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The effect of body weight on interfragmentary fracture strain in plate fixation of distal femur fractures: A finite element analysis - 22/09/24

Doi : 10.1016/j.otsr.2024.103868 
Ishan D. Shah a, , Adam M. Schlauch a, Lisa Phan b, Jiho Han c, Oluwatodimu Richard Raji M. Eng c, Brian Farrell d
a Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, St. Mary's Medical Center, 450 Stanyan Street, 94117 San Francisco, CA, USA 
b Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, 440 Escondido Mall Building 530, 94305 Stanford, CA, USA 
c The Taylor Collaboration, St. Mary's Medical Center, 2255 Hayes St, San Francisco, 94117, CA, USA 
d Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kaiser Permanente, 3600 Broadway, 94611 Oakland, CA, USA 

Corresponding author. St. Mary's Medical Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, 450 Stanyan St., 94117 San Francisco, CA, USA.St. Mary's Medical Center, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery450 Stanyan St.San Francisco, CA94117USA

Highlights

One of the most prognostic independent risk factors for developing distal femoral nonunion is obesity.
Increased axial load substantially increases interfragmentary strain, which can be normalized by shortening the working length and/or increasing the screw density of the construct.
Decreasing the working length had a larger effect than increasing the screw density on interfragmentary gap stiffness.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Abstract

Introduction

Distal femur fractures are difficult to successfully treat due to high rates of nonunion. Obesity is an independent prognostic risk factor for nonunion. Advances in finite element analyses (FEAs) have allowed researchers to better understand the performance and behavior of constructs at the bone-implant interface under a variety of conditions. The purpose of this study is to determine the impact of body weight on fracture strain in a lateral locking plate construct for supracondylar femur fractures and whether additional construct rigidity is beneficial to optimize fracture strain in high body mass patients.

Hypothesis

We hypothesized that increased loads would produce a higher interfragmentary strain (IFS), which could be decreased by shortening the working length of the construct.

Materials and methods

A 3D finite element analysis was performed on two separate femur models with a comminuted supracondylar distal femur fracture fixed with a lateral distal femoral locking plate in bridging mode with Ansys software. Axial forces were varied to recreate the effect of load from normal and high body mass patients. Working length and screw density of the construct were varied for each condition. Measurements of interfragmentary strain and shear motion (SM) were compared.

Results

Doubling the axial load from 70kg (control) to 140kg (high body mass) increased the interfragmentary strain by an average of 76% for the three working lengths (3.38%±1.67% to 4.37%±0.88% at the baseline working length (BWL), 1.42%±1.00% to 2.87%±2.02% at the intermediate working length (IWL) and 0.62%±0.22% to 1.22%±0.42% at the short working length (SWL)). On average, decreasing the working length in the 140kg load reduced the mean IFS to within 15% of the mean IFS of the 70kg load at the longer working length (2.87%±2.02% at IWL 140kg versus 3.38%±1.67% at BWL 70kg and 1.22%±0.45% SWL 140kg versus 1.42±1.00% IWL 70kg).

Discussion

Increased axial load increases interfragmentary strain in an AO/OTA 33A distal femur fracture fixed with a lateral distal femoral locking plate. Decreasing the working length of the fixation construct in the high body mass model decreased interfragmentary strain. Higher loading conditions reflective of high body mass patients should be considered in studies investigating optimization of fracture strain.

Level of proof

V; Finite Element Analysis (FEA).

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Keywords : Finite element analysis, Distal femur, Lateral locking plate, Interfragmentary strain


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Vol 110 - N° 6

Article 103868- octobre 2024 Retour au numéro
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