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  • Proximal tibial strain in medial unicompartmental knee replacements: A biomechanical study of implant design.

Proximal tibial strain in medial unicompartmental knee replacements: A biomechanical study of implant design.

The bone & joint journal (2013-10-01)
C E H Scott, M J Eaton, R W Nutton, F A Wade, P Pankaj, S L Evans
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

As many as 25% to 40% of unicompartmental knee replacement (UKR) revisions are performed for pain, a possible cause of which is proximal tibial strain. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of UKR implant design and material on cortical and cancellous proximal tibial strain in a synthetic bone model. Composite Sawbone tibiae were implanted with cemented UKR components of different designs, either all-polyethylene or metal-backed. The tibiae were subsequently loaded in 500 N increments to 2500 N, unloading between increments. Cortical surface strain was measured using a digital image correlation technique. Cancellous damage was measured using acoustic emission, an engineering technique that detects sonic waves ('hits') produced when damage occurs in material. Anteromedial cortical surface strain showed significant differences between implants at 1500 N and 2500 N in the proximal 10 mm only (p < 0.001), with relative strain shielding in metal-backed implants. Acoustic emission showed significant differences in cancellous bone damage between implants at all loads (p = 0.001). All-polyethylene implants displayed 16.6 times the total number of cumulative acoustic emission hits as controls. All-polyethylene implants also displayed more hits than controls at all loads (p < 0.001), more than metal-backed implants at loads ≥ 1500 N (p < 0.001), and greater acoustic emission activity on unloading than controls (p = 0.01), reflecting a lack of implant stiffness. All-polyethylene implants were associated with a significant increase in damage at the microscopic level compared with metal-backed implants, even at low loads. All-polyethylene implants should be used with caution in patients who are likely to impose large loads across their knee joint.

MATERIALIEN
Produktnummer
Marke
Produktbeschreibung

Sigma-Aldrich
Polyethylen, Ultra-high molecular weight, surface-modified, powder, 34-50 μm particle size
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Polyethylen, average Mw ~4,000 by GPC, average Mn ~1,700 by GPC
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Polyethylen, low density, melt index 25 g/10 min (190°C/2.16kg)
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Polyethylen, Ultra-high molecular weight, average Mw 3,000,000-6,000,000
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Polyethylen, High density, melt index 12 g/10 min (190 °C/2.16kg)
Polyethylen (LDPE), ERM®, certified reference material
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Polyethylen, Medium density
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Polyethylen, Linear low density, melt index 1.0 g/10 min (190°C/2.16kg)
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Polyethylen, High density, melt index 2.2 g/10 min (190 °C/2.16kg)
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Polyethylen, Ultra-high molecular weight, surface-modified, powder, 125 μm avg. part. size
Supelco
Polyethylen, analytical standard, suitable for gel permeation chromatography (GPC), 2,000