Heyland, MarkMarkHeylandCheca Esteban, SaraSaraCheca EstebanKendoff, DanielDanielKendoffDuda, GeorgGeorgDuda2024-07-022024-07-022019-12-01Scientific Reports 9 (1): 482 (2019)https://hdl.handle.net/11420/48166Aseptic loosening remains a major problem for uncemented femoral components in primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). Ideally, bone adaptation after THA manifests minimally and local bone density reduction is widely avoided. Different design features may help to approximate initial, post-THA bone strain to levels pre-THA. Strain-shielding effects of different SP-CL stem design features are systematically analyzed and compared to CLS Spotorno and CORAIL using finite element models and physiological musculoskeletal loading conditions. All designs show substantial proximal strain-shielding: 50% reduced medial surface strain, 40–50% reduction at lateral surface, >120 µm/m root mean square error (RMSE) compared to intact bone in Gruen zone 1 and >60 µm/m RMSE in Gruen zones 2, 6, and 7. Geometrical changes (ribs, grooves, cross sections, stem length, anatomic curvature) have a considerable effect on strain-shielding; up to 20%. Combinations of reduced stem stiffness with larger proximal contact area (anatomically curved, grooves) lead to less strain-shielding compared to clinically established implant designs. We found that only the combination of a structurally flexible stem with anatomical curvature and grooves improves strain-shielding compared to other designs. The clinical implications in vivo of this initial strain-shielding difference are currently under evaluation in an ongoing clinical analysis.en2045-2322Scientific reports20191Springer NatureTechnology::610: Medicine, HealthAnatomic grooved stem mitigates strain shielding compared to established total hip arthroplasty stem designs in finite-element modelsJournal Article10.1038/s41598-018-36503-zJournal Article