Automated fit quantification of tibial nail designs during the insertion using computer three-dimensional modelling

Author:

Amarathunga Jayani P1,Schuetz Michael A12,Yarlagadda Prasad KVD13,Schmutz Beat1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

2. Trauma Service, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

3. School of Chemistry, Physics and Mechanical Engineering, Science and Engineering Faculty, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

Abstract

Intramedullary nailing is the standard fixation method for displaced diaphyseal fractures of the tibia. An optimal nail design should both facilitate insertion and anatomically fit the bone geometry at its final position in order to reduce the risk of stress fractures and malalignments. Due to the nonexistence of suitable commercial software, we developed a software tool for the automated fit assessment of nail designs. Furthermore, we demonstrated that an optimised nail, which fits better at the final position, is also easier to insert. Three-dimensional models of two nail designs and 20 tibiae were used. The fitting was quantified in terms of surface area, maximum distance, sum of surface areas and sum of maximum distances by which the nail was protruding into the cortex. The software was programmed to insert the nail into the bone model and to quantify the fit at defined increment levels. On average, the misfit during the insertion in terms of the four fitting parameters was smaller for the Expert Tibial Nail Proximal bend (476.3 mm2, 1.5 mm, 2029.8 mm2, 6.5 mm) than the Expert Tibial Nail (736.7 mm2, 2.2 mm, 2491.4 mm2, 8.0 mm). The differences were statistically significant ( p ≤ 0.05). The software could be used by nail implant manufacturers for the purpose of implant design validation.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,General Medicine

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