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Purpose: Restoration and maintenance of the plateau surface are the key points in the treatment of tibial plateau fractures. Any deformity of the articular surface jeopardizes the future of the knee by causing osteoarthritis and axis deviation. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of trabecular metal (porous tantalum metal) on stability and strength of fracture repair in the central depression tibial plateau fracture.
Method: Six matched pairs of fresh frozen human cadaveric tibias were fractured and randomly assigned to be treated with either the standard of treatment (impacted cancellous bone graft stabilized by two 4.5mm screws under the comminuted articular surface) or the experimental method (the same screws supporting a 2 cm diameter Trabecular Metal (TM) disc placed under the comminuted articular surface). Each tibia was tested on a MTS machine simulating immediate postoperative load transmission with 500 Newton for 10000 cycles and then loaded to failure to determine the ultimate strength of the construct. Results: The trabecular metal construct showed 40% less caudad displacement of the articular surface (1, 32 ±0.1 mm vs. 0, 80 ±0.1 mm) in cyclic loading (p<
0.05). Its mechanical failure occurred at a mean of 3275 N compared to 2650 N for the standard of care construct (p<
0, 05).
Conclusion: The current study shows the biomechanical superiority of the trabecular metal construct compared to the current standard of treatment with regards to both its resistance to caudad displacement of the articular surface in cyclic loading and its strength at load to failure.