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  4. Time-dependent Viscoelastic Response of Acetabular Bone and Implant Seating during Dynamic Implantation of Press-fit Cups
 
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Time-dependent Viscoelastic Response of Acetabular Bone and Implant Seating during Dynamic Implantation of Press-fit Cups

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2020-07
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Messer-Hannemann, Philipp  
Weyer, Hannah  
Campbell, Graeme Michael  
Morlock, Michael  
Institut
Biomechanik M-3  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/6970
Journal
Medical engineering & physics  
Volume
81
Start Page
68
End Page
76
Citation
Medical Engineering and Physics (81): 68-76 (2020-07)
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.medengphy.2020.05.012
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85085974786
PubMed ID
32507677
Deformation of an acetabular cup implant during cementless implantation is indicative of the radial compressive forces, and such of the initial implant fixation strength. Stress relaxation in the surrounding bone tissue following implantation could reduce the deformation of the cup and thus primary implant fixation. The aim of this study was therefore to determine the early shape change of the implanted cup immediately after implantation with different press-fit levels and whether recording the force during cup impaction can be used to estimate initial cup fixation. Cup implantations into porcine acetabulae (n=10) were performed using a drop tower. The force induced by the drop weight and cup seating after each impact was recorded. Deformation of the implanted cup was determined with strain gauges over a period of 10min. Lever-out torques were measured to assess the initial fixation strength. Stress relaxation in the bone caused a reduction in cup deformation of 13.52±4.06% after 1min and 29.34±5.11% after 10min. The fixation strength increased with a higher force magnitude during impaction (Rs2=0.810, p=0.037). Reduction of the radial compressive forces due to stress relaxation of the surrounding bone should be considered during press-fit cup implantation in order to compensate for the reduced fixation strength over time. In addition, recording the implantation force could help to estimate initial fixation strength.
Subjects
Cup deformation
Hip arthroplasty
Implant fixation
Press-fit
Viscoelasticity
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