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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 195 - 195
1 Mar 2013
Herrmann S Kaehler M Souffrant R Kluess D Woernle C Bader R
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Introduction

Dislocation of total hip replacements (THRs) remains a severe complication after total hip arthroplasty. However, the contribution of influencing factors, such as implant positioning and soft tissue tension, is still not well understood due to the multi-factorial nature of the dislocation process. In order to systematically evaluate influencing factors on THR stability, our novel approach is to extract the anatomical environment of the implant into a musculoskeletal model. Within a hardware-in-the-loop (HiL) simulation the model provides hip joint angles and forces for a physical setup consisting of a compliant support and a robot which accordingly moves and loads the real implant components [2]. The purpose of this work was to validate the HiL test system against experimental data derived from one patient.

Methods

The musculoskeletal model includes all segments of the right leg with a simplified trunk. Bone segments were reconstructed from a human computed tomography dataset. The segments were mutually linked in the multibody software SIMPACK (v8.9, Simpack AG, Gilching, Germany) by ideal joints starting from the ground-fixed foot. Furthermore, inertia properties were incorporated based on anthropometric data. Inverse dynamics was used to obtain muscle forces. Thus, optimization techniques were implemented to resolve the distribution problem of muscle forces whereas muscles were assumed to act along straight lines. For validation purposes the model was scaled to one patient with an instrumented THR [1]. Averaged kinematic measurements were used to obtain joint angles for a knee-bending motion. Then, the model was exported into real-time capable machine code and embedded into the HiL environment. Real implant components of a standard THR were attached to the endeffector of the robot and the compliant support. Finally, the HiL simulation was carried out simulating knee-bending. Experimentally measured hip joint forces from the patient [1] were used to validate the HiL simulation.