Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Kharagpur, West Bengal 721 302, India
Abstract
Abstract
The primary fixation and long-term stability of a cementless femoral implant depend on bone ingrowth within the porous coating. Although attempts were made to quantify the peri-implant bone ingrowth using the finite element (FE) analysis and mechanoregulatory principles, the tissue differentiation patterns on a porous-coated hip stem have scarcely been investigated. The objective of this study is to predict the spatial distribution of evolutionary bone ingrowth around an uncemented hip stem, using a three-dimensional (3D) multiscale mechanobiology-based numerical framework. Multiple load cases representing a variety of daily living activities, including walking, stair climbing, sitting down, and standing up from a chair, were used as applied loading conditions. The study accounted for the local variations in host bone material properties and implant–bone relative displacements of the macroscale implanted FE model, in order to predict bone ingrowth in microscale representative volume elements (RVEs) of 12 interfacial regions. In majority RVEs, 20–70% bone tissue (immature and mature) was predicted after 2 months, contributing toward a progressive increase in average Young's modulus (1200–3000 MPa) of the interbead tissue layer. Higher bone ingrowth (mostly greater than 60%) was predicted in the anterolateral regions of the implant, as compared to the posteromedial side (20–50%). New bone tissue was formed deeper inside the interbead spacing, adhering to the implant surface. The study helps to gain an insight into the degree of osseointegration of a porous-coated femoral implant.
Subject
Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering
Cited by
4 articles.
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