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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 13 - 13
1 Apr 2013
Hoffmann S Paetzold R Mair S Stephan D Buehren V Augat P
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Hypothesis

The proximal geometry and design of trochanteric nails affects initial construct stiffness, fatigue survival, and preservation of biomechanical stability over time.

Materials & Methods

Eight pairs of human cadaveric femora were implanted with two different short intramedullary nails with (Intertan, (S&N)) and without (Gamma 3, (Stryker)) interlocking lag screws. Femoral osteotomies were performed to generate a pertrochanteric multifragmentary unstable fracture (OTA 31-A 2.2). The bones were tested in a cyclic testing protocol with increasing loads of 100 N every 20.000 cycles (start point 50/500 N) simulating one leg stance. The position of the femur was 10° adduction and 10° extension. Stiffness, failure load, and cycles to failure were measured.