High Speed Fracture Fixation: Assessing Resulting Fixation Stability and Fastener Withdrawal Strength

Author:

Philip Prygoski Matthew1,Sanchez Caballero Samuel2,Schmid Steven R.1,Lozier Antony J.3,Selles Miguel Angel4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, University of Notre Dame, 150 Multidisciplinary Research Building, Notre Dame, IN 46637 e-mail:

2. Institute for Automotive Manufacturing and Design, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Campus of Alcoy, Alcoy 03801, Spain e-mail:

3. Zimmer, Inc., Warsaw, IN 46581 e-mail:

4. Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Campus of Alcoy, Alcoy 03801, Spain e-mail:

Abstract

A new method of bone fracture fixation has been developed in which fixation darts (small diameter nails/pins) are driven across a fracture site at high velocity with a pneumatically powered gun. When fixation darts are inserted oblique to one another, kinematic constraints prevent fragment motion and allow bone healing to progress. The primary aim of this study is to determine if fixation darts can provide reasonable fixation stability compared to bone screws, which were used as a benchmark since they represent a simple, yet well-established, surgical technique. The first objective was to evaluate macro-level stability using different numbers of darts inserted parallel and oblique to each other; experimental comparisons were undertaken in a bone analog model. Experimental results showed fixation darts could not be substituted for screws on a one-to-one basis, but that a plurality of fixation darts provided comparable fixation to two bone screws while allowing for faster insertion and damaging less bone. A second objective was to evaluate micro-level stability; a finite element model was created in order to provide a detailed look at the stress state surrounding the fixation darts and the evolution of the fracture gap. Even with relatively weak fixation dart configurations, the fracture gap was maintained below physiological thresholds for bone healing. Most failures of the fixed fractures were attributed to fixation dart pullout from the cancellous structure. The final objective of the study was to characterize this mode of failure with separate fixation dart and screw pullout tests conducted in Sawbones® cancellous foam and fresh porcine cancellous bone. The results showed that the cancellous foam was an acceptable substitute for real bone and provided a conservative estimate of the fixation darts' performance relative to bone screws. A final comparison between experimental and numerically predicted pullout strengths provided confirmation that the model and experiments were consistent.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

Reference31 articles.

1. A Review of Locking Compression Plate Biomechanics and Their Advantages as Internal Fixators in Fracture Healing;Clin. Biomech.,2007

2. Influence of Size and Stability of the Osteotomy Gap on the Success of Fracture Healing;J. Orthop. Res.,1997

3. A Method to Determine the 3-D Stiffness of Fracture Fixation Devices and its APPLICATION to Predict Inter-Fragmentary Movement;J. Biomech.,1998

4. Magnitudes of Local Stress and Strain Along Bony Surfaces Predict the Course and Type of Fracture Healing;J. Biomech.,1999

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Pre-bending a dynamic compression plate significantly alters strain distribution near the fracture plane in the mid-shaft femur;Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine;2020-02-05

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