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Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study

INTRODUCTION: At present there are no reliable non-traumatic and non-invasive methods to analyse the healing process and loosening status after total hip replacement. Therefore early as well as late loosening of prosthesis and interface component problems are difficult to be found or diagnosed at an...

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Autores principales: Unger, AC, Cabrera-Palacios, H, Schulz, AP, Jürgens, Ch, Paech, A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3352019/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19541587
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-14-6-264
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author Unger, AC
Cabrera-Palacios, H
Schulz, AP
Jürgens, Ch
Paech, A
author_facet Unger, AC
Cabrera-Palacios, H
Schulz, AP
Jürgens, Ch
Paech, A
author_sort Unger, AC
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: At present there are no reliable non-traumatic and non-invasive methods to analyse the healing process and loosening status after total hip replacement. Therefore early as well as late loosening of prosthesis and interface component problems are difficult to be found or diagnosed at any time. METHODS: In a cadaver study the potential application of Resonance Frequency Monitoring (RFM) will be evaluated as a non-invasive and non-traumatic method to monitor loosening and interface problems in hip replacement. In a 65 year old female cadaver different stability scenarios for a total hip replacement (shaft, head/modular head and cup, ESKA, Luebeck, Germany) are simulated in cemented and cement less prosthesis and then analysed with RFM. The types of stability vary from secure/press-fit to interface-shaft disruption. RESULTS: The RFM shows in cemented as well as cement less prosthesis significant intra-individual differences in the spectral measurements with a high dynamic (20 dB difference corresponding to the factor 100 (10000%)), regarding the simulated status of stability in the prosthesis system. CONCLUSION: The results of the study demonstrate RFM as a highly sensitive non-invasive and non-traumatic method to support the application of RFM as a hip prosthesis monitoring procedure. The data obtained shows the possibility to use RFM for osteointegration surveillance and early detection of interface problems, but will require further evaluation in clinical and experimental studies.
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spelling pubmed-33520192012-05-16 Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study Unger, AC Cabrera-Palacios, H Schulz, AP Jürgens, Ch Paech, A Eur J Med Res Research INTRODUCTION: At present there are no reliable non-traumatic and non-invasive methods to analyse the healing process and loosening status after total hip replacement. Therefore early as well as late loosening of prosthesis and interface component problems are difficult to be found or diagnosed at any time. METHODS: In a cadaver study the potential application of Resonance Frequency Monitoring (RFM) will be evaluated as a non-invasive and non-traumatic method to monitor loosening and interface problems in hip replacement. In a 65 year old female cadaver different stability scenarios for a total hip replacement (shaft, head/modular head and cup, ESKA, Luebeck, Germany) are simulated in cemented and cement less prosthesis and then analysed with RFM. The types of stability vary from secure/press-fit to interface-shaft disruption. RESULTS: The RFM shows in cemented as well as cement less prosthesis significant intra-individual differences in the spectral measurements with a high dynamic (20 dB difference corresponding to the factor 100 (10000%)), regarding the simulated status of stability in the prosthesis system. CONCLUSION: The results of the study demonstrate RFM as a highly sensitive non-invasive and non-traumatic method to support the application of RFM as a hip prosthesis monitoring procedure. The data obtained shows the possibility to use RFM for osteointegration surveillance and early detection of interface problems, but will require further evaluation in clinical and experimental studies. BioMed Central 2009-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3352019/ /pubmed/19541587 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-14-6-264 Text en Copyright ©2009 I. Holzapfel Publishers
spellingShingle Research
Unger, AC
Cabrera-Palacios, H
Schulz, AP
Jürgens, Ch
Paech, A
Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study
title Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study
title_full Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study
title_fullStr Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study
title_short Acoustic monitoring (RFM) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study
title_sort acoustic monitoring (rfm) of total hip arthroplasty results of a cadaver study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3352019/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19541587
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-14-6-264
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