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Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 12 | Pages 712 - 721
4 Dec 2023
Dantas P Gonçalves SR Grenho A Mascarenhas V Martins J Tavares da Silva M Gonçalves SB Guimarães Consciência J

Aims. Research on hip biomechanics has analyzed femoroacetabular contact pressures and forces in distinct hip conditions, with different procedures, and used diverse loading and testing conditions. The aim of this scoping review was to identify and summarize the available evidence in the literature for hip contact pressures and force in cadaver and in vivo studies, and how joint loading, labral status, and femoral and acetabular morphology can affect these biomechanical parameters. Methods. We used the PRISMA extension for scoping reviews for this literature search in three databases. After screening, 16 studies were included for the final analysis. Results. The studies assessed different hip conditions like labrum status, the biomechanical effect of the cam, femoral version, acetabular coverage, and the effect of rim trimming. The testing and loading conditions were also quite diverse, and this disparity limits direct comparisons between the different researches. With normal anatomy the mean contact pressures ranged from 1.54 to 4.4 MPa, and the average peak contact pressures ranged from 2 to 9.3 MPa. Labral tear or resection showed an increase in contact pressures that diminished after repair or reconstruction of the labrum. Complete cam resection also decreased the contact pressure, and acetabular rim resection of 6 mm increased the contact pressure at the acetabular base. Conclusion. To date there is no standardized methodology to access hip contact biomechanics in hip arthroscopy, or with the preservation of the periarticular soft-tissues. A tendency towards improved biomechanics (lower contact pressures) was seen with labral repair and reconstruction techniques as well as with cam correction. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2023;12(12):712–721


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 5 Supple B | Pages 74 - 81
1 May 2024
Callary SA Broekhuis D Barends J Ramasamy B Nelissen RGHH Solomon LB Kaptein BL

Aims. The aim of this study was to compare the biomechanical models of two frequently used techniques for reconstructing severe acetabular defects with pelvic discontinuity in revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) – the Trabecular Metal Acetabular Revision System (TMARS) and custom triflange acetabular components (CTACs) – using virtual modelling. Methods. Pre- and postoperative CT scans from ten patients who underwent revision with the TMARS for a Paprosky IIIB acetabular defect with pelvic discontinuity were retrospectively collated. Computer models of a CTAC implant were designed from the preoperative CT scans of these patients. Computer models of the TMARS reconstruction were segmented from postoperative CT scans using a semi-automated method. The amount of bone removed, the implant-bone apposition that was achieved, and the restoration of the centre of rotation of the hip were compared between all the actual TMARS and the virtual CTAC implants. Results. The median amount of bone removed for TMARS reconstructions was significantly greater than for CTAC implants (9.07 cm. 3. (interquartile range (IQR) 5.86 to 21.42) vs 1.16 cm. 3. (IQR 0.42 to 3.53) (p = 0.004). There was no significant difference between the median overall implant-bone apposition between TMARS reconstructions and CTAC implants (54.8 cm. 2. (IQR 28.2 to 82.3) vs 56.6 cm. 2. (IQR 40.6 to 69.7) (p = 0.683). However, there was significantly more implant-bone apposition within the residual acetabulum (45.2 cm. 2. (IQR 28.2 to 72.4) vs 25.5 cm. 2. (IQR 12.8 to 44.1) (p = 0.001) and conversely significantly less apposition with the outer cortex of the pelvis for TMARS implants compared with CTAC reconstructions (0 cm. 2. (IQR 0 to 13.1) vs 23.2 cm. 2. (IQR 16.4 to 30.6) (p = 0.009). The mean centre of rotation of the hip of TMARS reconstructions differed by a mean of 11.1 mm (3 to 28) compared with CTAC implants. Conclusion. In using TMARS, more bone is removed, thus achieving more implant-bone apposition within the residual acetabular bone. In CTAC implants, the amount of bone removed is minimal, while the implant-bone apposition is more evenly distributed between the residual acetabulum and the outer cortex of the pelvis. The differences suggest that these implants used to treat pelvic discontinuity might achieve short- and long-term stability through different biomechanical mechanisms. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2024;106-B(5 Supple B):74–81


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 7, Issue 2 | Pages 148 - 156
1 Feb 2018
Pinheiro M Dobson CA Perry D Fagan MJ

Objectives. Legg–Calvé–Perthes’ disease (LCP) is an idiopathic osteonecrosis of the femoral head that is most common in children between four and eight years old. The factors that lead to the onset of LCP are still unclear; however, it is believed that interruption of the blood supply to the developing epiphysis is an important factor in the development of the condition. Methods. Finite element analysis modelling of the blood supply to the juvenile epiphysis was investigated to understand under which circumstances the blood vessels supplying the femoral epiphysis could become obstructed. The identification of these conditions is likely to be important in understanding the biomechanics of LCP. Results. The results support the hypothesis that vascular obstruction to the epiphysis may arise when there is delayed ossification and when articular cartilage has reduced stiffness under compression. Conclusion. The findings support the theory of vascular occlusion as being important in the pathophysiology of Perthes disease. Cite this article: M. Pinheiro, C. A. Dobson, D. Perry, M. J. Fagan. New insights into the biomechanics of Legg-Calvé-Perthes’ disease: The Role of Epiphyseal Skeletal Immaturity in Vascular Obstruction. Bone Joint Res 2018;7:148–156. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.72.BJR-2017-0191.R1


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 4 | Pages 426 - 434
1 Apr 2019
Logishetty K van Arkel RJ Ng KCG Muirhead-Allwood SK Cobb JP Jeffers JRT

Aims. The hip’s capsular ligaments passively restrain extreme range of movement (ROM) by wrapping around the native femoral head/neck. We determined the effect of hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA), dual-mobility total hip arthroplasty (DM-THA), conventional THA, and surgical approach on ligament function. Materials and Methods. Eight paired cadaveric hip joints were skeletonized but retained the hip capsule. Capsular ROM restraint during controlled internal rotation (IR) and external rotation (ER) was measured before and after HRA, DM-THA, and conventional THA, with a posterior (right hips) and anterior capsulotomy (left hips). Results. Hip resurfacing provided a near-native ROM with between 5° to 17° increase in IR/ER ROM compared with the native hip for the different positions tested, which was a 9% to 33% increase. DM-THA generated a 9° to 61° (18% to 121%) increase in ROM. Conventional THA generated a 52° to 100° (94% to 199%) increase in ROM. Thus, for conventional THA, the capsule function that exerts a limit on ROM is lost. It is restored to some extent by DM-THA, and almost fully restored by hip resurfacing. In positions of low flexion/extension, the posterior capsulotomy provided more normal function than the anterior, possibly because the capsule was shortened during posterior repair. However, in deep flexion positions, the anterior capsulotomy functioned better. Conclusion. Native head-size and capsular repair preserves capsular function after arthroplasty. The anterior and posterior approach differentially affect postoperative biomechanical function of the capsular ligaments. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B:426–434


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 5 | Pages 496 - 503
1 May 2023
Mills ES Talehakimi A Urness M Wang JC Piple AS Chung BC Tezuka T Heckmann ND

Aims. It has been well documented in the arthroplasty literature that lumbar degenerative disc disease (DDD) contributes to abnormal spinopelvic motion. However, the relationship between the severity or pattern of hip osteoarthritis (OA) as measured on an anteroposterior (AP) pelvic view and spinopelvic biomechanics has not been well investigated. Therefore, the aim of the study is to examine the association between the severity and pattern of hip OA and spinopelvic motion. Methods. A retrospective chart review was conducted to identify patients undergoing primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). Plain AP pelvic radiographs were reviewed to document the morphological characteristic of osteoarthritic hips. Lateral spine-pelvis-hip sitting and standing plain radiographs were used to measure sacral slope (SS) and pelvic femoral angle (PFA) in each position. Lumbar disc spaces were measured to determine the presence of DDD. The difference between sitting and standing SS and PFA were calculated to quantify spinopelvic motion (ΔSS) and hip motion (ΔPFA), respectively. Univariate analysis and Pearson correlation were used to identify morphological hip characteristics associated with changes in spinopelvic motion. Results. In total, 139 patients were included. Increased spinopelvic motion was observed in patients with loss of femoral head contour, cam deformity, and acetabular bone loss (all p < 0.05). Loss of hip motion was observed in patients with loss of femoral head contour, cam deformity, and acetabular bone loss (all p < 0.001). A decreased joint space was associated with a decreased ΔPFA (p = 0.040). The presence of disc space narrowing, disc space narrowing > two levels, and disc narrowing involving the L5–S1 segment were associated with decreased spinopelvic motion (all p < 0.05). Conclusion. Preoperative hip OA as assessed on an AP pelvic radiograph predicts spinopelvic motion. These data suggest that specific hip osteoarthritic morphological characteristics listed above alter spinopelvic motion to a greater extent than others. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2023;105-B(5):496–503


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 4 | Pages 312 - 318
1 Apr 2024
Sheth NP Jones SA Sanghavi SA Manktelow A

The advent of modular porous metal augments has ushered in a new form of treatment for acetabular bone loss. The function of an augment can be seen as reducing the size of a defect or reconstituting the anterosuperior/posteroinferior columns and/or allowing supplementary fixation. Depending on the function of the augment, the surgeon can decide on the sequence of introduction of the hemispherical shell, before or after the augment. Augments should always, however, be used with cement to form a unit with the acetabular component. Given their versatility, augments also allow the use of a hemispherical shell in a position that restores the centre of rotation and biomechanics of the hip. Progressive shedding or the appearance of metal debris is a particular finding with augments and, with other radiological signs of failure, should be recognized on serial radiographs. Mid- to long-term outcomes in studies reporting the use of augments with hemispherical shells in revision total hip arthroplasty have shown rates of survival of > 90%. However, a higher risk of failure has been reported when augments have been used for patients with chronic pelvic discontinuity. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2024;106-B(4):312–318


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 8 | Pages 671 - 680
14 Aug 2024
Fontalis A Zhao B Putzeys P Mancino F Zhang S Vanspauwen T Glod F Plastow R Mazomenos E Haddad FS

Aims. Precise implant positioning, tailored to individual spinopelvic biomechanics and phenotype, is paramount for stability in total hip arthroplasty (THA). Despite a few studies on instability prediction, there is a notable gap in research utilizing artificial intelligence (AI). The objective of our pilot study was to evaluate the feasibility of developing an AI algorithm tailored to individual spinopelvic mechanics and patient phenotype for predicting impingement. Methods. This international, multicentre prospective cohort study across two centres encompassed 157 adults undergoing primary robotic arm-assisted THA. Impingement during specific flexion and extension stances was identified using the virtual range of motion (ROM) tool of the robotic software. The primary AI model, the Light Gradient-Boosting Machine (LGBM), used tabular data to predict impingement presence, direction (flexion or extension), and type. A secondary model integrating tabular data with plain anteroposterior pelvis radiographs was evaluated to assess for any potential enhancement in prediction accuracy. Results. We identified nine predictors from an analysis of baseline spinopelvic characteristics and surgical planning parameters. Using fivefold cross-validation, the LGBM achieved 70.2% impingement prediction accuracy. With impingement data, the LGBM estimated direction with 85% accuracy, while the support vector machine (SVM) determined impingement type with 72.9% accuracy. After integrating imaging data with a multilayer perceptron (tabular) and a convolutional neural network (radiograph), the LGBM’s prediction was 68.1%. Both combined and LGBM-only had similar impingement direction prediction rates (around 84.5%). Conclusion. This study is a pioneering effort in leveraging AI for impingement prediction in THA, utilizing a comprehensive, real-world clinical dataset. Our machine-learning algorithm demonstrated promising accuracy in predicting impingement, its type, and direction. While the addition of imaging data to our deep-learning algorithm did not boost accuracy, the potential for refined annotations, such as landmark markings, offers avenues for future enhancement. Prior to clinical integration, external validation and larger-scale testing of this algorithm are essential. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2024;5(8):671–680


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 6, Issue 11 | Pages 623 - 630
1 Nov 2017
Suh D Kang K Son J Kwon O Baek C Koh Y

Objectives. Malalignment of the tibial component could influence the long-term survival of a total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The object of this study was to investigate the biomechanical effect of varus and valgus malalignment on the tibial component under stance-phase gait cycle loading conditions. Methods. Validated finite element models for varus and valgus malalignment by 3° and 5° were developed to evaluate the effect of malalignment on the tibial component in TKA. Maximum contact stress and contact area on a polyethylene insert, maximum contact stress on patellar button and the collateral ligament force were investigated. Results. There was greater total contact stress in the varus alignment than in the valgus, with more marked difference on the medial side. An increase in ligament force was clearly demonstrated, especially in the valgus alignment and force exerted on the medial collateral ligament also increased. Conclusion. These results highlight the importance of accurate surgical reconstruction of the coronal tibial alignment of the knee joint. Varus and valgus alignments will influence wear and ligament stability, respectively in TKA. Cite this article: D-S. Suh, K-T. Kang, J. Son, O-R. Kwon, C. Baek, Y-G. Koh. Computational study on the effect of malalignment of the tibial component on the biomechanics of total knee arthroplasty: A Finite Element Analysis. Bone Joint Res 2017;6:623–630. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.611.BJR-2016-0088.R2


Objectives. Posterior condylar offset (PCO) and posterior tibial slope (PTS) are critical factors in total knee arthroplasty (TKA). A computational simulation was performed to evaluate the biomechanical effect of PCO and PTS on cruciate retaining TKA. Methods. We generated a subject-specific computational model followed by the development of ± 1 mm, ± 2 mm and ± 3 mm PCO models in the posterior direction, and -3°, 0°, 3° and 6° PTS models with each of the PCO models. Using a validated finite element (FE) model, we investigated the influence of the changes in PCO and PTS on the contact stress in the patellar button and the forces on the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL), patellar tendon and quadriceps muscles under the deep knee-bend loading conditions. Results. Contact stress on the patellar button increased and decreased as PCO translated to the anterior and posterior directions, respectively. In addition, contact stress on the patellar button decreased as PTS increased. These trends were consistent in the FE models with altered PCO. Higher quadriceps muscle and patellar tendon force are required as PCO translated in the anterior direction with an equivalent flexion angle. However, as PTS increased, quadriceps muscle and patellar tendon force reduced in each PCO condition. The forces exerted on the PCL increased as PCO translated to the posterior direction and decreased as PTS increased. Conclusion. The change in PCO alternatively provided positive and negative biomechanical effects, but it led to a reduction in a negative biomechanical effect as PTS increased. Cite this article: K-T. Kang, Y-G. Koh, J. Son, O-R. Kwon, J-S. Lee, S. K. Kwon. A computational simulation study to determine the biomechanical influence of posterior condylar offset and tibial slope in cruciate retaining total knee arthroplasty. Bone Joint Res 2018;7:69–78. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.71.BJR-2017-0143.R1


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 92-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1061 - 1065
1 Aug 2010
Cho W Cho SK Wu C

There are three basic concepts that are important to the biomechanics of pedicle screw-based instrumentation. First, the outer diameter of the screw determines pullout strength, while the inner diameter determines fatigue strength. Secondly, when inserting a pedicle screw, the dorsal cortex of the spine should not be violated and the screws on each side should converge and be of good length. Thirdly, fixation can be augmented in cases of severe osteoporosis or revision. A trajectory parallel or caudal to the superior endplate can minimise breakage of the screw from repeated axial loading. Straight insertion of the pedicle screw in the mid-sagittal plane provides the strongest stability. Rotational stability can be improved by adding transverse connectors. The indications for their use include anterior column instability, and the correction of rotational deformity


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 4 | Pages 442 - 448
1 Apr 2020
Kayani B Konan S Ahmed SS Chang JS Ayuob A Haddad FS

Aims

The objectives of this study were to assess the effect of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) resection on flexion-extension gaps, mediolateral soft tissue laxity, maximum knee extension, and limb alignment during primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA).

Methods

This prospective study included 140 patients with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis undergoing primary robotic-arm assisted TKA. All operative procedures were performed by a single surgeon using a standard medial parapatellar approach. Optical motion capture technology with fixed femoral and tibial registration pins was used to assess study outcomes pre- and post-ACL resection with knee extension and 90° knee flexion. This study included 76 males (54.3%) and 64 females (45.7%) with a mean age of 64.1 years (SD 6.8) at time of surgery. Mean preoperative hip-knee-ankle deformity was 6.1° varus (SD 4.6° varus).


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 6, Issue 4 | Pages 216 - 223
1 Apr 2017
Ang BFH Chen JY Yew AKS Chua SK Chou SM Chia SL Koh JSB Howe TS

Objectives. External fixators are the traditional fixation method of choice for contaminated open fractures. However, patient acceptance is low due to the high profile and therefore physical burden of the constructs. An externalised locking compression plate is a low profile alternative. However, the biomechanical differences have not been assessed. The objective of this study was to evaluate the axial and torsional stiffness of the externalised titanium locking compression plate (ET-LCP), the externalised stainless steel locking compression plate (ESS-LCP) and the unilateral external fixator (UEF). Methods. A fracture gap model was created to simulate comminuted mid-shaft tibia fractures using synthetic composite bones. Fifteen constructs were stabilised with ET-LCP, ESS-LCP or UEF (five constructs each). The constructs were loaded under both axial and torsional directions to determine construct stiffness. Results. The mean axial stiffness was very similar for UEF (528 N/mm) and ESS-LCP (525 N/mm), while it was slightly lower for ET-LCP (469 N/mm). One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) testing in all three groups demonstrated no significant difference (F(2,12) = 2.057, p = 0.171). There was a significant difference in mean torsional stiffness between the UEF (0.512 Nm/degree), the ESS-LCP (0.686 Nm/degree) and the ET-LCP (0.639 Nm/degree), as determined by one-way ANOVA (F(2,12) = 6.204, p = 0.014). A Tukey post hoc test revealed that the torsional stiffness of the ESS-LCP was statistically higher than that of the UEF by 0.174 Nm/degree (p = 0.013). No catastrophic failures were observed. Conclusion. Using the LCP as an external fixator may provide a viable and attractive alternative to the traditional UEF as its lower profile makes it more acceptable to patients, while not compromising on axial and torsional stiffness. Cite this article: B. F. H. Ang, J. Y. Chen, A. K. S. Yew, S. K. Chua, S. M. Chou, S. L. Chia, J. S. B. Koh, T. S. Howe. Externalised locking compression plate as an alternative to the unilateral external fixator: a biomechanical comparative study of axial and torsional stiffness. Bone Joint Res 2017;6:216–223. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.64.2000470


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 7, Issue 5 | Pages 325 - 326
1 May 2018
Clement ND Deehan DJ


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 3 | Pages 461 - 464
1 May 1988
Stanley D Trowbridge E Norris S

A consecutive series of 150 patients with clavicular fractures is presented. In 81% detailed information regarding the mechanism of the injury was available and, of these, 94% had fractured their clavicle from a direct blow on the shoulder; only 6% had fallen on the outstretched hand. This finding, at variance with commonly held views regarding the mechanism of this injury, was further investigated by biomechanical analysis of the forces involved in clavicular fractures. The biomechanical model supported the clinical findings


Aims

The aim of this study was to compare any differences in the primary outcome (biphasic flexion knee moment during gait) of robotic arm-assisted bi-unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (bi-UKA) with conventional mechanically aligned total knee arthroplasty (TKA) at one year post-surgery.

Methods

A total of 76 patients (34 bi-UKA and 42 TKA patients) were analyzed in a prospective, single-centre, randomized controlled trial. Flat ground shod gait analysis was performed preoperatively and one year postoperatively. Knee flexion moment was calculated from motion capture markers and force plates. The same setup determined proprioception outcomes during a joint position sense test and one-leg standing. Surgery allocation, surgeon, and secondary outcomes were analyzed for prediction of the primary outcome from a binary regression model.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 11 | Pages 552 - 559
1 Nov 2016
Kang K Koh Y Son J Kwon O Baek C Jung SH Park KK

Objectives. Malrotation of the femoral component can result in post-operative complications in total knee arthroplasty (TKA), including patellar maltracking. Therefore, we used computational simulation to investigate the influence of femoral malrotation on contact stresses on the polyethylene (PE) insert and on the patellar button as well as on the forces on the collateral ligaments. Materials and Methods. Validated finite element (FE) models, for internal and external malrotations from 0° to 10° with regard to the neutral position, were developed to evaluate the effect of malrotation on the femoral component in TKA. Femoral malrotation in TKA on the knee joint was simulated in walking stance-phase gait and squat loading conditions. Results. Contact stress on the medial side of the PE insert increased with internal femoral malrotation and decreased with external femoral malrotation in both stance-phase gait and squat loading conditions. There was an opposite trend in the lateral side of the PE insert case. Contact stress on the patellar button increased with internal femoral malrotation and decreased with external femoral malrotation in both stance-phase gait and squat loading conditions. In particular, contact stress on the patellar button increased by 98% with internal malrotation of 10° in the squat loading condition. The force on the medial collateral ligament (MCL) and the lateral collateral ligament (LCL) increased with internal and external femoral malrotations, respectively. Conclusions. These findings provide support for orthopaedic surgeons to determine a more accurate femoral component alignment in order to reduce post-operative PE problems. Cite this article: K-T. Kang, Y-G. Koh, J. Son, O-R. Kwon, C. Baek, S. H. Jung, K. K. Park. Measuring the effect of femoral malrotation on knee joint biomechanics for total knee arthroplasty using computational simulation. Bone Joint Res 2016;5:552–559. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.511.BJR-2016-0107.R1


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 2, Issue 9 | Pages 186 - 192
1 Sep 2013
Boivin GP Platt KM Corbett J Reeves J Hardy AL Elenes EY Charnigo RJ Hunter SA Pearson KJ

Objectives. The goals of this study were: 1) to determine if high-fat diet (HFD) feeding in female mice would negatively impact biomechanical and histologic consequences on the Achilles tendon and quadriceps muscle; and 2) to investigate whether exercise and branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) supplementation would affect these parameters or attenuate any negative consequences resulting from HFD consumption. Methods. We examined the effects of 16 weeks of 60% HFD feeding, voluntary exercise (free choice wheel running) and BCAA administration in female C57BL/6 mice. The Achilles tendons and quadriceps muscles were removed at the end of the experiment and assessed histologically and biomechanically. Results. HFD feeding significantly decreased the Achilles tendon modulus without histological alterations. BCAA administration significantly decreased the stiffness of Achilles tendons in the exercised normal diet mice. Exercise partially ameliorated both the weight gain and glucose levels in the HFD-fed mice, led to a significant decrease in the maximum load of the Achilles tendon, and an increase in the average fibril diameter of the quadriceps femoris muscle. There were significant correlations between body weight and several biomechanical properties, demonstrating the importance of controlling obesity for maintaining healthy tendon properties. . Conclusions. In summary, this study showed a significant impact of obesity and body weight on tendon biomechanical properties with limited effects of exercise and BCAAs. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2013;2:186–92


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 91-B, Issue 3 | Pages 344 - 350
1 Mar 2009
Luyckx T Didden K Vandenneucker H Labey L Innocenti B Bellemans J

The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that patella alta leads to a less favourable situation in terms of patellofemoral contact force, contact area and contact pressure than the normal patellar position, and thereby gives rise to anterior knee pain. A dynamic knee simulator system based on the Oxford rig and allowing six degrees of freedom was adapted in order to simulate and record the dynamic loads during a knee squat from 30° to 120° flexion under physiological conditions. Five different configurations were studied, with variable predetermined patellar heights. The patellofemoral contact force increased with increasing knee flexion until contact occurred between the quadriceps tendon and the femoral trochlea, inducing load sharing. Patella alta caused a delay of this contact until deeper flexion. As a consequence, the maximal patellofemoral contact force and contact pressure increased significantly with increasing patellar height (p < 0.01). Patella alta was associated with the highest maximal patellofemoral contact force and contact pressure. When averaged across all flexion angles, a normal patellar position was associated with the lowest contact pressures. Our results indicate that there is a biomechanical reason for anterior knee pain in patients with patella alta


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 97-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1628 - 1633
1 Dec 2015
Elmadag M Uzer G Yildiz F Erden T Bilsel K Büyükpinarbasili N Üsümez A Bozdag E Sen C

This animal study compares different methods of performing an osteotomy, including using an Erbium-doped Yttrium Aluminum Garnet laser, histologically, radiologically and biomechanically. A total of 24 New Zealand rabbits were divided into four groups (Group I: multihole-drilling; Group II: Gigli saw; Group III: electrical saw blade and Group IV: laser). A proximal transverse diaphyseal osteotomy was performed on the right tibias of the rabbits after the application of a circular external fixator. The rabbits were killed six weeks after the procedure, the operated tibias were resected and radiographs taken. . The specimens were tested biomechanically using three-point bending forces, and four tibias from each group were examined histologically. Outcome parameters were the biomechanical stability of the tibias as assessed by the failure to load and radiographic and histological examination of the osteotomy site. . The osteotomies healed in all specimens both radiographically and histologically. The differences in the mean radiographic (p = 0.568) and histological (p = 0.71) scores, and in the mean failure loads (p = 0.180) were not statistically significant between the groups. . Different methods of performing an osteotomy give similar quality of union. The laser osteotomy, which is not widely used in orthopaedics is an alternative to the current methods. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015;97-B:1628–33


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 9, Issue 5 | Pages 4 - 9
1 Oct 2020
Matthews E Waterson HB Phillips JR Toms AD


Objectives. Secondary fracture healing is strongly influenced by the stiffness of the bone-fixator system. Biomechanical tests are extensively used to investigate stiffness and strength of fixation devices. The stiffness values reported in the literature for locked plating, however, vary by three orders of magnitude. The aim of this study was to examine the influence that the method of restraint and load application has on the stiffness produced, the strain distribution within the bone, and the stresses in the implant for locking plate constructs. Methods. Synthetic composite bones were used to evaluate experimentally the influence of four different methods of loading and restraining specimens, all used in recent previous studies. Two plate types and three screw arrangements were also evaluated for each loading scenario. Computational models were also developed and validated using the experimental tests. Results. The method of loading was found to affect the gap stiffness strongly (by up to six times) but also the magnitude of the plate stress and the location and magnitude of strains at the bone-screw interface. Conclusions. This study demonstrates that the method of loading is responsible for much of the difference in reported stiffness values in the literature. It also shows that previous contradictory findings, such as the influence of working length and very large differences in failure loads, can be readily explained by the choice of loading condition. Cite this article: A. MacLeod, A. H. R. W. Simpson, P. Pankaj. Experimental and numerical investigation into the influence of loading conditions in biomechanical testing of locking plate fracture fixation devices. Bone Joint Res 2018;7:111–120. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.71.BJR-2017-0074.R2


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 11, Issue 3 | Pages 3 - 3
1 Jun 2022
Ollivere B


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 1 | Pages 12 - 23
1 Feb 1981
Meggitt B Juett D Smith J

A study was made of the mechanics of blood-bearing in a series of patients treated with a cast-brace for fracture of the distal femur. Knee hinges incorporating strain-gauges, a simple force-plate on the floor and a standardised weight-bearing test were used to record axial loads through the cast-brace itself and through the fracture during the phases of healing. The cast-brace carried loads of only 10 to 20 per cent of body weight and functioned mainly as an antibuckling hinged tube. Patterns of weight-bearing recovery showed that the fracture itself limited loads to safe levels. A measure of the recovery of strength at the fracture was determined and termed the "fracture load index". Graphs obtained in this way demonstrated four biomechanical phases of bony union which correlated well with the stages of clinical healing. The clinical application of these results have led to improvements in the design of braces and the use of a cylinder cast-brace for fractures of the distal half of the femoral shaft and of a new type of brace with a hinge at the hip attached to the thigh cast for fractures of the proximal shaft. A simple clinical test is described by which it is possible to monitor the healing of fractures in cast-braces


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 182 - 182
1 Sep 2012
Khan L Wallace R Simpson A Robinson C
Full Access

Aims. The aim of this study was to compare biomechanical properties of pre-contoured plate fixation using different screw fixation modes in a mid-shaft clavicle fracture model. Methods. Fourth generation biomechanical clavicle sawbones with a mid-shaft osteotomy were plated in one of three modes: nonlocking bicortical, locking bicortical and locking unicortical mode. The specimens were then tested to failure in four-point bending and pull-off tests. Results. Failure due to fracture through the sawbone was more common in nonlocking bicortical mode while plate bending was more common in the locking bicortical group. The ultimate load at failure was significantly lower in the locking bicortical group compared to the nonlocking bicortical group, however there was no significant difference between the locking unicortical group and nonlocking bicortical group. In the pull-off tests 100% of nonlocking bicortical and locking bicortical plates failed by fracture of the sawbone. 100% of the locking unicortical plates failed by plate and screw pull-off from the sawbone. The load at failure was highest for the locking unicortical plate but this was not significantly different to the other groups. Conclusion. This study shows that specimens fixed with locking unicortical screw fixation withstood comparable or superior loads in four-point bending and pull-off test when compared to nonlocking bicortical and locking bicortical screw fixation. In addition both locking screws and unicortical screws appear to provide a protective effect against periprosthetic sawbone fracture. Locking unicortical screw fixation of pre-contoured plates may be a viable alternative in the fixation of mid-shaft clavicle fractures


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 11 | Pages 1642 - 1645
1 Nov 2021
Kayani B Giebaly D Haddad FS


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 2 | Pages 174 - 179
1 May 1980
Webb P Wright K Winter G

This paper presents a prospective trial carried out using the Monk "soft top" endoprosthesis in 33 patients. Two years after operation 70 per cent of the remaining patients had pain. A biomechanical and histopathological analysis of the endoprosthesis and the surrounding tissue, obtained from a further two patients at the time of revision, is presented. It is concluded that the prosthesis has inherent design faults which result in excessive wear of the polyethylene component. The wear debris produced stimulates a prolific fibrous tissue reaction which is associated with progressive clinical deterioration


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_34 | Pages 481 - 481
1 Dec 2013
Kurdziel M Wiater B Moravek J Pinkas D Wiater JM
Full Access

Purpose:. Glenoid loosening persists as a common cause of anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA) failure. Considering radiographic evidence of loosening as an endpoint, TSA has a reported survivorship of only 51.5% at 10 years. Component loosening may be related to cementation and it is postulated that poor cement penetration and heat-induced necrosis may partially be responsible. There is a growing interest among surgeons to minimize or abandon cement fixation and rely on biologic fixation to the polyethylene for long-term fixation. De Wilde et al. reported promising early clinical and radiographic results using a pegged, all-polyethylene ingrowth glenoid design implanted without cement. The goal of this study was to compare glenoid micromotion in an all-polyethylene, centrally fluted pegged glenoid using 3 cement fixation techniques. Materials and Methods:. Glenoid components (Anchor Peg Glenoid, Depuy Orthopaedics, Warsaw, IN, USA) (Figure 1) were implanted in polyurethane foam testing blocks with 3 different fixation methods (n = 5 per group). Group I glenoids were implanted with interference fit fixation with no added cement. Group II was implanted with a hybrid fixation, where only the peripheral pegs were cemented. Group III glenoids were fully cemented for implantation. Glenoid loosening was characterized according to ASTM Standard F-2028. The glenoid component and a 44 mm humeral head were mounted to a materials testing frame (858 Mini Bionix II, MTS Crop., Eden Prairie, MN, USA) with a 750N applied joint compressive force (Figure 1). A humeral head subluxation displacement of ± 0.5 mm was experimentally calculated as a value that simulates glenoid rim loading that may occur at higher load activities. For characterization of glenoid loosening, the humeral head was cycled 50,000 times along the superior-inferior glenoid axis, simulating approximately 5 years of device service. Glenoid distraction, compression, and superior-inferior glenoid migration were recorded with two differential variable reluctance transducers fixed to the glenoid prosthesis. Results:. All glenoid components completed the 50,000 cycles of humeral head translation successfully. With respect to glenoid distraction (Figure 2), interference fit fixation had significantly greater distraction compared to both hybrid and fully cemented fixation (p < 0.001). Hybrid fixation also displayed significantly higher distraction compared to fully cemented fixation (p < 0.001). In terms of glenoid compression (Figure 2), hybrid cementation had significantly greater compression compared to both interference-fit and fully cemented fixation (p < 0.001). Discussion:. This is the first biomechanics study comparing glenoid micromotion of a centrally fluted, pegged component using 3 different fixation techniques. Of all fixation methods, the fully cemented components displayed the least amount of motion in all parameters. Hybrid fixation exhibited lower distraction, higher compression, and comparable translation compared to interference-fit fixation. Results may indicate the differences in early motion and suggest little to no advantage of peripheral peg cementation over no cement with respect to initial fixation. Future studies are warranted to further evaluate interference-fit fixation as a viable option for implantation of a central fluted, all-polyethylene glenoid component


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 386 - 386
1 Jul 2010
Madan S Leunig M Ganz R
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Introduction: Patients who develop proximal femoral growth arrest present a typical deformity of short femoral neck, high riding greater trochanter, and caput valgum. This is seen usually seen in Perthes, AVN due to treatment of CDH, and sometimes in epiphyseal dysplasia. Method: We present a series of 34 cases (34 hips) treated at the above institutes. The cases treated in Berne were prior to 2002. Twenty patients were females. There were 24 patients with Perthes, nine with old healed and treated DDH, and one with epipyhseal dysplasia. All had Trendelenburg or delayed Trendelenburg sign. They had an average shortening of 3.5 cms, and their age range was 14 yrs to 64 yrs. Pre-op assessement was done with plain radiographs, CT scan, and or MRI scan. Results: Their Merle D’Aubigne score improved from 13 (10 to 15) to 17 (15 to 18) at the latest follow up. Twenty four (70%) had good to excellent result. Five have since undergone a total hip replacement, and five have some pain but can do reasonable amount of activity. The follow-up is 6 years (2 to 13 years). There was one trochanteric non-union, but no cases of AVN. Discussion: We describe the technique of biomechanically improving the moment arm and muscle length with this procedure. This helps the soft tissues to strengthen, improve force vectors in the correct direct in the hip, perhaps improve the longevity of the joint and also prepare the hip soft tissues for future THR


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 120 - 120
1 Sep 2012
Burke N Kennedy J Fitzpatrick D Mullett H
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Purpose. Locking plates are widely used in clinical practice for the surgical treatment of complex proximal humerus fractures, especially in osteoporotic bone. The aim of this study is to assess the biomechanical influence of the infero-medial locking screws on maintaining reduction of the fragments in a proximal humerus fracture. Materials & Methods. A standard 3-part proximal humerus fracture was created in fourth generation humerus saw bones. Each specimen was anatomically reduced and secured with a PHILOS locking plate. Eleven of the specimens had infero-medial locking screws inserted, and 11 specimens did not. Each humerus sawbone underwent cyclical loading at 532N, as previous studies showed this was the maximum force at the glenohumeral joint. The absolute inter-fragmentary motion was recorded using an infra-red motion analysis device. Each specimen was then loaded to failure. Results. The fixation of a 3-part proximal humerus fracture with the insertion of the infero-medial locking screws had significantly less inter-fragmentary motion at 250, 500, 750 and 1000 cycles, when compared to a similar fracture pattern without this strategically placed screw (P< 0.001). In both groups at each 250 cycle increment there was a significant increase in the overall fracture fragment movement (P< 0.01). The load to failure in the group with the infero-medial screws was also significantly more (P< 0.001). The median load of 1159N was required for construct failure compared to 1452N in the group without the inferomedial screws. Conclusion. This study supports the importance of anatomical reduction and adequate support of the medial column on maintaining fracture reduction of proximal humerus fractures. The key placement of the infero-medial locking screws is of significant importance in creating a solid construct for proximal humerus fracture healing. This may reduce implant complications such as screw perforations or the possible loss of reduction of fracture fragments


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 87-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 406 - 406
1 Sep 2005
Mathews H
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Introduction Current concepts in the treatment of degenerative disc disease include disc replacement. Disc replacement may restore height and lordosis while maintaining motion. This paper reviews the design criteria, biomechanical and biological (wear and safety) testing of the Maverick total disc arthroplasty. The surgical technique and early clinical results of the initial implantations were reviewed (Mathews HH, et al; Spine J. 2004). Methods The Maverick total disc arthroplasty is a semi-constrained, chrome cobalt metal-on-metal, ball and socket design prosthesis designed to resist shear forces. Various prosthetic sizes allow precise end plate coverage to help prevent subsidence and selective restoration of lordosis and disc height. The posterior location of the ball-and–socket articulation approximates the normal centre of rotation. The Maverick disc was subjected to axial compression, cadaveric motion, wear testing, and shock transmission studies. Early clinical outcomes were reviewed. Results Biomechanical testing resulted in no failures, cracks, loss of height or other mechanical damage after subjecting the components to 10 million loading cycles. Cadaveric testing showed maintenance of a range of motion in all planes with no statistically significant (p=.05) differences between the stiffness or range-of-motion measurements in any mode except for extension. Maverick tested at 10 million repetitions of significant bends, estimated to be equivalent to 31.5 years of clinical use, generated only 12 to 14 mm. 3. of debris. This represents approximately 9% of the anticipated debris of a metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty. No difference in shock transmission between metal-on-metal and metal-on-polyethylene prosthesis designs was demonstrated. Clinically at 2 years, at least three-quarters of patients obtained an Oswestry success of 15 points or more usually by 3 months after the procedure. Recovery and improvement was significantly quicker when compared to the historical arthrodesis controls. A few approach-related complications and technical failures have been reported. There have been no implant-related failures. Discussion The most clinically relevant concept in disc replacement may be restoration of spinal balance rather than preservation of motion. Laboratory testing confirms the design rationale of the Maverick disc. Early clinical results are encouraging. Longer term results and more careful study are needed to confirm its efficacy


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 4 | Pages 516 - 521
1 Apr 2018
Qian L Jiang C Sun P Xu D Wang Y Fu M Zhong S Ouyang J

Aims

The aim of this study was to compare the peak pull-out force (PPF) of pedicle-lengthening screws (PLS) and traditional pedicle screws (TPS) using instant and cyclic fatigue testing.

Materials and Methods

A total of 60 lumbar vertebrae were divided into six groups: PLS submitted to instant pull-out and fatigue-resistance testing (groups A1 and A2, respectively), TPS submitted to instant pull-out and fatigue-resistance testing (groups B1 and B2, respectively) and PLS augmented with 2 ml polymethylmethacrylate, submitted to instant pull-out and fatigue-resistance testing (groups C1 and C2, respectively). The PPF and normalized PPF (PPFn) for bone mineral density (BMD) were compared within and between all groups.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 4 | Pages 122 - 129
1 Apr 2016
Small SR Rogge RD Malinzak RA Reyes EM Cook PL Farley KA Ritter MA

Objectives. Initial stability of tibial trays is crucial for long-term success of total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in both primary and revision settings. Rotating platform (RP) designs reduce torque transfer at the tibiofemoral interface. We asked if this reduced torque transfer in RP designs resulted in subsequently reduced micromotion at the cemented fixation interface between the prosthesis component and the adjacent bone. Methods. Composite tibias were implanted with fixed and RP primary and revision tibial trays and biomechanically tested under up to 2.5 kN of axial compression and 10° of external femoral component rotation. Relative micromotion between the implanted tibial tray and the neighbouring bone was quantified using high-precision digital image correlation techniques. Results. Rotational malalignment between femoral and tibial components generated 40% less overall tibial tray micromotion in RP designs than in standard fixed bearing tibial trays. RP trays reduced micromotion by up to 172 µm in axial compression and 84 µm in rotational malalignment models. Conclusions. Reduced torque transfer at the tibiofemoral interface in RP tibial trays reduces relative component micromotion and may aid long-term stability in cases of revision TKA or poor bone quality. Cite this article: Mr S. R. Small. Micromotion at the tibial plateau in primary and revision total knee arthroplasty: fixed versus rotating platform designs. Bone Joint Res 2016;5:122–129. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.54.2000481


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 93-B, Issue 7 | Pages 937 - 941
1 Jul 2011
Bae J Oh J Chon C Oh C Hwang J Yoon Y

We evaluated the biomechanical properties of two different methods of fixation for unstable fractures of the proximal humerus. Biomechanical testing of the two groups, locking plate alone (LP), and locking plate with a fibular strut graft (LPSG), was performed using seven pairs of human cadaveric humeri. Cyclical loads between 10 N and 80 N at 5 Hz were applied for 1 000 000 cycles. Immediately after cycling, an increasing axial load was applied at a rate of displacement of 5 mm/min. The displacement of the construct, maximum failure load, stiffness and mode of failure were compared. The displacement was significantly less in the LPSG group than in the LP group (p = 0.031). All maximum failure loads and measures of stiffness in the LPSG group were significantly higher than those in the LP group (p = 0.024 and p = 0.035, respectively). In the LP group, varus collapse and plate bending were seen. In the LPSG group, the humeral head cut out and the fibular strut grafts fractured. No broken plates or screws were seen in either group. We conclude that strut graft augmentation significantly increases both the maximum failure load and the initial stiffness of this construct compared with a locking plate alone


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 2 | Pages 253 - 257
1 Feb 2007
Seel EH Davies EM

We performed a biomechanical study to compare the augmentation of isolated fractured vertebral bodies using two different bone tamps. Compression fractures were created in 21 vertebral bodies harvested from red deer after determining their initial strength and stiffness, which was then assessed after standardised bipedicular vertebral augmentation using a balloon or an expandable polymer bone tamp. The median strength and stiffness of the balloon bone tamp group was 6.71 kN (. sd. 2.71) and 1.885 kN/mm (. sd. 0.340), respectively, versus 7.36 kN (. sd. 3.43) and 1.882 kN/mm (. sd. 0.868) in the polymer bone tamp group. The strength and stiffness tended to be greater in the polymer bone tamp group than in the balloon bone tamp group, but this difference was not statistically significant (strength p > 0.8, and stiffness p = 0.4)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 164 - 164
1 Sep 2012
Gibson D Keogh C Morris S
Full Access

Introduction. Lag screw cut-out following fixation of unstable intertrochanteric fractures in osteoporotic bone remains an unsolved challenge. A novel new device is the X-Bolt which is an expanding type bolt that may offer superior fixation in osteoporotic bone compared to the standard DHS screw type device. Aims. The aim of this study was to test if there was a difference in cut-out using the X-Bolt implant compared with the standard DHS system. Methods. Specimens of low density surrogate bone (5pcf) were inserted into a simplified biomechanical fracture model and had either an X-Bolt or DHS implant inserted. There were eight samples in each group. The fracture model was tested with an incremental cyclical loading programme in a Material Test System. Displacement, cycle count and force exerted were continuously recorded until cut-out of the implant. Results. All of the specimens failed by varus collapse with superior cut-out and resulted in an automatic stop of the MTS. Specimens with the X-Bolt implant inserted lasted longer on cyclical count and withstood a greater force at cut-out compared with DHS specimens. The mean number of cycles to cutout in the DHS specimens was 4345 and in specimens with the X-Bolt inserted was 6898. The mean force at which cutout occurred in the DHS group was 1.025kN and in specimens with the X-Bolt inserted was 1.275kN. A statistically significant difference was observed with a P-value of 0.005 and a power of 87.2% with respect to cycle count and a P-value of 0.008 and power 84.8% with respect to force exerted at failure when comparing between the two groups. Conclusion. This study shows that the X-Bolt device demonstrated superior cut-out resistance and withstood greater loads compared to the DHS in low density surrogate bone in an unstable fracture model under cyclical axial loading


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 2 | Pages 311 - 311
1 Mar 2004
Bull A


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 87-B, Issue 6 | Pages 879 - 883
1 Jun 2005
Diab M Poston JM Huber P Tencer AF

Repeated trauma to the radial head may be one of the causative factors in the genesis of osteochondritis dissecans of the capitellum. We measured the force, contact area and pressure across the radiocapitellar articulation of the elbow before and after radial shortening osteotomy in five fresh-frozen cadaver upper limbs with loads of 45, 90 and 135 N, respectively. Measurements were made on pressure-sensitive film placed in the radiocapitellar articulation with the forearm in the supinated, neutral and pronated positions before and after radial shortening. Radial shortening significantly reduced the mean force and contact area across the radiocapitellar articulation in all positions of the forearm.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 6 | Pages 1043 - 1043
1 Nov 1997
Turner-Smith A


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 3 | Pages 352 - 357
1 May 1992
Rosenblum S Zuckerman J Kummer F Tam B

We examined the effect of the Gamma nail on strain distribution in the proximal femur, using ten cadaver femora instrumented with six unidirectional strain gauges along the medial and lateral cortices. The femora were loaded to 1800 N and strains were determined with or without distal interlocking screws before and after experimentally created two-part and four-part fractures. Motion of the sliding screw and the nail was also determined. Strain patterns and screw motion were compared with previously obtained values for a sliding hip screw device (SHS). The Gamma nail was shown to transmit decreasing load to the calcar with decreasing fracture stability, such that virtually no strain on the bone was seen in four-part fractures with the posteromedial fragment removed; increasing compression was noted, however, at the proximal lateral cortex. Conversely, the SHS showed increased calcar compression with decreasing fracture stability. The insertion of distal interlocking screws did not change the pattern of proximal femoral strain. The Gamma nail imparts non-physiological strains to the proximal femur, probably because of its inherent stiffness. These strains may alter bone remodelling and interfere with healing. Distal interlocking screws may not be necessary for stable intertrochanteric fractures.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 95-B, Issue 3 | Pages 348 - 353
1 Mar 2013
Metcalfe AJ Stewart C Postans N Dodds AL Holt CA Roberts AP

The aim of this study was to examine the loading of the other joints of the lower limb in patients with unilateral osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. We recruited 20 patients with no other symptoms or deformity in the lower limbs from a consecutive cohort of patients awaiting knee replacement. Gait analysis and electromyographic recordings were performed to determine moments at both knees and hips, and contraction patterns in the medial and lateral quadriceps and hamstrings bilaterally. The speed of gait was reduced in the group with OA compared with the controls, but there were only minor differences in stance times between the limbs. Patients with OA of the knee had significant increases in adduction moment impulse at both knees and the contralateral hip (adjusted p-values: affected knee: p < 0.01, unaffected knee p = 0.048, contralateral hip p = 0.03), and significantly increased muscular co-contraction bilaterally compared with controls (all comparisons for co-contraction, p < 0.01).

The other major weight-bearing joints are at risk from abnormal biomechanics in patients with unilateral OA of the knee.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2013;95-B:348–53.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 2 | Pages 311 - 311
1 Mar 2001
Laurence M


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 1 | Pages 155 - 155
1 Jan 2000
Amis AA


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 80-B, Issue 1 | Pages 186 - 186
1 Jan 1998
Laurence M


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 2 | Pages 277 - 279
1 Mar 1988
Letts M Kaylor D Gouw G

The use of prolonged halo stabilisation in a child is increasingly indicated for trauma and congenital instability of the cervical spine, but complications of pin fixation in this age group are frequent. We have analysed four aspects of the mechanics of the halo pin: the forces applied by each of six surgeons was shown to vary widely, penetration of the inner table occurred relatively easily, friction at the pin-halo interface influenced forces, and the skull thickness measured by CT scan varied from 1.1 mm to 4.3 mm in children under six years of age. We recommend CT scanning of the skull before elective halo application in young children to ascertain the safest pin sites.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 67-B, Issue 2 | Pages 255 - 260
1 Mar 1985
Nakamura N Ellis M Seedhom B

The effects of advancement of the tibial tuberosity by inserting bony wedges was studied on cadaveric specimens of the knee. The geometry, the contact areas and the forces acting on the patellofemoral joint were investigated, and the forces acting on the tibiofemoral compartment were calculated. A 1 cm advancement was found to be optimal in reducing the high patellofemoral joint forces occurring at 90 degrees and 110 degrees of flexion, whilst causing least reduction of the contact areas; the stresses on the joint were reduced significantly. Advancement by 2 cm and by 3 cm drastically reduced the congruity and the size of the contact area. It was also shown that 2 cm and 3 cm advancement caused an increase in forces at the patellofemoral joint and also in the tibiofemoral joint in a direction tangential to the articular surfaces.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 4 | Pages 664 - 665
1 Jul 1990
Kwong K


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 1, Issue 5 | Pages 78 - 85
1 May 2012
Entezari V Della Croce U DeAngelis JP Ramappa AJ Nazarian A Trechsel BL Dow WA Stanton SK Rosso C Müller A McKenzie B Vartanians V Cereatti A

Objectives

Cadaveric models of the shoulder evaluate discrete motion segments using the glenohumeral joint in isolation over a defined trajectory. The aim of this study was to design, manufacture and validate a robotic system to accurately create three-dimensional movement of the upper body and capture it using high-speed motion cameras.

Methods

In particular, we intended to use the robotic system to simulate the normal throwing motion in an intact cadaver. The robotic system consists of a lower frame (to move the torso) and an upper frame (to move an arm) using seven actuators. The actuators accurately reproduced planned trajectories. The marker setup used for motion capture was able to determine the six degrees of freedom of all involved joints during the planned motion of the end effector.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1396 - 1401
1 Oct 2007
Hirpara KM Sullivan PJ Raheem O O’Sullivan ME

We compared the bulking and tensile strength of the Pennington modified Kessler, Cruciate and the Savage repairs in an ex vivo model. A total of 60 porcine tendons were randomised to three groups, half repaired using a core suture alone and the remainder employing a core and peripheral technique. The tendons were distracted to failure. The force required to produce a 3 mm gap, the ultimate strength, the mode of failure and bulking for each repair were assessed. We found that there was a significant increase in strength without an increase in bulk as the number of strands increased. The Cruciate repair was significantly more likely to fail by suture pullout than the Pennington modified Kessler or Savage repairs. We advise the use of the Savage repair, especially in the thumb, and a Cruciate when a Savage is not possible. The Pennington modified Kessler repair should be reserved for multiple tendon injuries.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 347 - 347
1 Jul 2011
Rudol G Pagkalos I Polyzois I Wilcox R Tsiridis E
Full Access

In selected patients in-cement revision of the total hip arthroplasty components is an attractive option. Recommended roughening of the primary mantle surface remains controversial. Aim of the study was to investigate the influence of the cement surface roughening on the strength of bilaminar cement interface.

Flat, laboratory model of bilaminar cement interface was used. Prior to its creation, modeled primary mantle surface was machined to the roughness of either smooth surface observed after removal of a highly polished stem (Ra=200nm) or that following roughening (Ra=5μm). Two viscosities of interfering fluids (water and bone marrow) were also used. 6 variants (smooth or rough, both stained with water, bone marrow or with no fluid) with 7 repeats were exposed to single shear to failure.

No significant difference in resistance to shear was observed between the groups with dry smooth (16.82MPa) and rough surfaces (16.96MPa), and those stained with large volume of low viscosity fluid. In the presence of water, roughening did not significantly influence the interface (smooth – 17.04MPa and rough – 16.25MPa respectively).

In the smooth variant with large volume of viscous fluid, ultimate stress value dropped to 5.53MPa, and 9.87MPa in the roughened group with the same amount of viscous fluid (p< 0.05).

Extra roughening may offer some benefit when performing in-cement revision in the presence of large volume of viscous fluid only though in-cement revision would not be then recommended. In the presence of low viscosity fluids (blood, irrigation fluid) benefit of roughening is dubious.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 99 - 99
1 May 2011
Martin V Sanchez J Castaño M Viñas A González-orús A De Pedro J Dominguez J
Full Access

For the treatment of the fractures of the proximal extremity of the femur two predominant systems exist: the intramedular nail and the sliding screw plate.

The variables at the moment, to be considered, are the weight, age and type of fracture. The principal aims are: To develop models of finite elements of both types of implants and of two types of fracture (stable and unstable), and to integrate the models of finite elements of the implants in the model of fractured femur, to obtain the mechanical behavior of both types of implants and them to fit to the model of finite elements.

The analyzed models have been the gamma-3 nail (Stryker, USA) and the PerCutaneus Compression Plate (PCCP), (Gotfried, Israel). The real geometry has been created in the program SolidWorks 11.0 to be treated later in the program of calculation by means of finite elements Ansys.

The assembly with nail is more rigid (11.51 mm) that with plate (11.95 mm) on having had a few minor displacements. The tensions that appear in the nail (446 MPa) are major that those of the plate (132.93 MPa), in the unstable fractures.

In the unstable fractures, the intramedular nail is more rigid than the system of plate. The tensions to which the nail meets submitted are superior to those of break for what the nail would not be capable of supporting the first cycles of load. It is for it, that the system to using in these cases would be the sliding screw plate.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 3 | Pages 335 - 339
1 May 1992
Maquet P


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 4 | Pages 628 - 634
1 Aug 1988
Amis A Kempson S Campbell Miller J

The anterior cruciate ligament was replaced in rabbits, using implants of carbon or polyester filaments with known mechanical properties. The biocompatibility of the implants was assessed in detail using light microscopy, and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Mechanical tests were made of stability, in comparison with normal joints and controls after excision of the ligament. Some carbon fibre implants broke down in vivo, allowing instability; the fragments caused chronic inflammation. Intact carbon implants did not induce the formation of neoligaments; they were covered by tissue, but there was no ingrowth. Polyester did not degrade mechanically and supported early collagenous ingrowth within the implant, even in the mid-joint space. It was concluded that there was no justification for the use of carbon fibres as anterior cruciate replacements; polyester appeared to be suitable.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 63-B, Issue 1 | Pages 7 - 11
1 Feb 1981
Wardlaw D McLauchlan J Pratt D Bowker P

The off-loading characteristics of the cast-braces of 30 patients with fractures of the shaft of the femur have been investigated, during axial loading, using strain-gauge transducers. These were applied at the level of the fracture, where the cast was circumferentially split, and to the hinges of the brace at the knee. They measured the load transferred between the two portions of the thigh cast, and between the thigh cast as a whole and the below-knee cast; by subtraction from the total load on the limb, the skeletal force at the fracture level and at the knee could be calculated. In all patients there was an increase in the fracture load as union progressed which was thought to be due to physiological feedback mechanism from the fracture site. The load carried by the two portions of the thigh cast and by the thigh cast as a whole was proportionately high at first and stabilised at an average of 35 per cent of body weight.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 3 | Pages 391 - 396
1 Aug 1980
Northmore-Ball M Wood M Meggitt B

In 65 mature Wistar rats a Kirschner wire was introduced into the medullary cavity of each femur. A closed transverse mid-shaft fracture of one femur was produced by a three-point bending technique. Subsequently the mechanical characteristics of the healing fracture, including the torque and angle of twist required to take the callus to its yield point and to ultimate failure, were compared with those for the opposite femur of each rat. Controls were killed in groups at two, three, four, five and seven weeks. Test animals were given bovine growth hormone in a daily dose of five milligrams before being killed in groups at two, three and four weeks. A significant increase in torque index was found in the two-week group of test animals but not in subsequent groups. No evidence was found that growth hormone given alone could produce an overall shortening of the healing time in fresh fractures.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 75-B, Issue 5 | Pages 804 - 807
1 Sep 1993
Wright T Miller G Vander Griend R Wheeler D Dell P

Nine patients with nonunited humeral shaft fractures were treated by open reduction and internal fixation with an intramedullary fibular bone graft and a compression plate. Fixation of the screws was enhanced by passing them through the fibula as well as the two humeral cortices (quadricortical fixation). Eight of the nine fractures united at an average of 3.5 months. Tests on cadaver bones showed that quadricortical fixation was as strong as methylmethacrylate augmentation and significantly better than bicortical fixation.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 74-B, Issue 4 | Pages 585 - 588
1 Jul 1992
Sward L Hughes J Amis A Wallace W

Using 26 cadaver shoulders, we produced a standard defect in the supraspinatus tendon and performed one of three types of repair. Their strength was found by testing in tension the force required to produce a gap of 3 mm, then 6 mm, and finally total disruption of the repair. The use of a polyethylene patch to spread the forces over the lateral bone surface and of extra sutures to grasp the tendon end raised by 2.6 times the load at which a 3 mm gap in the repair occurred and by 1.7 times the load to failure.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 3 | Pages 431 - 434
1 May 1990
Phillips T Messieh S McDonald P

A leading problem with cementless hip replacement is thigh pain, probably due to some degree of loosening. This is most pronounced during activities such as stair climbing or getting up from a chair. Our study compares the immediate fixation of three stems in widespread clinical use, using a cadaver test simulation in which the femur was horizontal, and cyclic forces acted vertically downward on the prosthetic head with gradual increments of load. We implanted and tested 18 pairs of femurs, making analyses between stem types by right to left comparisons. We found no statistically significant differences in loosening between cementless AML and PCA prostheses, but cemented stems withstood greater loads than uncemented stems by a factor of five or more.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 77-B, Issue 2 | Pages 274 - 276
1 Mar 1995
Lacroix H Arwert H Snijders C Fontijne W

To investigate the origin of fractures at the distal locking site of the Gamma nail, we loaded ten paired human cadaver femora fixed with a Gamma nail in torsion until they fractured. When an awl was hammered in to start the hole for distal locking a fissure appeared in the lateral cortex of all the femora, and the mean torsional load to create a fracture was reduced by 57.8% compared with that in a control group in which the distal locking hole had been started with a centre drill. When an additional drill hole was made, the mean failure load in torsion decreased by 35.7%. We strongly recommend that an awl should not be used at the distal locking site of the Gamma nail; we recommend the use of a centre drill. Additional drill holes should be avoided because they act as stress raisers.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 97-B, Issue 5 | Pages 642 - 648
1 May 2015
Hunt NC Ghosh KM Blain AP Rushton SP Longstaff LM Deehan DJ

The aim of this study was to compare the maximum laxity conferred by the cruciate-retaining (CR) and posterior-stabilised (PS) Triathlon single-radius total knee arthroplasty (TKA) for anterior drawer, varus–valgus opening and rotation in eight cadaver knees through a defined arc of flexion (0º to 110º). The null hypothesis was that the limits of laxity of CR- and PS-TKAs are not significantly different.

The investigation was undertaken in eight loaded cadaver knees undergoing subjective stress testing using a measurement rig. Firstly the native knee was tested prior to preparation for CR-TKA and subsequently for PS-TKA implantation. Surgical navigation was used to track maximal displacements/rotations at 0º, 30º, 60º, 90º and 110° of flexion. Mixed-effects modelling was used to define the behaviour of the TKAs.

The laxity measured for the CR- and PS-TKAs revealed no statistically significant differences over the studied flexion arc for the two versions of TKA. Compared with the native knee both TKAs exhibited slightly increased anterior drawer and decreased varus-valgus and internal-external roational laxities. We believe further study is required to define the clinical states for which the additional constraint offered by a PS-TKA implant may be beneficial.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015; 97-B:642–8.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 3 | Pages 402 - 405
1 May 1991
Zuckerman J Leblanc J Choueka J Kummer F

A cadaver study was performed to determine the effect of arm position and capsular release on rotator cuff repair. Artificial defects were made in the rotator cuff to include only the supraspinatus (small) or both supraspinatus and infraspinatus (large). The defects were repaired in a standard manner with the shoulder abducted 30 degrees at the glenohumeral joint. Strain gauges were placed on the lateral cortex of the greater tuberosity and measurements were recorded in 36 different combinations of abduction, flexion/extension, and medial/lateral rotation. Readings were obtained before and after capsular release. With small tears, tension in the repair increased significantly with movement from 30 degrees to 15 degrees of abduction (p < 0.01) but was minimally affected by changes in flexion or rotation. Capsular release significantly reduced the force (p < 0.01) at 0 degree and 15 degrees abduction. For large tears, abduction of 30 degrees or more with lateral rotation and extension consistently produced the lowest values. Capsular release resulted in 30% less force at 0 degree abduction (p < 0.05).


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 73-B, Issue 1 | Pages 57 - 64
1 Jan 1991
Shahgaldi B Amis A Heatley F McDowell J Bentley G

We report the experimental use of three different biological implants to restore articular surface defects: glutaraldehyde-fixed bovine meniscal xenograft, glutaraldehyde-fixed bovine costal cartilage xenograft, and viable osteochondral allografts. The grafts were implanted in the knees of 19 goats who were allowed free-field activity and were studied for up to one year. The natural articular surfaces of meniscal fibrocartilage provided excellent articular surfaces at all times. Equally good articular surfaces were restored by host tissue growth covering costal cartilage grafts at six months, but by 12 months this surface had degenerated. The majority of the allografts survived and integrated with the host at six months, but many showed signs of failure at 12 months. Only three out of seven ungrafted defects healed completely at six months and the healed surfaces were degenerating at 12 months.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 1 | Pages 137 - 140
1 Jan 1990
Lidor C Dekel S Meyer M Blaugrund E Hallel T Edelstein S

In vitamin D-fed chicks 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 and 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 were implanted into experimentally-produced fractures of the mid-tibia. The mechanical and biochemical properties of the tibia were evaluated for two weeks, including torsion tests, measurement of alkaline phosphatase activity, 45Ca incorporation, and Ca2+ content. Both dihydroxylated metabolites of vitamin D3 had a direct effect on endochondral bone formation. 24,25(OH)2D3 strengthened the callus, and raised alkaline phosphate activity in the first seven days after fracture. 1,25(OH)2D3 decreased the strength of the callus concomitant with a reduction in 45Ca incorporation. It is suggested that local application of 24,25(OH)2D3 into fractures may accelerate healing and prevent non-union.


Introduction

Despite the multiple patho-aetiological basis of Hallux valgus (HV), corrective osteotomy is a common and globally performed orthopaedic procedure. Over-correction of the inter-metatarsal angle (IMA), however, is not without consequence. Through increased joint pressures, over-correction may predispose to joint degeneration. Hypothesizing that over-correction leads to an increase in intra-articular joint pressures, we constructed a mechanical simulation of the 1st metatarsal-phalangeal joint.

Methods

The vector forces of Flexor Hallucis Longus, Extensor Hallucis Longus, Extensor Hallucis Brevis and Adductor Hallucis, acting upon the 1st proximal phalanx were simulated with tensioned weighted rope. A Foley catheter balloon inflated to 1.5ml, simulated intra-articular distractive vector forces. The joint was freely mobile.

At 5° IMA intervals from 10° valgus to 15° varus, intrarticular pressures were recorded using a contact pressure (Graseby™, Hertfordshire, UK) transducer attached to a calibrated manometer (Digitech Instruments™, Ulhasnagar, India). At each angle, measurements were repeated five times with removal and recalibration of the pressure monitor after each measurement.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 7 | Pages 905 - 908
1 Jul 2006
Hetsroni I Finestone A Milgrom C Sira DB Nyska M Radeva-Petrova D Ayalon M

Excessive foot pronation has been considered to be related to anterior knee pain. We undertook a prospective study to test the hypothesis that exertional anterior knee pain is related to the static and dynamic parameters of foot pronation. Two weeks before beginning basic training lasting for 14 weeks, 473 infantry recruits were enrolled into the study and underwent two-dimensional measurement of their subtalar joint displacement angle during walking on a treadmill.

Of the 405 soldiers who finished the training 61 (15%) developed exertional anterior knee pain. No consistent association was found between the incidence of anterior knee pain and any of the parameters of foot pronation. While a statistically significant association was found between anterior knee pain and pronation velocity (left foot, p = 0.05; right foot, p = 0.007), the relationship was contradictory for the right and left foot. Our study does not support the hypothesis that anterior knee pain is related to excessive foot pronation.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXIX | Pages 210 - 210
1 Sep 2012
Cummins F Kelly D Kenny P
Full Access

Background and purpose

The two most common complications of femoral impaction bone grafting are femoral fracture and massive implant subsidence. We investigated fracture forces and implant subsidence rates in embalmed human femurs undergoing impaction grafting. The study consisted of two arms, the first examining the force at which femoral fracture occurs in the embalmed human femur, and the second examining whether significant graft implant/subsidence occurs following impaction at a set force at two different impaction frequencies.

Methods

Using a standardized impaction grafting technique with modifications, an initial group of 17 femurs underwent complete destructive impaction testing, allowing sequentially increased, controlled impaction forces to be applied until femoral fracture occurred. A second group of 8 femurs underwent impaction bone grafting at constant force, at an impaction frequency of 1 Hz or 10 Hz. An Exeter stem was cemented into the neomedullary canals. These constructs underwent subsidence testing simulating the first 2 months of postoperative weight bearing.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 34 - 34
17 Nov 2023
Elliott M Rodrigues R Hamilton R Postans N Metcalfe A Jones R McGregor A Arvanitis T Holt C
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Abstract. Objectives. Biomechanics is an essential form of measurement in the understanding of the development and progression of osteoarthritis (OA). However, the number of participants in biomechanical studies are often small and there is limited ways to share or combine data from across institutions or studies. This is essential for applying modern machine learning methods, where large, complex datasets can be used to identify patterns in the data. Using these data-driven approaches, it could be possible to better predict the optimal interventions for patients at an early stage, potentially avoiding pain and inappropriate surgery or rehabilitation. In this project we developed a prototype database platform for combining and sharing biomechanics datasets. The database includes methods for importing and standardising data and associated variables, to create a seamless, searchable combined dataset of both healthy and knee OA biomechanics. Methods. Data was curated through calls to members of the OATech Network+ (. https://www.oatechnetwork.org/. ). The requirements were 3D motion capture data from previous studies that related to analysing the biomechanics of knee OA, including participants with OA at any stage of progression plus healthy controls. As a minimum we required kinematic data of the lower limbs, plus associated kinetic data (i.e. ground reaction forces). Any additional, complementary data such as EMG could also be provided. Relevant ethical approvals had to be in place that allowed re-use of the data for other research purposes. The datasets were uploaded to a University hosted cloud platform. The database platform was developed using Javascript and hosted on a Windows server, located and managed within the department. Results. Three independent datasets were curated following the call to OATech Network+ members. These originated from separate studies collected from biomechanics labs at Cardiff University, Keele University, and Imperial College London. Participants with knee OA were at various stages of progression and all datasets included healthy controls. The total sample size of the three datasets is n=244, split approximately equally between healthy and knee OA participants. Naming conventions and formatting of the exported data varied greatly across datasets. Datasets were therefore formatted into a common format prior to upload, with guidelines developed for future contributions. Uploading data at the marker set level was too complicated for combination at the prototype stage. Therefore, processed variables relating to joint angles and joint moments were used. The resulting prototype database included an import function to align and standardise variables. A a simple query tool was further developed to extract outputs from the database, along with a suitable user interface for basic data exploration. Conclusion. Combining biomechanics dataset presents a wide range of challenges from both a technical and data governance context. Here we have taken the first steps to demonstrate a proof-of-concept that can combine heterogenous data from independent OA-related biomechanics studies into a combined, searchable resource. Expanding this in the future to a fully open access database will create an essential resource that will facilitate the application of data-driven models and analyses for better understanding, stratification and prediction of OA progression. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


In severe cases of total knee & hip arthroplasty, where off-the-shelf implants are not suitable (i.e., in cases with extended bone defects or periprosthetic fractures), 3D-printed custom-made knee & hip revision implants out of titanium or cobalt-chromium alloy represent one of the few remaining clinical treatment options. Design verification and validation of such custom-made implants is very challenging. Therefore, a methodology was developed to support surgeons and engineers in their decision on whether a developed design is suitable for the specific case. A novel method for the pre-clinical testing of 3D-printed custom-made knee implants has been established, which relies on the biomechanical test and finite element analysis (FEA) of a comparable clinically established reference implant. The method comprises different steps, such as identification of the main potential failure mechanism, reproduction of the biomechanical test of the reference implant via FEA, identification of the maximum value of the corresponding FEA quantity of interest at the required load level, definition of this value as the acceptance criterion for the FEA of the custom-made implant, reproduction of the biomechanical test with the custom-made implant via FEA, decision making for realization or re-design based on the acceptance criterion is fulfilled or not. Exemplary cases of custom-made knee & hip implants were evaluated with this new methodology. The FEA acceptance criterion derived from the reference implants was fulfilled in both custom-made implants and subsequent biomechanical tests verified the FEA results. The suggested method allows a quantitative evaluation of the biomechanical properties of custom-made knee & hip implant without performing physical bench testing. This represents an important contribution to achieve a sustainable patient treatment in complex revision total knee & hip arthroplasty with custom-made 3D printed implants in a safe and timely manner


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 89 - 89
1 Dec 2022
Kitzen J Paulson K Edwards B Bansal R Korley R Duffy P Dodd A Martin R Schneider P
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Dual plate constructs have become an increasingly common fixation technique for midshaft clavicle fractures and typically involve the use of mini-fragment plates. The goal of this technique is to reduce plate prominence and implant irritation, as these are common reasons for revision surgery. However, limited biomechanical data exist for these lower-profile constructs. The study aim was to compare dual mini-fragment orthogonal plating to traditional small-fragment clavicle plates for biomechanical non-inferiority and to determine if an optimal plate configuration could be identified, using a cadaveric model. Twenty-four cadaveric clavicles were randomized to one of six groups (n=4 per group), stratified by CT-based bone mineral content (BMC). The six different plating configurations compared were: pre-contoured superior or anterior fixation using a single 3.5-mm LC-DC plate, and four different dual-plating constructs utilizing 2.4-mm and 2.7-mm reconstruction or LC-DC plates. The clavicles were plated and then osteotomized to create an inferior butterfly fracture, which was then fixed with a single interfragmentary screw (OTA 15.2B). Axial, torsional, and bending (anterior and superior surface loading) stiffness were determined for each construct through non-destructive cyclic testing, using an MTS 858 Bionix materials testing system. This was followed by a load-to-failure test in three-point superior-surface bending. Kruskal-Wallace H and Mann-Whitney U were used to test for statistical significance. There were no significant differences in BMC (median 7.9 g, range 4.2-13.8 g) for the six groups (p=1.000). For axial stiffness, the two dual-plate constructs with a superior 2.4-mm and anterior 2.7-mm plate (either reconstruction or LC-DC) were significantly stiffer than the other four constructs (p=0.021). For both superior and anterior bending, the superior 2.4-mm and anterior 2.7-mm plate constructs were significantly stiffer when compared to the 3.5-mm superior plate (p=0.043). In addition, a 3.5-mm plate placed anterior was a stiffer construct than a superior 3.5-mm plate (p=0.043). No significant differences were found in torsional stiffness or load-to-failure between the different constructs. Dual plating using mini-fragment plates is biomechanically superior for fixation of midshaft clavicle fractures when compared to a single superior 3.5-mm plate and has similar biomechanical properties to a 3.5-mm plate placed anteriorly. With the exception of axial stiffness, no significant differences were found when different dual plating constructs were compared to each other. However, placing a 2.4-mm plate superiorly in combination with a 2.7-mm plate anteriorly might be the optimal construct, given the biomechanical superiority over the 3.5-mm plate placed superior


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 5 | Pages 339 - 351
23 May 2023
Tan J Liu X Zhou M Wang F Ma L Tang H He G Kang X Bian X Tang K

Aims. Mechanical stimulation is a key factor in the development and healing of tendon-bone insertion. Treadmill training is an important rehabilitation treatment. This study aims to investigate the benefits of treadmill training initiated on postoperative day 7 for tendon-bone insertion healing. Methods. A tendon-bone insertion injury healing model was established in 92 C57BL/6 male mice. All mice were divided into control and training groups by random digital table method. The control group mice had full free activity in the cage, and the training group mice started the treadmill training on postoperative day 7. The quality of tendon-bone insertion healing was evaluated by histology, immunohistochemistry, reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction, Western blotting, micro-CT, micro-MRI, open field tests, and CatWalk gait and biomechanical assessments. Results. Our results showed a significantly higher tendon-bone insertion histomorphological score in the training group, and the messenger RNA and protein expression levels of type II collagen (COL2A1), SOX9, and type X collagen (COL10A1) were significantly elevated. Additionally, tendon-bone insertion resulted in less scar hyperplasia after treadmill training, the bone mineral density (BMD) and bone volume/tissue volume (BV/TV) were significantly improved, and the force required to induce failure became stronger in the training group. Functionally, the motor ability, limb stride length, and stride frequency of mice with tendon-bone insertion injuries were significantly improved in the training group compared with the control group. Conclusion. Treadmill training initiated on postoperative day 7 is beneficial to tendon-bone insertion healing, promoting biomechanical strength and motor function. Our findings are expected to guide clinical rehabilitation training programmes. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2023;12(5):339–351


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 66 - 66
23 Jun 2023
Chosa E Zhao X
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Finite element analysis (FEA) has been applied for the biomechanical analysis of acetabular dysplasia, but not for biomechanical studies of periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) or those performing analysis taking into consideration the severity of acetabular dysplasia. This study aimed to perform biomechanical evaluation of changes in stress distribution following PAO and to determine the effect of the severity of developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) using three-dimensional FEA. A normal model was designed with a 25° center-edge (CE) angle and a 25° vertical-center-anterior margin (VCA) angle. DDH models were designed with CE and VCA angles each of 10, 0, or −10°. Post-PAO models were created by separating each DDH model and rotating the acetabular bone fragment in the anterolateral direction so that the femoral head was covered by the acetabular bone fragment, with CE and VCA angles each at 25°. Compared to the normal hip joint model, the DDH models showed stress concentration in the acetabular edge and contacting femoral head, and higher stress values; stress increased with decreasing CE and VCA angles. Compared to the DDH models, the post-PAO models showed near-normal patterns of stress distribution in the acetabulum and femoral head, with stress concentration areas shifted from the lateral to medial sides. Stress dispersion was especially apparent in the severe acetabular dysplasia models. PAO provided greater decreases in the maximum values of von Mises stress in the load-bearing area of the acetabulum and femoral head when applied to the DDH models of higher degrees of severity, although the values increased with increasing severity of DDH. PAO is expected to provide biomechanical improvement of the hip joint, although the results also suggest a limitation in the applicability of PAO for the patients with severe acetabular dysplasia


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 120 - 120
11 Apr 2023
Hettich G Weiß J Grupp T
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In severe cases of total knee arthroplasty which cannot be treated with off-the-shelf implants anymore custom-made knee implants may serve as one of the few remaining options to restore joint function or to prevent limb amputation. Custom-made implants are specifically designed and manufactured for one individual patient in a single-unit production, in which the surgeon is responsible for the implant design characteristics in consultation with the corresponding engineer. The mechanical performance of these custom-made implants is challenging to evaluate due to the unique design characteristics and the limited time until which the implant is needed. Nevertheless, the custom-made implant must comply with clinical and regulatory requirements. The design of custom-made implants is often based on a underlying reference implant with available biomechanical test results and well-known clinical performance. To support surgeons and engineers in their decision whether a specific implant design is suitable, a method is proposed to evaluate its mechanical performance. The method uses finite element analysis (FEA) and comprises six steps: (1) Identification of the main potential failure mechanism and its corresponding FEA quantity of interest. (2) Reproduction of the biomechanical test of the reference implant via FEA. (3) Identification of the maximum value of the corresponding FEA quantity of interest at the required load level. (4) Definition of this value as the acceptance criteria for the FEA of the custom-made implant. (5) Reproduction of the biomechanical test with the custom-made implant via FEA. (6) Conclusion whether the acceptance criteria is fulfilled or not. The method was applied to two exemplary cases of custom-made knee implants. The FEA acceptance criteria derived from the reference implants were fulfilled in both custom-made implants. Subsequent biomechanical tests verified the FEA results. This study suggests and applies a non-destructive and efficient method for pre-clinical testing of a single-unit custom-made knee implant to evaluate whether the design is mechanically suitable


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Matrix metalloproteinase enzymes (MMPs) play a crucial role in the remodeling of articular cartilage, contributing also to osteoarthritis (OA) progression. The pericellular matrix (PCM) is a specialized space surrounding each chondrocyte, containing collagen type VI and perlecan. It acts as a transducer of biomechanical and biochemical signals for the chondrocyte. This study investigates the impact of MMP-2, -3, and -7 on the integrity and biomechanical characteristics of the PCM. Human articular cartilage explants (n=10 patients, ethical-nr.:674/2016BO2) were incubated with activated MMP-2, -3, or -7 as well as combinations of these enzymes. The structural degradative effect on the PCM was assessed by immunolabelling of the PCM's main components: collagen type VI and perlecan. Biomechanical properties of the PCM in form of the elastic moduli (EM) were determined by means of atomic force microscopy (AFM), using a spherical cantilever tip (2.5µm). MMPs disrupted the PCM-integrity, resulting in altered collagen type VI and perlecan structure and dispersed pericellular arrangement. A total of 3600 AFM-measurements revealed that incubation with single MMPs resulted in decreased PCM stiffness (p<0.001) when compared to the untreated group. The overall EM were reduced by ∼36% for all the 3 individual enzymes. The enzyme combinations altered the biomechanical properties at a comparable level (∼36%, p<0.001), except for MMP-2/-7 (p=0.202). MMP-induced changes in the PCM composition have a significant impact on the biomechanical properties of the PCM, similar to those observed in early OA. Each individual MMP was shown to be highly capable of selectively degrading the PCM microenvironment. The combination of MMP-2 and -7 showed a lower potency in reducing the PCM stiffness, suggesting a possible interplay between the two enzymes. Our study showed that MMP-2, -3, and -7 play a direct role in the functional and structural remodeling of the PCM. Acknowledgements: This work was supported by the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Tübingen (grant number.: 2650-0-0)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 83 - 83
17 Apr 2023
Tawy G McNicholas M Biant L
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Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) aims to alleviate pain and restore joint biomechanics to an equivalent degree to age-matched peers. Zimmer Biomet's Nexgen TKA was the most common implant in the UK between 2003 and 2016. This study compared the biomechanical outcomes of the Nexgen implant against a cohort of healthy older adults to determine whether knee biomechanics is restored post-TKA. Patients with a primary Nexgen TKA and healthy adults >55 years old with no musculoskeletal deficits or diagnosis of arthritis were recruited locally. Eligible participants attended one research appointment. Bilateral knee range of motion (RoM) was assessed with a goniometer. A motorised arthrometer (GENOUROB) was then used to quantify the anterior-posterior laxity of each knee. Finally, gait patterns were analysed on a treadmill. An 8-camera Vicon motion capture system generated the biomechanical model. Preliminary statistical analyses were performed in SPSS (α = 0.05; required sample size for ongoing study: n=21 per group). The patient cohort (n=21) was older and had a greater BMI than the comparative group (n=13). Patients also had significantly poorer RoM than healthy older adults. However, there were no inter-group differences in knee laxity, walking speed or cadence. Gait kinematics were comparable in the sagittal plane during stance phase. Peak knee flexion during swing phase was lower in the patient group, however (49.0° vs 41.1°). Preliminary results suggest that knee laxity and some spatiotemporal and kinematic parameters of gait are restored in Nexgen TKA patients. While knee RoM remains significantly poorer in the patient cohort, an average RoM of >110° was achieved. This suggests the implant provides sufficient RoM for most activities of daily living. Further improvements to knee kinematics may necessitate additional rehabilitation. Future recruitment drives will concentrate on adults over the age of 70 for improved inter-group comparability


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 26 - 26
11 Apr 2023
Kowalski E Pelegrinelli A Ryan N Dervin G Lamontagne M
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This study examined pre-operative measures to predict post-operative biomechanical outcomes in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients. Twenty-eight patients (female=12/male=16, age=63.6±6.9, BMI=29.9±7.4 kg/m2) with knee osteoarthritis scheduled to undergo TKA were included. All surgeries were performed by the same surgeon (GD) with a subvastus approach. Patients visited the gait lab within one-month prior to surgery and 12 months following surgery. At the gait lab, patients completed the knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score (KOOS), a timed up and go (TUG), maximum knee flexion and extension strength evaluation, and a walking task. Variables of interest included the five KOOS sub-scores, TUG time, maximum knee flexion and extension strength normalized to body weight, walking speed, and peak knee biomechanics variables (flexion angle, abduction moment, power absorption). A Pearson's correlation was used to identify significantly correlated variables which were then inputted into a multiple regression. No assumption violations for the multiple regression existed for any variables. Pre-operative knee flexion and extension strength, TUG time, and age were used in the multiple regression. The multiple regression model statistically significantly predicted peak knee abduction moment, post-operative walking speed, and post-operative knee flexion strength. All four variables added statistically significantly to the prediction p<.05. Pre-operative KOOS values did not correlate with any biomechanical indicators of post-operative success. Age, pre-operative knee flexion and extension strength, and TUG times predicted peak knee abduction moment, which is associated with medial knee joint loading. These findings stress the importance of pre-surgery condition, as stronger individuals achieved better post-operative biomechanical outcomes. Additionally, younger patients had better outcomes, suggesting that surgeons should not delay surgery in younger patients. This delay in surgery may prevent patients from achieving optimal outcomes. Future studies should utilize a hierarchical multiple regression to identify which variables are most predictive


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 25 - 25
11 Apr 2023
Richter J Ciric D Kalchschmidt K D'Aurelio C Pommer A Dauwe J Gueorguiev B
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Reorientating pelvic osteotomies are performed to improve femoral head coverage and secondary degenerative arthritis. A rectangular triple pelvic innominate osteotomy (3PIO) is performed in symptomatic cases. However, deciding optimal screw fixation type to avoid complications is questionable. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the biomechanical behavior of two different acetabular screw configurations used for rectangular 3PIO osteosynthesis. It was hypothesized that bi-directional screw fixation would be biomechanically superior to mono-axial screw fixation technique. A rectangular 3PIO was performed in twelve right-side artificial Hemi-pelvises. Group 1 (G1) had two axial and one transversal screw in a bi-directional orientation. Group 2 (G2) had three screws in the axial direction through the iliac crest. Acetabular fragment was reoriented to 10.5° inclination in coronal plane, and 10.0° increased anteversion along axial plane. Specimens were biomechanically tested until failure under progressively increasing cyclic loading at 2Hz, starting at 50N peak compression, increasing 0.05N/cycle. Stiffness was calculated from machine data. Acetabular anteversion, inclination and medialization were evaluated from motion tracking data from 250-2500 at 250 cycle increments. Failure cycles and load were evaluated for 5° change in anteversion. Stiffness was higher in G1 (56.46±19.45N/mm) versus G2 (39.02±10.93N/mm) but not significantly, p=0.31. Acetabular fragment anteversion, inclination and medialization increased significantly each group (p≤0.02) and remained non-significantly different between the groups (p≥0.69). Cycles to failure and failure load were not significantly different between G1 (4406±882, 270.30±44.10N) and G2 (5059±682, 302.95±34.10N), p=0.78. From a biomechanical perspective, the present study demonstrates that a bi-directional screw orientation does not necessarily advantageous versus mono-axial alignment when the latter has all three screws evenly distributed over the osteotomy geometry. Moreover, the 3PIO fixation is susceptible to changes in anteversion, inclination and medialization of the acetabular fragment until the bone is healed. Therefore, cautious rehabilitation with partial weight-bearing is recommended


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 12, Issue 8 | Pages 504 - 511
23 Aug 2023
Wang C Liu S Chang C

Aims. This study aimed to establish the optimal fixation methods for calcaneal tuberosity avulsion fractures with different fragment thicknesses in a porcine model. Methods. A total of 36 porcine calcanea were sawed to create simple avulsion fractures with three different fragment thicknesses (5, 10, and 15 mm). They were randomly fixed with either two suture anchors or one headless screw. Load-to-failure and cyclic loading tension tests were performed for the biomechanical analysis. Results. This biomechanical study predicts that headless screw fixation is a better option if fragment thickness is over 15 mm in terms of the comparable peak failure load to suture anchor fixation (headless screw: 432.55 N (SD 62.25); suture anchor: 446.58 N (SD 84.97)), and less fracture fragment displacement after cyclic loading (headless screw: 3.94 N (SD 1.76); suture anchor: 8.68 N (SD 1.84)). Given that the fragment thickness is less than 10 mm, suture anchor fixation is a safer option. Conclusion. Fracture fragment thickness helps in making the decision of either using headless screw or suture anchor fixation in treating calcaneal tuberosity avulsion fracture, based on the regression models of our study. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2023;12(8):504–511


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 83 - 83
1 Jul 2022
Dandridge O Garner A Amis A Cobb J Arkel RV
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Abstract. Patellofemoral Arthroplasty (PFA) is an alternative to TKA for patellofemoral osteoarthritis that preserves tibiofemoral compartments. It is unknown how implant positioning affects biomechanics, especially regarding the patella. This study analysed biomechanical effects of femoral and patellar component position, hypothesising femoral positioning is more important. Nine cadaveric knees were studied using a repeated-measures protocol. Knees were tested intact, then after PFA implanted in various positions: neutral (as-planned), patellar over/understuffing (±2mm), patellar tilt, patellar flexion, femoral rotation, and femoral tilt (all ±6°). Arthroplasties were implemented with CT-designed patient-specific instrumentation. Anterior femoral cuts referenced Whiteside's line and all femoral positions ensured smooth condyle-to-component transition. Knee extension moments, medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL) length-change, and tibiofemoral and patellofemoral kinematics were measured under physiological muscle loading. Data were analysed with one-dimensional statistical parametric mapping (Bonferroni-Holm corrected). PFA changed knee function, altering extension moments (p<0.001) and patellofemoral kinematics (p<0.05), but not tibiofemoral kinematics. Patellar component positioning affected patellofemoral kinematics: over/understuffing influenced patellar anterior translation and the patellar tendon moment arm (p<0.001). Medially tilted patellar cuts produced lateral patellar tilt (p<0.001) and vice versa. A similar inverse effect occurred with extended/flexed patellar cuts, causing patellar flexion and extension (p<0.001), respectively. Of all variants, only extending the patellar cut produced near-native extension moments throughout. Conversely, the only femoral effect was MPFL length change between medially/laterally rotated components. PFA can restore native knee biomechanics. Provided anterior femoral cuts are controlled and smooth condyle-to-component transition assured, patellar position affects biomechanics more than femoral, contradicting the hypothesis


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Dec 2022
Kowalski E Dervin G Lamontagne M
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One in five patients remain unsatisfied due to ongoing pain and impaired mobility following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). It is important if surgeons can pre-operatively identify which patients may be at risk for poor outcomes after TKA. The purpose of this study was to determine if there is an association between pre-operative measures and post-operative outcomes in patients who underwent TKA. This study included 28 patients (female = 12 / male = 16, age = 63.6 ± 6.9, BMI = 29.9 ± 7.4 kg/m2) with knee osteoarthritis who were scheduled to undergo TKA. All surgeries were performed by the same surgeon (GD), and a subvastus approach was performed for all patients. Patients visited the gait lab within one-month of surgery and 12 months following surgery. At the gait lab, patients completed the knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score (KOOS), a timed up and go (TUG), and walking task. Variables of interest included the five KOOS sub-scores (symptoms, pain, activities of daily living, sport & recreation, and quality of life), completion time for the TUG, walking speed, and peak knee biomechanics variables (flexion angle, abduction moment, power absorption). A Pearson's product-moment correlation was run to assess the relationship between pre-operative measures and post-operative outcomes in the TKA patients. Preliminary analyses showed the relationship to be linear with all variables normally distributed, as assessed by Shapiro-Wilk's test (p > .05), and there were no outliers. There were no statistically significant correlations between any of the pre-operative KOOS sub-scores and any of the post-operative biomechanical outcomes. Pre-operative TUG time had a statistically significant, moderate positive correlation with post-operative peak knee abduction moments [r(14) = .597, p < .001] and peak knee power absorption [r(14) = .498, p = .007], with pre-operative TUG time explaining 36% of the variability in peak knee abduction moment and 25% of the variability in peak knee power absorption. Pre-operative walking speed had a statistically significant, moderate negative correlation with post-operative peak knee abduction moments [r(14) = -.558, p = .002] and peak knee power absorption [r(14) = -.548, p = .003], with pre-operative walking speed explaining 31% of the variability in peak knee abduction moment and 30% of the variability in peak knee power absorption. Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs), such as the KOOS, do indicate the TKA is generally successful at relieving pain and show an overall improvement. However, their pre-operative values do not correlate with any biomechanical indicators of post-operative success, such as peak knee abduction moment and knee power. Shorter pre-operative TUG times and faster pre-operative walking speeds were correlated with improved post-operative biomechanical outcomes. These are simple tasks surgeons can implement into their clinics to evaluate their patients. Future research should expand these findings to a larger sample size and to determine if other factors, such as surgical approach or implant design, improves patient outcomes


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 106-B, Issue 8 | Pages 792 - 801
1 Aug 2024
Kleeman-Forsthuber L Kurkis G Madurawe C Jones T Plaskos C Pierrepont JW Dennis DA

Aims. Spinopelvic pathology increases the risk for instability following total hip arthroplasty (THA), yet few studies have evaluated how pathology varies with age or sex. The aims of this study were: 1) to report differences in spinopelvic parameters with advancing age and between the sexes; and 2) to determine variation in the prevalence of THA instability risk factors with advancing age. Methods. A multicentre database with preoperative imaging for 15,830 THA patients was reviewed. Spinopelvic parameter measurements were made by experienced engineers, including anterior pelvic plane tilt (APPT), spinopelvic tilt (SPT), sacral slope (SS), lumbar lordosis (LL), and pelvic incidence (PI). Lumbar flexion (LF), sagittal spinal deformity, and hip user index (HUI) were calculated using parameter measurements. Results. With advancing age, patients demonstrate increased posterior APPT, decreased standing LL, decreased LF, higher pelvic incidence minus lumbar lordosis (PI-LL) mismatch, higher prevalence of abnormal spinopelvic mobility, and higher HUI percentage. With each decade, APPT progressed posteriorly 2.1°, LF declined 6.0°, PI-LL mismatch increased 2.9°, and spinopelvic mobility increased 3.8°. Significant differences were found between the sexes for APPT, SPT, SS, LL, and LF, but were not felt to be clinically relevant. Conclusion. With advancing age, spinopelvic biomechanics demonstrate decreased spinal mobility and increased pelvic/hip mobility. Surgeons should consider the higher prevalence of instability risk factors in elderly patients and anticipate changes evolving in spinopelvic biomechanics for young patients. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2024;106-B(8):792–801


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 119 - 119
2 Jan 2024
Tryfonidou M
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Tryfonidou leads the Horizon 2020 consortium (iPSpine; 2019–2023) bringing a transdisciplinary team of 21 partners together to address the challenges and bottlenecks of iPS-based advanced therapies towards their transition to the clinic. Here, chronic back pain due to intervertebral disc degeneration is employed as a show case. The project develops the iPS-technology and designed smart biomaterials to carry, protect and instruct the iPS cells within the degenerate disc environment. This work will be presented including ongoing activities focus on translating the developed methodology and tools towards clinically relevant animal models. The consortium optimized the protocol for the differentiated iPS-notochordal-like cells (iPS-NLCs) and shortlisted two biomaterials shortlisted based on their physicochemical, cytotoxicity, biomechanical and biocompatibility testing. Both were shown to be safe and have been tested with the progenitors of iPS-NLCs. An advanced platform (e.g., the dynamic loading bioreactor for disc tissue) was used to evaluate their performance: the biomaterials supported the iPS-NLC progenitors after injection into the degenerate disc and seem to also support their maturation towards NLCs. Furthermore, we confirmed the capacity of these cells to survive inside degenerated discs at 30 days upon injection in sheep, whereafter we continued with their evaluation at 3 months post-injection. We achieved full evaluation of the sheep spines, including biomechanical analysis using the portable spine biomechanics tester prior analysis at the macro- and microscopic, and biochemical level


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 82 - 82
11 Apr 2023
Souleiman F Zderic I Pastor T Varga P Helfen T Richards G Gueorguiev B Theopold J Osterhoff G Hepp P
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Glenohumeral joint injuries frequently result in shoulder instability. However, the biomechanical effect of cartilage loss on shoulder stability remains unknown. The aim of the current study was to investigate biomechanically the effect of two severity stages of cartilage loss in different dislocation directions on shoulder stability. Joint dislocation was provoked for 11 human cadaveric glenoids in seven different dislocation directions between 3 o'clock (anterior) to 9 o'clock (posterior) dislocation. Shoulder stability ratio (SSR) and concavity gradient were assessed in intact condition, and after 3 mm and 6 mm simulated cartilage loss. The influence of cartilage loss on SSR and concavity gradient was statistically evaluated. Between intact state and 6 mm cartilage loss, both SSR and concavity gradient decreased significantly in every dislocation direction (p≤0.038), except the concavity gradient in 4 o'clock dislocation direction (p=0.088). Thereby, anterior-inferior dislocation directions were associated with the highest loss of SSR and concavity gradient of up to 59.0% and 49.4%, respectively, being significantly higher for SSR compared to all other dislocation directions (p≤0.04). The correlations between concavity gradient and SSR for pooled dislocation directions were significant for all three conditions of cartilage loss (p<0.001). From a biomechanical perspective, articular cartilage of the glenoid contributes significantly to the concavity gradient, correlating strongly with the associated loss in glenohumeral joint stability. The highest effect of cartilage loss was observed in anterior-inferior dislocation directions, suggesting that surgical intervention should be considered for recurrent shoulder dislocations in the presence of cartilage loss


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 82 - 82
23 Jun 2023
Halvorson RT Khattab K Ngwe H Ornowski J Akkaya Z Matthew RP Souza R Bird A Lotz J Vail TP Bailey JF
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Patients demonstrate distinct trajectories of recovery after THA. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of adjacent muscle quality on postoperative hip kinematics. We hypothesized that patients with better adjacent muscle quality (less fatty infiltration) would have greater early biomechanical improvement. Adults undergoing primary THA were recruited. Preoperative MRI was obtained and evaluated via Scoring Hip Osteoarthritis with MRI Scores (SHOMRI, Lee, 2015). Muscle quality was assessed by measuring fat fraction [FF] from water-fat sequences. Biomechanics were assessed preoperatively and six weeks postoperatively during a staggered stance sit-to-stand using the Kinematic Deviation Index (KDI, Halvorson, 2022). Spearman's rho was used to assess correlations between muscle quality and function. Ten adults (5M, 5F) were recruited (average age: 60.1, BMI: 23.79, SHOMRI: 40.6, KDI: 2.96). Nine underwent a direct anterior approach and one a posterior approach. Preoperatively, better biomechanical function was very strongly correlated with lower medius FF (rho=0.89), strongly correlated with lower FF in the minimus (rho=0.75) and tensor fascia lata (TFL) FF (rho=0.70), and weakly correlated with SHOMRI (rho=0.29). At six weeks, greater biomechanical improvement was strongly correlated with lower minimus FF (rho=0.63), moderately correlated with medius FF (rho=0.59), and weakly correlated with TFL FF (rho=0.26) and SHOMRI (rho=0.39). Lastly, medius FF was moderately correlated with SHOMRI (rho=0.42) with negligible correlations between SHOMRI and FF in the minimus and TFL. These findings suggest adjacent muscle quality may be related to postoperative function following THA, explaining some of the variability and supporting specialized muscle rehabilitation or regeneration therapy to improve outcomes


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 41 - 41
4 Apr 2023
Benca E Zderic I van Knegsel K Caspar J Hirtler L Fuchssteiner C Strassl A Gueorguiev B Widhalm H Windhager R Varga P
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Odontoid fracture of the second cervical vertebra (C2) is the most common spinal fracture type in elderly patients. However, very little is known about the biomechanical fracture mechanisms, but could play a role in fracture prevention and treatment. This study aimed to investigate the biomechanical competence and fracture characteristics of the odontoid process. A total of 42 human C2 specimens (14 female and 28 male, 71.5 ± 6.5 years) were scanned via quantitative computed tomography, divided in 6 groups (n = 7) and subjected to combined quasi-static loading at a rate of 0.1 mm/s until fracturing at inclinations of −15°, 0° and 15° in sagittal plane, and −50° and 0° in transverse plane. Bone mineral density (BMD), specimen height, fusion state of the ossification centers, stiffness, yield load, ultimate load, and fracture type according to Anderson and d'Alonzo were assessed. While the lowest values for stiffness, yield, and ultimate load were observed at load inclination of 15° in sagittal plane, no statistically significant differences could be observed among the six groups (p = 0.235, p = 0.646, and p = 0.505, respectively). Evaluating specimens with only clearly distinguishable fusion of the ossification centers (n = 26) reveled even less differences among the groups for all mechanical parameters. BMD was positively correlated with yield load (R² = 0.350, p < 0.001), and ultimate load (R² = 0.955, p < 0.001), but not with stiffness (p = 0.070). Type III was the most common fracture type (23.5%). These biomechanical outcomes indicate that load direction plays a subordinate role in traumatic fractures of the odontoid process in contrast to BMD which is a strong determinant of stiffness and strength. Thus, odontoid fractures appear to result from an interaction between load magnitude and bone quality


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 4 - 4
2 Jan 2024
Han S Yoo Y Choi H Lee K Korhonen R Esrafilian A
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It is known that the gait dynamics of elderly substantially differs from that of young people. However, it has not been well studied how this age-related gait dynamics affects the knee biomechanics, e.g., cartilage mechanical response. In this study, we investigated how aging affects knee biomechanics in a female population using subject-specific computational models. Two female subjects (ages of 23 and 69) with no musculoskeletal disorders were recruited. Korea National Institute for Bioethics Policy Review Board approved the study. Participants walked at a self-selected speed (SWS), 110% of SWS, and 120% of SWS on 10 m flat ground. Three-dimensional marker trajectories and ground reaction forces (Motion Analysis, USA), and lower limbs’ muscle activities were measured (EMG, Noraxon USA). Knee cartilage and menisci geometries were obtained from subjects’ magnetic resonance images (3T, GE Health Care). An EMG-assisted musculoskeletal finite element modeling workflow was used to estimate knee cartilage tissue mechanics in walking trials. Knee cartilage and menisci were modeled using a transversely isotropic poroviscoelastic material model. Walking speed in SWS, 110%, and 120% of SWS were 1.38 m/s, 1.51 m/s, and 1.65 m/s for the young, and 1.21 m/s, 1.34 m/s and 1.46 m/s for the elderly, respectively. The maximum tensile stress in the elderly tibial cartilage was ~25%, ~33%, and ~32% lower than the young at SWS, 110%, and 120% of SWS, respectively. These preliminary results suggest that the cartilage in the elderly may not have enough stimulation even at 20% increases in walking speed, which may be one reason for tissue degeneration. To enhance these findings, further study with more subjects and different genders will investigate how age-related gait dynamics affects knee biomechanics. Acknowledgments: Australian NHMRC Ideas Grant (APP2001734), KITECH (JE220006)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 5 - 5
11 Apr 2023
Mischler D Tenisch L Schader J Dauwe J Gueorguiev B Windolf M Varga P
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Despite past advances of implant technologies, complication rates of fixations remain high at challenging sites such as the proximal humerus [1]. These may not only be owed to the implant itself but also to dissatisfactory surgical execution of fracture reduction and implant positioning. Therefore, the aim of this study was to quantify the instrumentation accuracy of a highly standardised and guided procedure and its influence on the biomechanical outcome and predicted failure risk. Preoperative planning of osteotomies creating an unstable 3-part fracture and fixation with a locking plate was performed based on CT scans of eight pairs of low-density proximal humerus samples from elderly female donors (85.2±5.4 years). 3D-printed subject-specific guides were used to osteotomise and instrument the samples according to the pre-OP plan. Instrumentation accuracies in terms of screw lengths and orientations were evaluated by comparing post-OP CT scans with the pre-OP plan. The fixation constructs were biomechanically tested until cyclic cut-out failure [2]. Failure risks of the planned and the post-OP configurations were predicted using a validated sample-specific finite element (FE) simulation approach [2] and correlated with the experimental outcomes. Small deviations were found for the instrumented screw trajectories compared to the planned configuration in the proximal-distal (0.3±1.3º) and anterior-posterior directions (-1.7±1.8º), and for screw tip to joint distances (-0.3±1.1 mm). Significantly higher failure risk was predicted for the post-OP compared to the planned configurations (p<0.01) via FE. When incorporating the instrumentation inaccuracies, the biomechanical results could be predicted well with FE (R. 2. =0.70). Despite the high instrumentation accuracy achieved using sophisticated subject-specific 3D-printed guides, even minor deviations from the pre-OP plan significantly increased the FE-predicted risk of failure. This underlines the importance of intraoperative guiding technology [3] in tandem with careful pre-OP planning to assist surgeons to achieve optimal outcomes. Acknowledgements. This study was performed with the assistance of the AO Foundation via the AOTRAUMA Network


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 43 - 43
11 Apr 2023
Amirouche F Mok J Leonardo Diaz R Forsthoefel C Hussain A
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Lateral lumbar interbody fusion (LLIF) has biomechanical advantages due to the preservation of ligamentous structures (ALL/PLL), and optimal cage height afforded by the strength of the apophyseal ring. We compare the biomechanical motion stability of multiple levels LLIF (4 segments) utilising PEEK interbody 26mm cages to stand-alone cage placement and with supplemental posterior fixation with pedicle screw and rods. Six lumbar human cadaver specimens were stripped of the paraspinal musculature while preserving the discs, facet joints, and osteoligamentous structures and potted. Specimens were tested under 5 conditions: intact, posterior bilateral fixation (L1-L5) only, LLIF-only, LLIF with unilateral fixation and LLIF with bilateral fixation. Non-destructive testing was performed on a universal testing machine (MTS Systems Corp) to produce flexion-extension, lateral-bending, and axial rotation using customized jigs and a pulley system to define a non-constraining load follower. Three-dimensional spine motion was recorded using a motion device (Optotrak). Results are reported for the L3-L4 motion segment within the construct to allow comparison with previously published works of shorter constructs (1-2 segments). In all conditions, there was an observed decrease in ROM from intact in flexion/extension (31%-89% decrease), lateral bending (19%-78%), and axial rotation (37%-60%). At flexion/extension, the decreases were statistically significant (p<0.007) except for stand-alone LLIF. LLIF+unilateral had similar decreases in all planes as the LLIF+bilateral condition. The observed ROM within the 4-level construct was similar to previously reported results in 1-2 levels for stand-alone LLIF and LLIF+bilateral. Surgeons may be concerned about the biomechanical stability of an approach utilizing stand-alone multilevel LLIF. Our results show that 4-level multilevel LLIF utilizing 26 mm cages demonstrated ROM comparable to short-segment LLIF. Stand-alone LLIF showed a decrease in ROM from the intact condition. The addition of posterior supplemental fixation resulted in an additional decrease in ROM. The results suggest that unilateral posterior fixation may be sufficient


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 80 - 80
11 Apr 2023
Oliveira J Simões J Noronha J Ramos A
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Validation of a new meniscal root repair technique that will be biomechanically superior to current gold standard procedures and, at the same time, will allow controlled adjustable fixation. Medial and lateral meniscus from 10 porcine knees were collected. An iatrogenic posterior root tear was created and a single transosseous tibial tunnel technique that closely replicates the repair procedure with a 2-mm-wide-knottable braided tape was performed. Randomly, in one group (A) two simple cinch stitch were applied to suture the posterior root of the meniscus and, in the other group (B), a simple stich that holds the meniscus in two points in a crosse match configuration was used. For final fixation, alternating surgeon's knots (A group) and a doubled suture knot that allows an adjustable fixation were used (B group). All repairs were standardized for location and the repair stiches were placed in the body of the meniscus. The new suture configuration (B group) showed a better biomechanical performance in terms of load for both the medial [151,0-560,3] 306,9±173,8N and the lateral posterior root fixation [268,2-463,1] 347,4±74,3N in comparison to the cinch stitch (A group) [219,0-365,2] 268,9±58,7N and [219,0-413,6] 318,0±72N. The maximum stiffness was also higher for the new tested suture configuration (B group) for both the medial meniscus [10,6-34,5] 18,9±9,2N/mm vs [7,1-12,7] 10,9±2,2N/mm and the lateral meniscus [16,0-27,9] 21,6±5,5N/mm vs [7,6-15,6] 12,6±3,5N/mm. The presented new meniscal root repair is biomechanically superior to current gold standard techniques, as the cinch stich made with tape, keeping the simplicity and reproducibility of the procedure and, at the same time, is economically advantageous since a single tape in needed and allows adjustable fixation of the repair over a button


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 107 - 107
2 Jan 2024
Pastor T Zderic I Berk T Souleiman F Vögelin E Beeres F Gueorguiev B Pastor T
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Recently, a new generation of superior clavicle plates was developed featuring the variable-angle locking technology for enhanced screw positioning and optimized plate-to-bone fit design. On the other hand, mini-fragment plates used in dual plating mode have demonstrated promising clinical results. However, these two bone-implant constructs have not been investigated biomechanically in a human cadaveric model. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to compare the biomechanical competence of single superior plating using the new generation plate versus dual plating with low-profile mini-fragment plates. Sixteen paired human cadaveric clavicles were assigned pairwise to two groups for instrumentation with either a 2.7 mm Variable Angle Locking Compression Plate placed superiorly (Group 1), or with one 2.5 mm anterior plate combined with one 2.0 mm superior matrix mandible plate (Group 2). An unstable clavicle shaft fracture AO/OTA15.2C was simulated by means of a 5 mm osteotomy gap. All specimens were cyclically tested to failure under craniocaudal cantilever bending, superimposed with bidirectional torsion around the shaft axis and monitored via motion tracking. Initial stiffness was significantly higher in Group 2 (9.28±4.40 N/mm) compared to Group 1 (3.68±1.08 N/mm), p=0.003. The amplitudes of interfragmentary motions in terms of craniocaudal and shear displacement, fracture gap opening and torsion were significantly bigger over the course of 12500 cycles in Group 1 compared to Group 2; p≤0.038. Cycles to 2 mm shear displacement were significantly lower in Group 1 (22792±4346) compared to Group 2 (27437±1877), p=0.047. From a biomechanical perspective, low-profile 2.5/2.0 dual plates demonstrated significantly higher initial stiffness, less interfragmentary movements, and higher resistance to failure compared to 2.7 single superior variable-angle locking plates and can therefore be considered as a useful alternative for diaphyseal clavicle fracture fixation especially in unstable fracture configurations


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 5 - 5
1 Dec 2022
Lombardo MDM Mangiavini L Peretti GM
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Menisci are crucial structures for knee homeostasis: they provide increase of congruence between the articular surfaces of the distal femur and tibial plateau, bear loading, shock absorption, lubrication, and proprioception. After a meniscal lesion, the golden rule, now, is to save as much meniscus as possible: only the meniscus tissue which is identified as unrepairable should be excised and meniscal sutures find more and more indications. Several different methods have been proposed to improve meniscal healing. They include very basic techniques, such as needling, abrasion, trephination and gluing, or more complex methods, such as synovial flaps, meniscal wrapping, or the application of fibrin clots. Basic research of meniscal substitutes has also become very active in the last decades. The features needed for a meniscal scaffold are: promotion of cell migration, it should be biomimetic and biocompatible, it should resist forces applied and transmitted by the knee, it should slowly biodegrade and should be easy to handle and implant. Several materials have been tested, that can be divided into synthetic and biological. The first have the advantage to be manufactured with the desired shapes and sizes and with precise porosity dimension and biomechanical characteristics. To date, the most common polymers are polylactic acid (PGA); poly-(L)-lactic acid (PLLA); poly- (lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA); polyurethane (PU); polyester carbon and polycaprolactone (PCL). The possible complications, more common in synthetic than natural polymers are poor cell adhesion and the possibility of developing a foreign body reaction or aseptic inflammation, leading to alter the joint architecture and consequently to worsen the functional outcomes. The biological materials that have been used over time are the periosteal tissue, the perichondrium, the small intestine submucosa (SIS), acellular porcine meniscal tissue, bacterial cellulose. Although these have a very high biocompatibility, some components are not suitable for tissue engineering as their conformation and mechanical properties cannot be modified. Collagen or proteoglycans are excellent candidates for meniscal engineering, as they maintain a high biocompatibility, they allow for the modification of the porosity texture and size and the adaptation to the patient meniscus shape. On the other hand, they have poor biomechanical characteristics and a more rapid degradation rate, compared to others, which could interfere with the complete replacement by the host tissue. An interesting alternative is represented by hydrogel scaffolds. Their semi-liquid nature allows for the generation of scaffolds with very precise geometries obtained from diagnostic images (i.e. MRI). Promising results have been reported with alginate and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA). Furthermore, hydrogel scaffolds can be enriched with growth factors, platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and Bone Marrow Aspirate Concentrate (BMAC). In recent years, several researchers have developed meniscal scaffolds combining different biomaterials, to optimize the mechanical and biological characteristics of each polymer. For example, biological polymers such as chitosan, collagen and gelatin allow for excellent cellular interactions, on the contrary synthetic polymers guarantee better biomechanical properties and greater reliability in the degradation time. Three-dimensional (3D) printing is a very interesting method for meniscus repair because it allows for a patient-specific customization of the scaffolds. The optimal scaffold should be characterized by many biophysical and biochemical properties as well as bioactivity to ensure an ECM-like microenvironment for cell survival and differentiation and restoration of the anatomical and mechanical properties of the native meniscus. The new technological advances in recent years, such as 3D bioprinting and mesenchymal stem cells management will probably lead to an acceleration in the design, development, and validation of new and effective meniscal substitutes


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 52 - 52
17 Nov 2023
Jones R Bowd J Gilbert S Wilson C Whatling G Jonkers I Holt C Mason D
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Abstract. OBJECTIVE. Knee varus malalignment increases medial knee compartment loading and is associated with knee osteoarthritis (OA) progression and severity. 1. Altered biomechanical loading and dysregulation of joint tissue biology drive OA progression, but mechanistic links between these factors are lacking. Subchondral bone structural changes are biomechanically driven, involve bone resorption, immune cell influx, angiogenesis, and sensory nerve invasion, and contribute to joint destruction and pain. 2. We have investigated mechanisms underlying this involving RANKL and alkaline phosphatase (ALP), which reflect bone resorption and mineralisation respectively. 3. and the axonal guidance factor Sema3A. Sema3A is osteotropic, expressed by mechanically sensitive osteocytes, and an inhibitor of sensory nerve, blood vessel and immune cell invasion. 4. Sema3A is also differentially expressed in human OA bone. 5. HYPOTHESIS: Medial knee compartment overloading in varus knee malalignment patients causes dysregulation of bone derived Sema3A signalling directly linking joint biomechanics to pathology and pain. METHODS. Synovial fluid obtained from 30 subjects with medial knee OA (KL grade II-IV) undergoing high tibial osteotomy surgery (HTO) was analysed by mesoscale discovery and ELISA analysis for inflammatory, neural and bone turnover markers. 11 of these patients had been previously analysed in a published patient-specific musculoskeletal model. 6. of gait estimating joint contact location, pressure, forces, and medial-lateral condyle load distribution in a published data set included in analyses. Data analysis was performed using Pearson's correlation matrices and principal component analyses. Principal Components (PCs) with eigenvalues greater than 1 were analysed. RESULTS. PC1 (32.94% of variation) and PC2 (25.79% of variation) from PCA analysis and correlation matrices separated patients according to correlated clusters of established inflammatory markers of OA pain and progression (IL6/IL8, r=0.754, p<0.001) and anti-inflammatory mediators (IL4/IL10, r=0.469, p=0.005). Bone turnover marker ALP was positively associated with KL grade (r=0.815, p=0.002) and negatively associated with IL10 (r=−0.402, p=0.018) and first peak knee loading pressures (r=−0.688, p=0.019). RANKL was positively associated with IL4 (r=0.489, p=0.003). Synovial fluid Sema3A concentrations showed separate clustering from all OA progression markers and was inversely correlated with TNF-α (r=−0.423, p=0.022) in HTO patients. Sema3A was significantly inversely correlated with total predicted force in the medial joint compartment (r=−0.621, p=0.041), mean (r=−0.63, p=0.038) and maximum (r=−0.613, p=0.045) calculated medial compartment joint pressures during the first phase and mean (r=−0.618, p=0.043) and maximum (r=−0.641, p=0.034) medial compartment joint pressures during midstance outputs of patient-specific musculoskeletal model. CONCLUSIONS. This study shows joint inflammatory status and mechanical overloading influence subchondral bone-remodelling. Synovial Sema3A concentrations are inversely correlated to patient-specific musculoskeletal model estimations of pathological medial overloading. This study reveals Sema3A as a biological mediator with capacity to induce OA pain and disease progression that is directly regulated by gait mechanical loading. Declaration of Interest. (b) declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research reported:I declare that there is no conflict of interest that could be perceived as prejudicing the impartiality of the research project


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 9, Issue 6 | Pages 285 - 292
1 Jun 2020
Wang Z Li H Long Z Lin S Thoreson AR Moran SL Gingery A Amadio PC Steinmann SP Zhao C

Aims. Many biomechanical studies have shown that the weakest biomechanical point of a rotator cuff repair is the suture-tendon interface at the medial row. We developed a novel double rip-stop (DRS) technique to enhance the strength at the medial row for rotator cuff repair. The objective of this study was to evaluate the biomechanical properties of the DRS technique with the conventional suture-bridge (SB) technique and to evaluate the biomechanical performance of the DRS technique with medial row knots. Methods. A total of 24 fresh-frozen porcine shoulders were used. The infraspinatus tendons were sharply dissected and randomly repaired by one of three techniques: SB repair (SB group), DRS repair (DRS group), and DRS with medial row knots repair (DRSK group). Specimens were tested to failure. In addition, 3 mm gap formation was measured and ultimate failure load, stiffness, and failure modes were recorded. Results. The mean load to create a 3 mm gap formation in the DRSK and DRS groups was significantly higher than in the SB group. The DRSK group had the highest load to failure with a mean ultimate failure load of 395.0 N (SD 56.8) compared to the SB and DRS groups, which recorded 147.1 N (SD 34.3) and 285.9 N (SD 89.8), respectively (p < 0.001 for both). The DRS group showed a significantly higher mean failure load than the SB group (p = 0.006). Both the DRS and DRSK groups showed significantly higher mean stiffness than the SB group. Conclusion. The biomechanical properties of the DRS technique were significantly improved compared to the SB technique. The DRS technique with medial row knots showed superior biomechanical performance than the DRS technique alone


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 39 - 39
4 Apr 2023
Lim W Lie D Chou S Lie H Yew A
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This study aims to investigate the mechanical properties of a rotator cuff tear repaired with a polypropylene interposition graft in an ovine infraspinatus ex-vivo model. Twenty fresh shoulders from skeletally mature sheep were used in this study. A tear size of 20 mm from the tendon joint was created in the infraspinatus tendon to simulate a large tear in fifteen specimens. This was repaired with a polypropylene mesh used as an interposition graft between the ends of the tendon. Eight specimens were secured with mattress stitches while seven were secured to the remnant tendon on the greater tuberosity side by continuous stitching. Remaining five specimens with an intact tendon served as a control group. All specimens underwent cyclic loading with a universal testing machine to determine the ultimate failure load and gap distance. Gap distance increased with progressive cyclic loading through 3000 cycles for all repaired specimens. Mean gap distance after 3000 cycles for both continuous and mattress groups are 1.7 mm and 4.2 mm respectively (P = .001). Significantly higher mean ultimate failure load was also observed with 549.2 N in the continuous group, 426.6 N in the mattress group and 370 N in the intact group. The use of a polypropylene mesh as an interposition graft for large irreparable rotator cuff tears is biomechanically suitable and results in a robust repair that is comparable to an intact rotator cuff tendon. When paired with a continuous suturing technique, it demonstrates significantly resultant superior biomechanical properties that may potentially reduce re-tear rates after repairing large or massive rotator cuff tears


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 64 - 64
7 Aug 2023
Tawy G McNicholas M Biant L
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Abstract. Introduction. This study compared biomechanical and functional parameters of a total knee arthroplasty (TKA) implant (Cemented Zimmer Hi-Flex) against healthy older adults to determine whether knee biomechanics was restored in this patient population. Methodology. Patients with a primary TKA and healthy adults >55 years old with no musculoskeletal deficits or arthritis participated. Bilateral knee range of motion (RoM) was assessed with a goniometer, then gait patterns were analysed with a 3D motion-capture system. An arthrometer then quantified anterior-posterior laxity of each knee. Statistical analyses were performed in SPSS (α=0.05; required sample size: n=21 per group). Results. 25 knees were replaced in 21 patients. Nine presented with fixed flexion deformities (FFD) (13.3±5.6°). FFDs were abolished intraoperatively, and the average flexion increased from 124.8±9.1° to 130.9±5.8°. At 9.6±3.2 years postoperatively, the patients achieved poorer RoM than healthy controls (n=23); p<0.0001. These differences were due to limited flexion in the knee. Patients also failed to achieve the same degree of flexion as controls bilaterally during gait. No differences were observed during mid-flexion; a state that has been associated with instability (p=0.614). There were no differences between groups in knee laxity. Conclusion. Patients in this study had similar gait patterns to healthy older adults during mid-flexion, and were no more likely to exhibit anterior-posterior translation of the knee >7mm; a known risk factor of instability. However, the flexion range was poorer. This led to bilateral pathological knee flexion patterns during gait. Further research should identify the cause of these limitations


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 137 - 137
4 Apr 2023
Chen P Chen Z Landao E Leys T Wang T Zheng Q Ding Y Zheng M
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To address the current challenge of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction, this study is the first to fabricate a braided collagen rope (BCR) which mimics native hamstring for ACL reconstruction. The study aims to evaluate the biological and biomechanical properties of BCR both in vivo and vitro. Rabbit ACL reconstruction model using collagen rope and autograft (hamstring tendon) was conducted. The histological and biomechanical evaluations were conducted at 6-, 12-, 18, 26-week post-operation. In vitro study included cell morphology analysis, cell function evaluation and RNA sequencing of the tenocytes cultured on BCR. A cadaver study was also conducted to verify the feasibility of BCR for ACL reconstruction. BCR displays satisfactory mechanical strength similar to hamstring graft for ACL reconstruction in rabbit. Histological assessment showed BCR restore ACL morphology at 26 weeks similar to native ACL. The superior dynamic ligamentization in BCR over autograft group was evidenced by assessment of cell and collagen morphology and orientation. The in vitro study showed that the natural collagen fibres within BCR enables to signal the morphology adaptation and orientation of human tenocytes in bioreactor. BCR enables to enhance cell proliferation and tenogenic expression of tenocytes as compared to hydrolysed collagen. We performed an RNA-Sequencing (RNA-seq) experiment where RNA was extracted from tenocyte seeded with BCR. Analysis of enriched pathways of the up-regulated genes revealed that the most enriched pathways were the Hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha (HIF1A) regulated networks, implicating the possible mechanism BCR induced ACL regeneration. The subsequent cadaver study was conducted to proof the feasibility of BCR for ACL reconstruction. This study demonstrated the proof-of-concept of bio-textile braided collagen rope for ACL reconstruction, and the mechanism by which BCR induces natural collagen fibres that positively regulate morphology and function of tenocytes


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 25 - 25
17 Apr 2023
Kwak D Bae T Kim I
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The objective of this study was to analyze the biomechanical effect of an implanted ACL graft by determining the tunnel position according to the aspect ratio (ASR) of the distal femur during flexion-extension motion. To analyze biomechanical characteristics according to the ASR of the knee joint, only male samples were selected to exclude the effects of gender and 89 samples were selected for measurement. The mean age was 50.73 years, and the mean height was 165.22 cm. We analyzed tunnel length, graft bending angle, and stress of the graft according to tunnel entry position and aspect ratio (ratio of antero-posterior depth to medio-lateral width) of the articular surface for the distal femur during single-bundle outside-in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction surgery. We performed multi-flexible-body dynamic analyses with wherein four ASR (98, 105, 111, and 117%) knee models. The various ASRs were associated with approximately 1-mm changes in tunnel length. The graft bending angle increased when the entry point was far from the lateral epicondyle and was larger when the ASR was smaller. The graft was at maximum stress, 117% ASR, when the tunnel entry point was near the lateral epicondyle. The maximum stress value at a 5-mm distance from the lateral epicondyle was 3.5 times higher than the 15-mm entry position and, the cases set to 111% and 105% ASR, showed 1.9 times higher stress values when at a 5-mm distance compared with a 15-mm distance. In the case set at 98% ASR, the low-stress value showed a without-distance difference from the lateral epicondyle. Our results suggest that there is no relationship between the ASR and femoral tunnel length, A smaller ASR causes a higher graft bending angle, and a larger ASR causes greater stress in the graft


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 112 - 112
2 Jan 2024
Vater C Tian X Findeisen L Raina D Kern H Bolte J Straßburger L Matuszewski L Modler N Gottwald R Winkler A Schaser K Disch A Zwingenberger S
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A novel EP4 selective agonist (KMN-159) was developed [1] and has been proven that it can act as an osteopromotive factor to repair critical-size femoral bone defects in rats at a dose-dependent manner [2]. Based on its osteopromotive properties, we hypothesized that KMN-159 could also aid in bone formation for spinal fusion. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate its spinal fusion effect in a dorsolateral spinal fusion model in rats. This study was performed on 192, 10-week-old male Wistar rats. The rats were randomized into 8 groups (n = 12 per group): 1) SHAM (negative control), 2) MCM (scaffold only), 3) MCM + 20 µg BMP-2 (positive control), 4-8) MCM + 0.2, 2, 20, 200 or 2000 µg KMN-159. A posterolateral intertransverse process spinal fusion at L4 to L5 was performed bilaterally by implanting group dependent scaffolds (see above) or left empty in the SHAM group (protocol no. 25-5131/474/38). Animals were euthanized after 3 weeks and 6 weeks for µCT and biomechanical testing analysis. The results showed that KMN-159 promoted new bone formation in a dose-dependent manner at 3 weeks and 6 weeks as verified by µCT. The biomechanical testing showed that the dose of 20, 200 and 2000 µg KMN-159 groups obtained comparable strength with BMP-2 group, which higher than SHAM, MCM and lower doses of 0.2 and 2 µg KMN-159 groups. In conclusion, KMN-159 could be a potential replacement of BMP-2 as a novel osteopromotive factor for spinal fusion. Acknowledgements: We are grateful to Ulrike Heide, Anna-Maria Placht (assistance with surgeries) as well as Suzanne Manthey & Annett Wenke (histology)


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 13, Issue 2 | Pages 44 - 46
1 Apr 2024

The April 2024 Research Roundup. 360. looks at: Prevalence and characteristics of benign cartilaginous tumours of the shoulder joint; Is total-body MRI useful as a screening tool to rule out malignant progression in patients with multiple osteochondromas?; Effects of vancomycin and tobramycin on compressive and tensile strengths of antibiotic bone cement: a biomechanical study; Biomarkers for early detection of Charcot arthropathy; Strong association between growth hormone therapy and proximal tibial physeal avulsion fractures in children and adolescents; UK pregnancy in orthopaedics (UK-POP): a cross-sectional study of UK female trauma and orthopaedic surgeons and their experiences of pregnancy; Does preoperative weight loss change the risk of adverse outcomes in total knee arthroplasty by initial BMI classification?


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 1 - 1
11 Apr 2023
Mischler D Knecht M Varga P
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Surgical education of fracture fixation biomechanics relies mainly on simplified illustrations to distill the essence of the underlying principles. These mostly consist of textbook drawings or hands-on exercises during courses, both with unique advantages such as broad availability and haptics, respectively. Computer simulations are suited to bridge these two approaches; however, the validity of such simulations must be guaranteed to teach the correct aspects. Therefore, the aim of this study was to validate finite element (FE) simulations of bone-plate constructs to be used in surgical education in terms of fracture gap movement and implant surface strain. The validation procedure was conducted in a systematic and hierarchical manner with increasing complexity. First, the material properties of the isolated implant components were determined via four-point bending of the plate and three-point bending of the screw. Second, stiffness of the screw-plate interface was evaluated by means of cantilever bending to determine the properties of the locking mechanism. Third, implant surface strain and fracture gap motion were measured by testing various configurations of entire fixation constructs on artificial bone (Canevasit) in axial compression. The determined properties of the materials and interfaces assessed in these experiments were then implemented into FE models of entire fixation constructs with different fracture width and screw configurations. The FE-predicted implant surface strains and fracture gap motions were compared with the experimental results. The simulated results of the different construct configurations correlated strongly with the experimentally measured fracture gap motions (R. 2. >0.99) and plate surface strains (R. 2. >0.95). In a systematic approach, FE model validation was achieved successfully in terms of fracture gap motion and implant deformation, confirming trustworthiness for surgical education. These validated models are used in a novel online education tool OSapp (. https://osapp.ch/. ) to illustrate and explain the biomechanical principles of fracture fixations in an interactive manner


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_3 | Pages 38 - 38
23 Feb 2023
Ernstbrunner L Almond M Rupasinghe H Jo O Zbeda R Ackland D Ek E
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The extracortical single-button (SB) inlay repair is one of the most preferred distal biceps tendon repair techniques. However, specific complications such as neurovascular injury and non-anatomic repairs have led to the development of techniques that utilize intracortical double-button (DB) fixation. To compare the biomechanical stability of the extracortical SB repair with the anatomical DB repair technique. Controlled laboratory study. The distal biceps tendon was transected in 18 cadaveric elbows from 9 donors. One elbow of each donor was randomly assigned to the extracortical SBor anatomical DB group. Both groups were cyclically loaded with 60N over 1000 cycles between 90° of flexion and full extension. The elbow was then fixed in 90° of flexion and the repair construct loaded to failure. Gap-formation and construct stiffness during cyclic loading, and ultimate load to failure was analysed. After 1000 cycles, the anatomical DB technique compared with the extracortical SB technique showed significantly less gap-formation (mean difference 1.2 mm; p=0.017) and significantly more construct stiffness (mean difference 31 N/mm; p=0.023). Ultimate load to failure was not significantly different comparing both groups (SB, 277 N ±92 vs. DB, 285 N ±135; p=0.859). The failure mode in the anatomical DB group was significantly different compared with the extracortical SB technique (p=0.002) and was due to fracture avulsion of the BicepsButton in 7 out of 9 specimens (vs. none in SB group). Our study shows that the intracortical DB technique produces equivalent or superior biomechanical performance to the SB technique. The DB repair technique reduces the risk of nerve injury and better restores the anatomical footprint of biceps tendon. The DB technique may offer a clinically viable alternative to the SB repair technique


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 20 - 20
11 Apr 2023
Hamilton R Holt C Hamilton D Garcia A Graham C Jones R Shilabeer D Kuiper J Sparkes V Khot S Mason D
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Mechanical loading of joints with osteoarthritis (OA) results in pain-related functional impairment, altered joint mechanics and physiological nociceptor interactions leading to an experience of pain. However, the current tools to measure this are largely patient reported subjective impressions of a nociceptive impact. A direct measure of nociception may offer a more objective indicator. Specifically, movement-induced physiological responses to nociception may offer a useful way to monitor knee OA. In this study, we gathered preliminary data on healthy volunteers to analyse whether integrated biomechanical and physiological sensor datasets could display linked and quantifiable information to a nociceptive stimulus. Following ethical approval, 15 healthy volunteers completed 5 movement and stationary activities in 2 conditions; a control setting and then repeated with an applied quantified thermal pain stimulus to their right knee. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) and an electromyography (EMG) lower body marker set were tested and integrated with ground reaction force (GRF) data collection. Galvanic skin response electrodes for skin temperature and conductivity and photoplethysmography (PPG) sensors were manually timestamped to the integrated system. Pilot data showed EMG, GRF and IMU fluctuations within 0.5 seconds of each other in response to a thermal trigger. Preliminary analysis on the 15 participants tested has shown skin conductance, PPG, EMG, GRFs, joint angles and kinematics with varying increases and fluctuations during the thermal condition in comparison to the control condition. Preliminary results suggest physiological and biomechanical data outputs can be linked and identified in response to a defined nociceptive stimulus. Study data is currently founded on healthy volunteers as a proof-of-concept. Further exploratory statistical and sensor readout pattern analysis, alongside early and late-stage OA patient data collection, can provide the information for potential development of wearable nociceptive sensors to measure disease progression and treatment effectiveness