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1.
J Biomech Eng ; 145(12)2023 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37542709

ABSTRACT

Biomechanical engineers and physicists commonly employ biological bone for biomechanics studies, since they are good representations of living bone. Yet, there are challenges to using biological bone, such as cost, degradation, disease, ethics, shipping, sourcing, storage, variability, etc. Therefore, the Synbone® company has developed a series of synthetic bones that have been used by biomechanical investigators to offset some drawbacks of biological bone. There have been a number of published biomechanical reports using these bone surrogates for dental, injury, orthopedic, and other applications. But, there is no prior review paper that has summarized the mechanical properties of these synthetic bones in order to understand their general performance or how well they represent biological bone. Thus, the goal of this article was to survey the English-language literature on the mechanical properties of these synthetic bones. Studies were included if they quantitatively (a) characterized previously unknown values for synthetic bone, (b) validated synthetic versus biological bone, and/or (c) optimized synthetic bone performance by varying geometric or material parameters. This review of data, pros, cons, and future work will hopefully assist biomechanical engineers and physicists that use these synthetic bones as they develop experimental testing regimes and computational models.


Subject(s)
Bone and Bones , Biomechanical Phenomena , Materials Testing , Finite Element Analysis
2.
Med Eng Phys ; 104: 103801, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35641070

ABSTRACT

Comminuted proximal tibia fractures are an ongoing surgical challenge. This "proof of concept" study is the first step in designing a new percutaneous plate for this injury under toe-touch weight-bearing as prescribed after surgery. Finite element simulations generated design curves for overall stiffness, bone and implant stress, and interfragmentary motion using 3 fixations (no, 1, or 2 "kickstand" (KS) screws across the fracture gap) over a range of plate elastic moduli (EP = 5 to 200 GPa). Combining well-established optimization criteria to enhance callus formation (i.e. 0.2 mm ≤ axial interfragmentary motion ≤ 1 mm; shear / axial interfragmentary motion ratio < 1.6), lessen stress shielding (i.e. bone stress under the proposed plate > bone stress under a traditional titanium or steel plate), and reduce steel screw breakage (i.e. screw max stress < ultimate tensile stress of steel) resulted in plate design recommendations: 172.6 ≤ EP < 200 GPa (no KS screw), 79.8 ≤ EP < 100 GPa (1 KS screw), and 4.9 ≤ EP < 100 GPa (2 KS screws). A prototype plate could be made from materials currently used or proposed for orthopaedics, such as polymers, fiber-reinforced polymers, fiber metal laminates, metal foams, or shape memory alloys.


Subject(s)
Fractures, Bone , Tibia , Biomechanical Phenomena , Finite Element Analysis , Fracture Fixation, Internal/methods , Humans , Polymers , Steel
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