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1.
Clin Biomech (Bristol, Avon) ; 78: 105090, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32562880

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: One of most accepted principles for treating Kienböck's disease before wrist degeneration settles in is to decompress the lunate by an osteotomy. Several osteotomies have been proposed since 1935. However, they are based on biomechanical hypotheses that are sometimes conflicting: This study compares the decompression effect of radius transverse shortening, radius lateral closing and medial closing wedge osteotomies, capitate shortening - with and without hamate shortening - and a Camembert-type radius wedge osteotomy with and without ulnar head shortening according to Sennwald. METHODS: We built a 3D wrist model using finite elements that included the metacarpal, carpal and forearm bones. All wrist ligaments and Triangular Fibrocartilage Complex were incorporated in the simulation. Load was applied on the metacarpals with the forearm bones fixed. We then applied the different osteotomies to the model. FINDINGS: When load was applied to the wrist, the osteotomies that best unloaded the lunate were the capitate shortening osteotomy combined with hamate shortening and the Camembert osteotomy combined with ulna shortening; the latter was the only osteotomy that completely unloaded the lunate. INTERPRETATION: We think the association of the radius Camembert osteotomy and ulna Sennwald's shortening osteotomy is the most effective procedure to propose in Kienböck's disease.


Subject(s)
Lunate Bone/physiopathology , Lunate Bone/surgery , Osteonecrosis/surgery , Osteotomy , Adult , Arthrodesis , Biomechanical Phenomena , Female , Finite Element Analysis , Humans , Male , Osteonecrosis/physiopathology , Radius/physiopathology , Radius/surgery , Ulna/physiopathology , Ulna/surgery , Weight-Bearing
2.
J Healthc Eng ; 2019: 5340616, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31019667

ABSTRACT

Three-dimensional (3D) printing refers to a number of manufacturing technologies that generate a physical model from digital information. Medical 3D printing was once an ambitious pipe dream. However, time and investment made it real. Nowadays, the 3D printing technology represents a big opportunity to help pharmaceutical and medical companies to create more specific drugs, enabling a rapid production of medical implants, and changing the way that doctors and surgeons plan procedures. Patient-specific 3D-printed anatomical models are becoming increasingly useful tools in today's practice of precision medicine and for personalized treatments. In the future, 3D-printed implantable organs will probably be available, reducing the waiting lists and increasing the number of lives saved. Additive manufacturing for healthcare is still very much a work in progress, but it is already applied in many different ways in medical field that, already reeling under immense pressure with regards to optimal performance and reduced costs, will stand to gain unprecedented benefits from this good-as-gold technology. The goal of this analysis is to demonstrate by a deep research of the 3D-printing applications in medical field the usefulness and drawbacks and how powerful technology it is.


Subject(s)
Printing, Three-Dimensional , Prostheses and Implants , Prosthesis Design , Humans , Patient-Specific Modeling , Precision Medicine
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