Fixation stability of femoral components in a canine hip replacement model
β Scribed by Dr. Ray Vanderby Jr.; Paul A. Manley; Sean S. Kohles; Andrew A. McBeath
- Book ID
- 102916938
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 866 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
A canine hip replacement model was used to compare fixation stability in cemented and cementless femoral components. Parameters of comparison were the loadβinduced positional changes of each prosthesis relative to its proximal femoral cortex, hereafter called relative displacements. Identical femoral components, with the proximal third of their stem porousβcoated, were implanted in the right femurs of 10 large, mixedβbreed dogs. Five were tightly fit to allow porous ingrowth, and five were cemented into the medullary canal. Four months after implantation, all femurs were harvested. A prosthesis was implanted in the left (normal) femur of each dog ex vivo with fixation identical to the contralateral limb to simulate acute postoperative fixation. Eddy current transducers measured relative displacements under application of static loads, serially applied in the axial, mediolateral, and craniocaudal directions. Thereafter, the femurs were transversely sectioned and morphologically analyzed to correlate bony apposition at the implant surface with relative displacements. We observed no difference in relative displacements between acute and 4βmonthβcemented groups (e.g., 0.0059 Β± 0.0021 vs. 0.0060 Β± 0.0048 mm, respectively, for 100βN axial loading measured at midstem). With cementless implantation, relative displacements of the acute group were significantly larger (p = 0.007) than those of the 4βmonth group (e.g., 0.236 Β± 0.257 vs. 0.097 Β± 0.129 mm, respectively, for 100βN axial loading measured at midstem). Cementless components implanted for 4 months were not significantly different than cemented components, but a trend suggested that they were still not as stable as cemented components, particularly for craniocaudal loads. Relative displacements of the 4βmonth, porous ingrowth group were approximately proportional to the percentage of bony apposition raised to the β 1.44 power (r = 0.94).
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The paper is concerned with the selection of materials for use in the design of the femoral component of cemented hip replacement joints. The analysis was performed using a three-dimensional finite element model with a representative physiological loading condition. A range of materials was consider