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  4. The influence of bone damage on press-fit mechanics
 
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The influence of bone damage on press-fit mechanics

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2014-04-11
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Bishop, Nicholas  
Biomechanik M-3  
Höhn, Jan Christian
Biomechanik M-3  
Rothstock, Stephan  
Biomechanik M-3  
Damm, Niklas  
Biomechanik M-3  
Morlock, Michael  
Biomechanik M-3  
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/46329
Journal
Journal of biomechanics  
Volume
47
Issue
6
Start Page
1472
End Page
1478
Citation
Journal of Biomechanics 47 (6): 1472-1478 (2014)
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.jbiomech.2014.01.029
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-84896489795
Publisher
Elsevier
Press-fitting is used to anchor uncemented implants in bone. It relies in part on friction resistance to relative motion at the implant-bone interface to allow bone ingrowth and long-term stability. Frictional shear capacity is related to the interference fit of the implant and the roughness of its surface. It was hypothesised here that a rough implant could generate trabecular bone damage during implantation, which would reduce its stability. A device was constructed to simulate implantation by displacement of angled platens with varying surface finishes (polished, beaded and flaked) onto the surface of an embedded trabecular bone cube, to different nominal interferences. Push-in (implantation) and Pull-out forces were measured and micro-CT scans were made before and after testing to assess permanent bone deformation. Depth of permanent trabecular bone deformation ('damage'), Pull-out force and Radial force all increased with implantation displacement and with implantation force, for all surface roughnesses. The proposed hypothesis was rejected, since primary stability did not decrease with trabecular bone damage. In fact, Pull-out force linearly increased with push-in force, independently of trabecular bone damage or implant surface. This similar behaviour for the different surfaces might be explained by the compaction of bone into the surfaces during push-in so that Pull-out resistance is governed by bone-on-bone, rather than implant surface-on-bone friction. The data suggest that maximum stability is achieved for the maximum implantation force possible (regardless of trabecular bone damage or surface roughness), but this must be limited to prevent periprosthetic cortical bone fracture, patient damage and component malpositioning.
Subjects
Bone damage
Bone experiment
Implant anchorage
Press fit
Uncemented implants
DDC Class
610: Medicine, Health
620: Engineering
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