The effect of plate design, bridging span, and fracture healing on the performance of high tibial osteotomy plates
Objectives Opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (HTO) is an established surgical procedure for the treatment of early-stage knee arthritis. Other than infection, the majority of complications are related to mechanical factors – in particular, stimulation of healing at the osteotomy site. This study u...
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Zusammenfassung: | Objectives
Opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (HTO) is an established surgical procedure for the
treatment of early-stage knee arthritis. Other than infection, the majority of complications
are related to mechanical factors – in particular, stimulation of healing at the osteotomy
site. This study used finite element (FE) analysis to investigate the effect of plate design and
bridging span on interfragmentary movement (IFM) and the influence of fracture healing on
plate stress and potential failure.
Materials and Methods
A 10° opening wedge HTO was created in a composite tibia. Imaging and strain gauge data
were used to create and validate FE models. Models of an intact tibia and a tibia implanted
with a custom HTO plate using two different bridging spans were validated against experimental
data. Physiological muscle forces and different stages of osteotomy gap healing simulating
up to six weeks postoperatively were then incorporated. Predictions of plate stress
and IFM for the custom plate were compared against predictions for an industry standard
plate (TomoFix).
Results
For both plate types, long spans increased IFM but did not substantially alter peak plate
stress. The custom plate increased axial and shear IFM values by up to 24% and 47%, respectively,
compared with the TomoFix. In all cases, a callus stiffness of 528 MPa was required to
reduce plate stress below the fatigue strength of titanium alloy.
Conclusion
We demonstrate that larger bridging spans in opening wedge HTO increase IFM without
substantially increasing plate stress. The results indicate, however, that callus healing is
required to prevent fatigue failure.
Peer Reviewed |
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ISSN: | 2046-3758 2046-3758 |
DOI: | 10.1302/2046-3758.712.BJR-2018-0035.R1 |