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1.
J Orthop Res ; 8(3): 453-63, 1990 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2324862

ABSTRACT

Earlier in vitro studies showed that a compliant layer between a metal surface and trabecular bone improved the load distribution. In this study, the behavior of a compliant layer of Dacron velour was investigated in vivo using a patella resurfacing in a sheep as a model. Bilateral cases were used to compare the velour interface with a direct metal-to-bone interface. For the metal patellas, a fibrous layer developed adjacent to the metal while the underlying bone formed a new subchondral-like layer. With the velour interface, fibrous tissue invaded the velour, followed later by bone, which sometimes reached the metal surface. For follow-ups of 8 months or more, the load across the interface was transferred over localised patches, for both the press-fit and velour interfaces. There was no significant difference in the areas of contact. There was evidence that this was due to the irregularity of the bony surface beneath the fibrous layer, or to bone nodules actually growing up to the metal. It was concluded that in this in vivo model, the velour layer did not retain a more uniform load distribution compared with the press-fit joint, due to the nature of the bone and fibrous tissue that formed at the interfaces.


Subject(s)
Joint Prosthesis , Polyesters , Animals , Bone Development/physiology , Knee Joint/cytology , Knee Joint/physiology , Sheep , Stress, Mechanical , Textiles
2.
J Orthop Res ; 4(4): 486-93, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3783302

ABSTRACT

Low pressure sensitive Fujifilm was used to measure the load distribution between the resected tibial surface and a tibial component at axial loads up to 3,000 N for a rigid interface, a compliant interface of dacron double-sided velour, and a cemented interface. The pressure patterns consisted of a multitude of small red dots, generally reflecting the slight irregularities of the cut surface and the stiffness of the cancellous bone at the surface. The pressure patterns were photographed with high-contrast film and input into a computer using a photodiode matrix camera. The data were analyzed to yield the number of contact points for each sample. The velour was more effective in distribution of load to the proximal tibia than the rigid and cemented interfaces, while there was no significant difference between the cemented interface and the rigid interface. A second series of tests showed significant increases in contact points from rigid to one layer to two layers of velour. Cyclic axial loading tests were performed to study the characteristics of rigid and compliant interfaces in a model of in vitro subsidence. Static pressure patterns taken at regular intervals showed that subsidence occurred in vitro in up to 1/3 of the tibias, and that the regions of load transfer could change with time. A model of subsidence was proposed and it was suggested that a velour layer could inhibit the subsidence.


Subject(s)
Knee Prosthesis , Biomechanical Phenomena , Bone Cements , Compliance , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Models, Biological , Prosthesis Design , Tibia/physiology , Tibia/surgery
3.
J Bone Joint Surg Am ; 66(7): 1032-40, 1984 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6480632

ABSTRACT

We reviewed 124 consecutive kinematic condylar total knee replacements (in ninety-one patients) at two to four years postoperatively. One hundred and eleven (90 per cent) were rated as good or excellent. The average active postoperative flexion was 106 degrees (range, 94 to 120 degrees). Twenty-two knees (18 per cent) had incomplete, non-progressive radiolucent lines, less than one millimeter in width, at the tibial bone-cement interface; these were considered insignificant. Restriction of stair-climbing ability in this series appeared to be a function of involvement of multiple joints rather than of patellar replacement, as the rheumatoid patients with resurfaced patellae performed the worst. The osteoarthritic patients with involvement of a single joint performed the best, regardless of whether the patella was resurfaced or not. When compared with a similar series of total knee replacements in which the tibial component was made entirely of plastic, less reaction at the bone-cement interface was found with the metal-backed kinematic tibial component. We suggest that this finding is clinical confirmation of in vitro studies that demonstrated the advantage of metal-backed tibial components. We concluded that this procedure, if meticulously performed, will give predictably good to excellent results with a low complication rate, a good postoperative range of motion, and a favorable-appearing bone-cement interface at two to four years.


Subject(s)
Knee Prosthesis , Adult , Aged , Arthritis, Juvenile/surgery , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/surgery , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Locomotion , Male , Middle Aged , Osteoarthritis/surgery , Patella/surgery
4.
J Bone Joint Surg Am ; 66(6): 878-87, 1984 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6736089

ABSTRACT

Of seventy-three adults who were treated for osteoarthritis of the hip by medial-displacement intertrochanteric osteotomy done by one of us, sixty-one (with sixty-seven treated hips) could be evaluated twelve to fifteen years after osteotomy or at the time when they had an arthroplasty for recurrent symptoms. Specific criteria based on preoperative data were used prospectively to categorize the hips as to their suitability for medial-displacement osteotomy. In addition, at the conclusion of the study, an osteotomy suitability score (maximum score, 12 points) was assessed retrospectively as a determinant of suitability for medial-displacement osteotomy. Ten years after the osteotomy, thirty-four (51 per cent) of the sixty-seven hips had been treated with a cup arthroplasty or total hip arthroplasty. At the conclusion of the study (between twelve and fifteen years after osteotomy), forty-four (66 per cent) of the sixty-seven hips had had an arthroplasty. Among the sixteen hips that had been considered excellent candidates according to the prospective criteria, 85 per cent had not yet required hip arthroplasty five years after osteotomy and two-thirds had not had an arthroplasty ten years after surgery. Of the thirty hips with a suitability score of 7 points or more, 85 per cent had not required arthroplasty at five years and 67 per cent had not done so at ten years. The numerical scoring therefore appeared to be a more reliable determinant of suitability.


Subject(s)
Hip Joint/surgery , Osteoarthritis/surgery , Osteotomy/methods , Aged , Female , Femur/surgery , Follow-Up Studies , Hip Prosthesis , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Retrospective Studies , Time Factors
5.
J Biomed Mater Res ; 10(4): 605-11, 1976 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-947922

ABSTRACT

Total joint and other prosthesis often require the removal and replacement of considerable quantities of cancellous bone, and often are anchored in place by grouting into cancellous bone. Thus, a possible source of failure or loosening of many types of prostheses may be rooted in the lack of understanding of the structure, properties, and function of this material. In addition, as we have pointed out before, cancellous bone may play an important biomechanical role in the etiology of joint degeneration. With these considerations in mind, the architecture of the cancellous bone in the human patella was studied by serial sectioning and microradiography, using an improved technique developed in our laboratory. Volumes of cancellous bone with apparently different functional roles were identified. Stereological techniques were used to quantify the structural characteristics and geometrical relationships throughout the patella. These results led to a structural model for the cancellous bone of the patella, and a comprehensive picture of the internal architecture. The distribution of mechanical compliance and yield stress was also measured, as a function of location and orientation, by a specially constructed microcompression testing machine. The measurements reflected the distribution of trabecular architecture, and both the properties and architecture reflected the gross biomechanical function of the patella. Furthermore, a true structure-function relationship was derived. Patellar contact area studies were performed on fresh cadavers and mapped for various angles of flexion. The variation in contact areas and the spatial variations in stiffness are discussed relative to the biomechanics and clinical aspects of the patella.


Subject(s)
Patella/anatomy & histology , Biomechanical Phenomena , Bone and Bones/physiology , Humans , Patella/physiology
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