The monitoring of fracture healing is a complex process. Typically, successive radiographs are performed and an emerging calcification of the fracture area is evaluated. The aim of this study was to investigate whether different bone healing patterns can be distinguished using a telemetric instrumented femoral internal plate fixator. An electronic telemetric system was developed to assess bone healing mechanically. The system consists of a telemetry module which is applied to an internal locking plate fixator, an external reader device, a sensor for measuring externally applied load and a laptop computer with processing software. By correlation between externally applied load and load measured in the implant, the elasticity of the osteosynthesis is calculated. The elasticity decreases with ongoing consolidation of a fracture or nonunion and is an appropriate parameter for the course of bone healing. At our centre, clinical application has been performed in 56 patients suffering nonunion or fracture of the femur.Objectives
Materials and Methods
Fully automated robots for the planning and implantation of total hip arthroplasty have completely withdrawn from the market. Reasons were technical problems during the reaming process that lead to postoperative neurological problems. This lead, especially in Germany, to numerous court cases and created a hostile environment regarding robotic orthopaedic surgery. The first steps in the development of a robotic assisted system for total hip arthroplasty are presented. This system will be able to plan and mill both femoral and acetabular implant seat. This project aims to combine the advantages of minimally invasive techniques and navigational systems with the accuracy that robotic assisted bone milling can provide. One of the main goals is the study of the technical problems of previous systems and to develop methods to prevent those. The project-name is RomEo (Robotic minimally invasive Endoprosthetics), the main project partners are the Helmut-Schmidt University/Hamburg and the Department of Trauma and Orthopaedics of the BG Trauma Hospital Hamburg. The paper focuses on:
The “workspace” created in minimally invasive hip surgery as determined in cadaver operations, including a 3D reconstruction Possible solutions of the problems of non-invasive patient fixation as determined in cadaver testing with different fixation methods Feasibility of 3D operation simulation using Voxelman data, access route data and implant CAD data