Fixation of osteoporotic proximal humerus fractures remains challenging even with state-of-the-art locking plates. Despite the demonstrated biomechanical benefit of screw tip augmentation with bone cement, the clinical findings have remained unclear, potentially as the optimal augmentation combinations are unknown. The aim of this study was to systematically evaluate the biomechanical benefits of the augmentation options in a humeral locking plate using finite element analysis (FEA). A total of 64 cement augmentation configurations were analyzed using six screws of a locking plate to virtually fix unstable three-part fractures in 24 low-density proximal humerus models under three physiological loading cases (4,608 simulations). The biomechanical benefit of augmentation was evaluated through an established FEA methodology using the average peri-screw bone strain as a validated predictor of cyclic cut-out failure.Aims
Methods
We aimed to further evaluate the biomechanical characteristics
of two locking screws Synthetic tubular bone models representing normal bone density
and osteoporotic bone density were used. Artificial fracture gaps
of 1 cm were created in each specimen before fixation with one of
two constructs: 1) two locking screws using a five-hole locking
compression plate (LCP) plate; or 2) three non-locking screws with
a seven-hole LCP plate across each side of the fracture gap. The
stiffness, maximum displacement, mode of failure and number of cycles
to failure were recorded under progressive cyclic torsional and
eccentric axial loading.Objectives
Methods