and six ‘extra small’ BOX® (MatOrtho Ltd, UK) TAA implants, of the same conceptual design and polyethylene insert thickness, were tested in a modified 6 station pneumatic knee simulator. 5 million cycles (Mc) of wear simulation were completed for each implant size, under kinematics aiming to replicate an ankle gait cycle (Figure 1) [1]. The simulator used had six degrees of freedom, of which four were controlled. The maximum axial load was 3150N, equivalent to 4.5 times body weight of a 70kg individual. The flexion profile ranged from −15° plantarflexion to 15° dorsiflexion. Rotation about the tibial component ranged from −2.3° of internal rotation to 8° external rotation, and anterior/posterior (AP) displacement ranged from 3.1 mm anterior to −0.9 mm posterior displacement. The lubricant used was 25% bovine serum supplemented with 0.04% sodium azide to prevent bacterial degradation. The wear of the TAA polyethylene inserts were determined gravimetrically after each Mc, with unloaded soak controls used to compensate for the uptake of moisture by the polyethylene.Background
Materials & Methods
Osteoarthritis is a debilitating disease affecting over 1.7 million people in the UK annually. Total ankle replacements are an increasingly sought option for repairing a late stage arthritic ankle, but result in the removal of significant portions of bone regardless of tissue quality. Hence, the mapping of bone quality would allow the use of targeted treatments at earlier stages of the disease. This study aims to develop characterisation methodologies using porcine tissue to investigate the mechanical properties of subchondral bone in the ankle. N=11 talar bone plugs (6mm diameter) were extracted from porcine ankles and embedded into Delrin endcaps using a thin layer of PMMA cement. These were scanned under micro-CT (16 microns) and subjected to quasi-static uniaxial compression to determine apparent stiffness for each specimen. Specimen-specific continuum FE models were developed, with material properties derived from the greyscale value of the underlying image. A python-based least squares regression (Opti4Abq, N=6) was used to minimise the difference between experimental and model stiffness values, to determine the coefficient linking greyscale and mechanical properties. Apparent stiffness, elastic modulus and compressive strength were compared to BV/TV, which was derived using BoneJ (a bone image plugin for the NIH ImageJ). The results show positive correlations between BV/TV and compressive strength, stiffness and Young's modulus. Average BV/TV across all samples was 0.45. Average experimental and computational stiffness were 986N/mm and 891 N/mm respectively. A 21.8% RMS error was found using the validation set (N=5), which was of similar order to the calibration set. Some specimens saw issues with misalignment of the specimen faces and the loading platens, likely causing overestimation of mechanical properties. This study has developed methods that can be translated for use with human ankle bone and will lead to the development of an accurate means of mapping arthritic bone in the ankle.
Total ankle replacement (TAR) is a substitute to ankle fusion, replacing the degenerated joint with a mechanical motion-conserving alternative. Compared with hip and knee replacements, TARs remain to be implanted in much smaller numbers, due to the surgical complexity and low mid-to-long term survival rates. TAR manufacturers have recently explored the use of varying implant sizes to improve TAR performance. This would allow surgeons a wider scope for implanting devices for varying patient demographics. Minimal pre-clinical testing has been demonstrated to date, while existing wear simulation standards lack definition. Clinical failure of TARs and limited research into wear testing defined a need for further investigation into the wear performance of TARs to understand the effects of the kinematics on varying implant sizes. Six medium and six extra small BOX® (MatOrtho) TARs will be tested in a modified knee simulator for 5 million cycles (Mc). The combinations of simulator inputs that mimic natural gait conditions were extracted from ankle kinematic profiles defined in previous literature. The peak axial load will be 3.15 kN, which is equivalent to 4.5 times body weight of a 70kg individual. The flexion profile ranges from 15° plantarflexion to 15° dorsiflexion. Rotation about the tibial component will range from −2.3° of internal rotation to 8° external rotation, while the anterior/posterior displacement will be 7mm anterior to −2mm posterior throughout the gait cycle. The components will be rotated through the simulation stations every Mc to account for inter-station variability. Gravimetric measurements of polyethylene wear will be taken at every Mc stage. A contact profilometer will also be used to measure average surface roughness of each articulating surface pre-and-post simulation. The development of such methods will be crucial in the ongoing improvement of TARs, and in enhancing clinical functionality, through understanding the envelope of TAR performance.
Total ankle replacement (TAR) is less successful than other joint replacements with a 77% survivorship at 10 years. Predominant indications for revision include: Insert dislocation, soft tissue impingement and pain/stiffness. Insert edge-loading may be both a product and cause of these indications and was reported to affect 22% of patients with the, now withdrawn from market, Ankle Evolutive System (AES) TAR (Transysteme, Nimes, France). Compressive forces up to seven times body weight over a relatively small contact area (∼6.0 to 9.2 cm2), in combination with multi-directional motion potentially causes significant polyethylene wear and deformation in mobile-bearing TAR designs. Direct methods of measuring component volume (e.g. pycnometer) use Archimedes' principle but cannot identify spatial changes in volume or form indicative of wear/deformation. Quantitative methods for surface analysis bridge this limitation and may advance methods for analysing the edge loading phenomena in TAR. Determine the frequency of edge loading in a cohort of explanted total ankle replacements and compare the quantitative surface characteristics using a novel explant analysis method.Introduction
Aim