Biomechanical comparison between standard and inclined screw orientation in dynamic hip screw side-plate fixation: The lift-off phenomenon

Common failure modes of dynamic hip screw are cut-out and lift-off. To minimize the latter, distal screws can be inserted in different orientations. However, the effectiveness remains controversial. The aim of this study was to biomechanically investigate the influence of distal screw orientation on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of orthopaedic translation 2019-07, Vol.18, p.92-99
Hauptverfasser: Zderic, Ivan, Willhuber, Gaston C., Ahrend, Marc-Daniel, Gras, Florian, Barla, Jorge, Sancineto, Carlos, Windolf, Markus, Richards, Geoff, Gueorguiev, Boyko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Common failure modes of dynamic hip screw are cut-out and lift-off. To minimize the latter, distal screws can be inserted in different orientations. However, the effectiveness remains controversial. The aim of this study was to biomechanically investigate the influence of distal screw orientation on construct stability. Thirty artificial generic long bones were assigned to three groups (n = 10) and fixed with two-hole dynamic hip screw–plates, inserting distal cortical screws with neutral parallel screw orientation (A), divergent screw orientation (B) or convergent screw orientation (C). Starting at 60 N, cyclic loading was applied to the implant tip perpendicular to the lag screw axis with progressive peak load increase at a rate of 0.002 N/cycle until failure. Parameters of interest were construct stiffness and machine actuator displacement after 250, 1000 and 5000 cycles, as well as cycles to failure. Displacement after 250, 1000 and 5000 cycles was significantly higher in Group C than in Groups A and B, p  0.99. Parallel or divergent distal screw insertion provides similar construct stability in terms of resistance to plate lift-off. In contrast, converging screw insertion leads to inferior stability and is not advisable from a biomechanical point of view.
ISSN:2214-031X
2214-0328
DOI:10.1016/j.jot.2018.10.005