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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 122 - 122
4 Apr 2023
Schwarzenberg P Colding-Rasmussen T Hutchinson D Mischler D Horstmann P Petersen M Malkock M Wong C Varga P
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The objective of this study was to investigate how a new customizable light-curable osteosynthesis method (AdFix) compared to traditional metal hardware when loaded in torsion in an ovine phalanx model.

Twenty-one ovine proximal phalanges were given a 3mm transverse osteotomy and four 1.5mm cortex screws were inserted bicortically on either side of the gap. The light-curable polymer composite was then applied using the method developed by Hutchinson [1] to create osteosyntheses in two groups, having either a narrow (6mm, N=9) or a wide (10mm, N=9) fixation patch. A final group (N=3) was fixated with conventional metal plates. The constructs were loaded in torsion at a rate of 6°/second until failure or 45° of rotation was reached. Torque and angular displacement were measured, torsional stiffness was calculated as the slope of the Torque-Displacement curve, and maximum torque was queried for each specimen.

The torsional stiffnesses of the narrow, wide, and metal plate constructs were 39.1 ± 6.2, 54.4 ± 6.3, and 16.2 ± 3.0 Nmm/° respectively. All groups were statistically different from each other (p<0.001). The maximum torques of the narrow, wide, and metal plate constructs were 424 ± 72, 600 ± 120, and 579 ± 20 Nmm respectively. The narrow constructs were statistically different from the other two (p<0.05), while the wide and metal constructs were not statistically different from each other (p=0.76).

This work demonstrated that the torsional performance of the novel solution is comparable to metal fixators. As a measure of the functional range, the torsional stiffness in the AdhFix exceeded that of the metal plate. Furthermore, the wide patches were able to sustain a similar maximum toque as the metal plates. These results suggest AdhFix to be a viable, customizable alternative to metal implants for fracture fixation in the hand.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 57 - 57
1 Apr 2018
Hettwer W Petersen M
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Background

In certain clinical situations, complex local anatomy and limitations of surgical exposure can make adequate and bone tumor ablation, resection and reconstruction very challenging. We wished to review our clinical experience and accuracy achieved with entirely virtually planned single stage tumor ablation/resection and reconstructions.

Methods

We report 6 cases of bone tumors in which tumor removal (by radio-frequency (RF) ablation and/or resection) and subsequent reconstruction were based entirely on pre-operative virtual analysis and planning. All interventions were accomplished with specifically designed and pre-operatively manufactured 3D-printed drill & resection guides. Immediate subsequent defect reconstruction was either performed with a precisely matching allograft (n=1) or composite metal implant (n=5) consisting of a defect specific titanium scaffold and multiple integrated fixation features to provide optimal immediate stability as well as subsequent opportunity for osseointegration. We reviewed the sequence of all procedural steps as well as the accuracy of each saw blade or drill trajectory by direct intra-operative measurement, post-operative margin status and virtual comparison of pre- and post-operative CT scans.