Transitional Stiffness Intramedullary Stems to Reduce Periprosthetic Pain

Author(s):  
R. D. Crowninshield ◽  
D. Wentz ◽  
W. Paprosky ◽  
A. Rosenberg ◽  
A. Stoller

The intramedullary canal presence of a stemmed prosthetic component can be expected to change the distribution of stress from the joint loading to the adjacent skeleton. The reconstructed skeletal stiffening that results for relatively rigid prosthetic components can result in periprosthetic stress shielding. The abrupt change in reconstruction stiffness that can occur at the implant stem terminus can be associated with periprosthetic pain. A stem end “clothes pin” slot, intended to make a stem end more flexible, produces a substantially asymmetric and abrupt alteration of stem stiffness. The present work is directed to analyzing ways that the structural stiffness of the terminus region of a prosthetic stem can be controlled to provide a symmetrical transitional region of controllable load transfer to the surrounding bone. It is hypothesized that through implant design, prosthesis-to-bone interface pressure and periprosthetic bone stress levels at a prosthetic stem terminus can be reduced and that this will be associated with a reduced occurrence and severity of “end of stem pain” in a variety of prosthetic applications.

Author(s):  
Noureddine Djebbar ◽  
Abdessamed Bachiri ◽  
Benali Boutabout

The design of an implant thread plays a fundamental role in the osseointegration process, particularly in low-density bone. It has been postulated that design features that maximize the surface area available for contact may improve mechanical anchorage and stability in cancellous bone. The primary stability of a dental implant is determined by the mechanical engagement between the implant and bone at the time of implant insertion. The contact area of implant-bone interfaces and the concentrated stresses on the marginal bones are principal concerns of implant designers. Numerous factors influence load transfer at the bone-implant interface, for example, the type of loading, surface structure, amount of surrounding bone, material properties of the implant and implant design. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of the impact two different projectile of implant threads on stress distribution in the jawbone using three-dimensional finite element analysis.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (17) ◽  
pp. 5973
Author(s):  
Paul Didier ◽  
Boris Piotrowski ◽  
Gael Le Coz ◽  
David Joseph ◽  
Pierre Bravetti ◽  
...  

The present work proposes a parametric finite element model of the general case of a single loaded dental implant. The objective is to estimate and quantify the main effects of several parameters on stress distribution and load transfer between a loaded dental implant and its surrounding bone. The interactions between them are particularly investigated. Seven parameters (implant design and material) were considered as input variables to build the parametric finite element model: the implant diameter, length, taper and angle of inclination, Young’s modulus, the thickness of the cortical bone and Young’s modulus of the cancellous bone. All parameter combinations were tested with a full factorial design for a total of 512 models. Two biomechanical responses were identified to highlight the main effects of the full factorial design and first-order interaction between parameters: peri-implant bone stress and load transfer between bones and implants. The description of the two responses using the identified coefficients then makes it possible to optimize the implant configuration in a case study with type IV. The influence of the seven considered parameters was quantified, and objective information was given to support surgeon choices for implant design and placement. The implant diameter and Young’s modulus and the cortical thickness were the most influential parameters on the two responses. The importance of a low Young’s modulus alloy was highlighted to reduce the stress shielding between implants and the surrounding bone. This method allows obtaining optimized configurations for several case studies with a custom-made design implant.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (23) ◽  
pp. 7184
Author(s):  
Nathanael Tan ◽  
Richard van Arkel

Stiff total hip arthroplasty implants can lead to strain shielding, bone loss and complex revision surgery. The aim of this study was to develop topology optimisation techniques for more compliant hip implant design. The Solid Isotropic Material with Penalisation (SIMP) method was adapted, and two hip stems were designed and additive manufactured: (1) a stem based on a stochastic porous structure, and (2) a selectively hollowed approach. Finite element analyses and experimental measurements were conducted to measure stem stiffness and predict the reduction in stress shielding. The selectively hollowed implant increased peri-implanted femur surface strains by up to 25 percentage points compared to a solid implant without compromising predicted strength. Despite the stark differences in design, the experimentally measured stiffness results were near identical for the two optimised stems, with 39% and 40% reductions in the equivalent stiffness for the porous and selectively hollowed implants, respectively, compared to the solid implant. The selectively hollowed implant’s internal structure had a striking resemblance to the trabecular bone structures found in the femur, hinting at intrinsic congruency between nature’s design process and topology optimisation. The developed topology optimisation process enables compliant hip implant design for more natural load transfer, reduced strain shielding and improved implant survivorship.


2021 ◽  
Vol 318 ◽  
pp. 71-81
Author(s):  
Basma Eltlhawy ◽  
Tawfik El-Midany ◽  
Noha Fouda ◽  
Ibrahim Eldesouky

The current research presents a novel porous tibia implant design based on porous structure. The implant proximal portion was designed as a porous rhombic dodecahedron structure with 500 μm pore size. Finite element method (FEM) was used to assess the stem behavior under compressive loading compared to a solid stem model. CATIA V5R18 was used for modeling both rhombic dodecahedron and full solid models. Static structural analysis was carried out using ANSYS R18.1 to asses the implant designs. The results indicated enhanced clinical performance of tibial-knee implants compared to the solid titanium implant via increasing the maximum von-Mises stresses by 64% under the tibial tray in porous implant which reduce stress shielding. Also, the maximum shear stress developed in bone/implant interface was reduced by 68% combined with relieving the stress concentration under the stem tip to relieve patients' pain. Finally, porous implants provide cavities for bone ingrowth which improve implant fixation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 2473011418S0011
Author(s):  
Daniel Sturnick ◽  
Guilherme Saito ◽  
Jonathan Deland ◽  
Constantine Demetracopoulos ◽  
Xiang Chen ◽  
...  

Category: Ankle Arthritis Introduction/Purpose: Loosening of the tibial component is the primary failure mode in total ankle arthroplasty (TAA). The mechanics of the tibial component loosening has not been fully elucidated. Clinically observed radiolucency and cyst formation in the periprosthetic bone may be associated with unfavorable load sharing at and adjacent to the tibial bone-implant interface contributory to implant loosening. However, no study has fully investigated the load transfer from the tibial component to the bone under multiaxial loads in the ankle. The objective of this study was to utilize subject-specific finite element (FE) models to investigate the load transfer through tibial bone-implant interface, as well as periprosthetic bone strains under simulated multiaxial loads. Methods: Bone-implant FE models were developed from CT datasets of three cadaveric specimens that underwent TAA using a modern fixed-bearing tibial implant (a cobalt-chrome tray with a polyethylene bearing, Salto Talaris, Integra LifeSciences). Implant placement was estimated from the post-operative CT scans. Bone was modeled as isotropic elastic material with inhomogeneous Young’s modulus (determined from CT Hounsfield units) and a uniform Poisson’s ratio of 0.3. The tibial tray (Young’s modulus: 200,000 MPa, Poisson’s ratio: 0.3) and the polyethylene bearing (Young’s modulus: 600 MPa, Poisson’s ratio: 0.4) were modeled as isotropic elastic. A 100-N compressive force, a 300-N anterior force, and a 3-Nm moment were applied to two literature based loading regions on the surface of the polyethylene bearing. The proximal tibia was fixed in all directions. The bone-implant contact was modeled as frictional with a coefficient of 0.7, whereas the polyethylene bearing was bonded to the tray. Results: Along the long axis of the tibia, load was transferred to the bone primarily through the flat bone-contacting base of the tibial tray and the cylindrical top of the keel, little amount of load was transferred to the bone between those two features (Fig. 1A). Low strain was observed in bone regions medial and lateral to the keel of the tibial tray, where bone cysts were often observed clinically (Fig. 1A). On average, approximated 70% of load was transferred through the anterior aspect of the tibial tray at the flat bone-contacting base, which corresponded to the relatively high bone strain adjacent to the implant edge in the anterior bone-implant interface (Fig. 1B). Conclusion: Our results demonstrated a two-step load transfer pattern along the long axis of the tibia, revealing regions with low bone strain peripheral to the keel indicative to stress shielding. Those regions were consistent with the locations of bone cysts observed clinically, which may be explained by the stress shielding associated remodeling of bone. These findings could also describe the mechanism of implant loosening and failure. Future studies may use our model to simulate more loading scenarios, as well as different implant placement and design, to identify means to optimize load transfer to the bone and prevent stress shielding.


Author(s):  
Bahram Raad ◽  
Narges Shayesteh Moghaddam ◽  
Mohammad Elahinia

The aim of this article is to investigate the effect of two different fixation hardware materials on bone remodeling after a mandibular reconstruction surgery and to restore the mandible’s function, healthy appearance, mastication, swallowing, breathing, and speech. The hypothesis is that using fixation hardware with stiffness close to that of the surrounding bone will result in a more successful healing process in the mandible bone. The finite element model includes the material properties and forces of the cancellous bone, cortical bone, ligaments, muscles, and teeth. The reconstruction surgery is modeled by including the fixation hardware and the grafted bone. In the sectioned mandible, to best mimic the geometry of the mandible, two single barrel grafts are placed at the top of each other to form a double barrel graft set. Two different materials were used as the mandibular fixation parts, stiff Ti-6Al-4V, and porous superelastic Nickel-Titanium (NiTi) alloys. A comparison of these two alloys demonstrates that using porous NiTi alloy as the fixation part results in a faster healing pace. Furthermore, the density distribution in the mandibular bone after the healing process is more similar to the normal mandible density distribution. The simulations results indicate that the porous superelastic NiTi fixation hardware transfers and distributes the existing forces on the mandible bone more favorably. The probability of stress shielding and/or stress concentration decrease. This type of fixation hardware, therefore, is more appropriate for mandible bone reconstruction surgery.


2007 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 349-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Nizam Ahmad ◽  
Solehuddin Shuib ◽  
A.Y. Hassan ◽  
A.A. Shokri ◽  
M.I.Z. Ridzwan ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 693-699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdulsalam Abdulaziz Al-Tamimi ◽  
Carlos Quental ◽  
Joao Folgado ◽  
Chris Peach ◽  
Paulo Bartolo

Abstract The design of commercially available fixation plates and the materials used for their fabrication lead to the plates being stiffer than bone. Consequently, commercial plates are prone to induce bone stress shielding. In this study, three-dimensional fixation plates are designed using topology optimisation aiming to reduce the risk of bone stress shielding. Fixation plate designs were optimised by minimising the strain energy for three levels of volume reduction (i.e. 25%, 45% and 75%). To evaluate stress shielding, changes in bone stress due to the different fixation plate designs were determined on the fracture plane of an idealised shaft of a long bone under a four-point bending load considering the effect of a patient walking with crutches of a transverse fractured tibia. Topology optimisation is a viable approach to design less stiff plates with adequate mechanical strength considering high volume reductions, which consequently increased the stress transferred to the bone fracture plane minimising bone stress shielding.


Author(s):  
Philip Boughton ◽  
Y. Chen ◽  
C. Thompson ◽  
G. Roger ◽  
Jari Hyvarinen ◽  
...  

Intramedullary (IM) nails are routinely used to stabilize long bone fractures. They can however lead to stress shielding, pain, migration, obstruct hematopoietic tissue, become a loci for infection, and require subsequent surgical retrieval. Novel intra-osseous scaffold (IOS™) prototypes for fracture healing have been developed to function as a regenerative scaffold to enhance callous formation under mechanically stabilized conditions then resorb. Prototype fixation pins and rod systems were formed from glass-reinforced-glass. Flexion, torsion and shear tests were performed to evaluate the composite pins and rods. A modular rod design was successfully deployed and dilated while in a deformable state. When fitted and gripping the intramedullary canal then set in a rigid state. An obliquely sectioned ovine femur was used as a long bone fracture model for deployment and mechanical verification. Flexural support provided by the intramedullary scaffold was superior to multiple k-wire fixation, while the k-wire approach was more stabilizing under torsional loads. Glass reinforced glass samples were mechanically tested after soaking for up to 4 weeks in saline. Strength and modulus of the composite was reduced to approximately 25% of initial values after 2 weeks.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 45-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Rivière ◽  
Guido Grappiolo ◽  
Charles A. Engh ◽  
Jean-Pierre Vidalain ◽  
Antonia-F. Chen ◽  
...  

Bone remodelling around a stem is an unavoidable long-term physiological process highly related to implant design. For some predisposed patients, it can lead to periprosthetic bone loss secondary to severe stress-shielding, which is thought to be detrimental by contributing to late loosening, late periprosthetic fracture, and thus rendering revision surgery more complicated. However, these concerns remain theoretical, since late loosening has yet to be documented among bone ingrowth cementless stems demonstrating periprosthetic bone loss associated with stress-shielding. Because none of the stems replicate the physiological load pattern on the proximal femur, each stem design is associated with a specific load pattern leading to specific adaptive periprosthetic bone remodelling. In their daily practice, orthopaedic surgeons need to differentiate physiological long-term bone remodelling patterns from pathological conditions such as loosening, sepsis or osteolysis. To aid in that process, we decided to clarify the behaviour of the five most used femoral stems. In order to provide translational knowledge, we decided to gather the designers’ and experts’ knowledge and experience related to the design rationale and the long-term bone remodelling of the following femoral stems we deemed ‘legendary’ and still commonly used: Corail (Depuy); Taperloc (Biomet); AML (Depuy); Alloclassic (Zimmer); and CLS-Spotorno (Zimmer).Cite this article: EFORT Open Rev 2018;3:45-57. DOI: 10.1302/2058-5241.3.170024


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