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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_8 | Pages 62 - 62
11 Apr 2023
Preutenborbeck M Wright P Loughran G Bishop N
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Orthopaedic impaction-instruments are used to drive implants into the bone of the patient. Pre-clinical experimental testing protocols and computer models of those are used to assess robustness and functional efficiency of such instruments. This generally involves impaction of the instrument mounted on a substrate that should represent the mechanics of the patient. In this study, the effects of the substrate on stressing of the impaction-instruments were investigated using dynamic finite element analysis. Model results were compared with experimental data from lab protocols, which have been derived to recreate the mechanics of cadaveric implantations, which represent clinical conditions.

FEA models of selected experimental protocols were created in which a simplified instrument was impacted on substrates with varying material properties and boundary conditions. After impaction, the instrument settled into a modal vibration which then decayed over time. The resulting axial strain data from the computational model was compared to strain-gauge data collected from experimental measurements. Strain signal amplitude, frequency and decay were compared. The damping-ratio was derived from the decay of the strain signal.

The computational model slightly over-predicted the initial experimental strain amplitudes in all cases, but the frequency of the cyclic strain signals matched. However, the model underestimated the experimentally measured rate of signal decay. Inclusion of implant seating and soft-tissue conditions had little effect on decay.

Clinical failures of impaction-instruments may be related to multiple fatigue cycles for each impaction and should be modelled accurately to allow failure prediction. Any soft substrate results in an impedance mismatch at the instrument interface, which reflects the pressure wave and causes vibration with a frequency related to the speed-of-sound in the instrument, and its geometry. While this could be accurately modelled computationally, signal decay was underestimated. Further experimental quantification of energy losses will be important to understand vibration decay.


Abstract

Objectives

Total hip arthroplasty (THA) procedures are physically demanding for surgeons. Repetitive mallet swings to impact a surgical handle (impactions), can lead to muscle fatigue, discomfort and injuries. The use of an automated surgical hammer may reduce fatigue and increase surgical efficiency. The aim of this study was to develop a method to quantify user's performance, by recording surface electromyography (sEMG), for automated and manual impactions.

Methods

sEMG signals were recorded from eight muscle compartments (arm and back muscles) of an orthopaedic surgeon during repetitions of manual and automated impaction tasks, replicating femoral canal preparation (broaching) during a THA. Each task was repeated, randomly, four times manually and four times with the automated impaction device. The mechanical outcomes (broaching efficiency and broach advancement) were quantified by tracking the kinematics of the surgical instrumentation. Root mean square (RMS) values and median frequency (MDF) were calculated for each task to, respectively, investigate which muscles were mostly involved (higher RMS) in each task and to quantify the decrease in MDF, which is an indicator of muscle fatigue.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 24 - 24
1 Mar 2021
Preutenborbeck M Brown C Tarsuslugil S
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Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Hip dislocations remain one of the most common complications of total-hip-arthroplasty (Zahar et al.,2013). There is contradicting evidence whether the surgical approach affects dislocation rates (Sheth et al., 2015; Maratt, 2018). The aim of this study was to develop instrumentation to measure hip forces during simulated range-of-motion tests where the hip was forced to dislocate in cadaveric specimen.

METHODS

A total-hip-replacement was completed on both hips of a single cadaveric specimen by a trained orthopaedic surgeon during a lab initiated by DePuy. A direct-anterior surgical approach was performed on the right leg and a posterior approach was performed on the left. Before final implantation of the femoral component, a trial reduction with a femoral neck trial was performed. The neck trial was modified with strain gauges placed around the shaft which were designed to measure resultant hip forces throughout the range-of-motion assessment. A force-calibration was performed using a calibration-block to convert strain to force values.