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Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws

Background and Objectives: Hip fractures constitute the most debilitating complication of osteoporosis with steadily increasing incidences in the aging population. Their intramedullary nailing can be challenging because of poor anchorage in the osteoporotic femoral head. Cement augmentation of Proxi...

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Autores principales: Sermon, An, Hofmann-Fliri, Ladina, Zderic, Ivan, Agarwal, Yash, Scherrer, Simon, Weber, André, Altmann, Martin, Knobe, Matthias, Windolf, Markus, Gueorguiev, Boyko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8465598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34577822
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina57090899
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author Sermon, An
Hofmann-Fliri, Ladina
Zderic, Ivan
Agarwal, Yash
Scherrer, Simon
Weber, André
Altmann, Martin
Knobe, Matthias
Windolf, Markus
Gueorguiev, Boyko
author_facet Sermon, An
Hofmann-Fliri, Ladina
Zderic, Ivan
Agarwal, Yash
Scherrer, Simon
Weber, André
Altmann, Martin
Knobe, Matthias
Windolf, Markus
Gueorguiev, Boyko
author_sort Sermon, An
collection PubMed
description Background and Objectives: Hip fractures constitute the most debilitating complication of osteoporosis with steadily increasing incidences in the aging population. Their intramedullary nailing can be challenging because of poor anchorage in the osteoporotic femoral head. Cement augmentation of Proximal Femoral Nail Antirotation (PFNA) blades demonstrated promising results by enhancing cut-out resistance in proximal femoral fractures. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of augmentation on the fixation strength of TFN-ADVANCED(TM) Proximal Femoral Nailing System (TFNA) blades and screws within the femoral head and compare its effect when they are implanted in centre or anteroposterior off-centre position. Materials and Methods: Eight groups were formed out of 96 polyurethane low-density foam specimens simulating isolated femoral heads with poor bone quality. The specimens in each group were implanted with either non-augmented or cement-augmented TFNA blades or screws in centre or anteroposterior off-centre positions, 7 mm anterior or posterior. Mechanical testing was performed under progressively increasing cyclic loading until failure, in setup simulating an unstable pertrochanteric fracture with a lack of posteromedial support and load sharing at the fracture gap. Varus-valgus and head rotation angles were monitored. A varus collapse of 5° or 10° head rotation was defined as a clinically relevant failure. Results: Failure load (N) for specimens with augmented TFNA head elements (screw/blade centre: 3799 ± 326/3228 ± 478; screw/blade off-centre: 2680 ± 182/2591 ± 244) was significantly higher compared with respective non-augmented specimens (screw/blade centre: 1593 ± 120/1489 ± 41; screw/blade off-centre: 515 ± 73/1018 ± 48), p < 0.001. For both non-augmented and augmented specimens failure load in the centre position was significantly higher compared with the respective off-centre positions, regardless of the head element type, p < 0.001. Augmented off-centre TFNA head elements had significantly higher failure load compared with non-augmented centrally placed implants, p < 0.001. Conclusions: Cement augmentation clearly enhances the fixation stability of TFNA blades and screws. Non-augmented blades outperformed screws in the anteroposterior off-centre position. Positioning of TFNA blades in the femoral head is more forgiving than TFNA screws in terms of failure load.
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spelling pubmed-84655982021-09-27 Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws Sermon, An Hofmann-Fliri, Ladina Zderic, Ivan Agarwal, Yash Scherrer, Simon Weber, André Altmann, Martin Knobe, Matthias Windolf, Markus Gueorguiev, Boyko Medicina (Kaunas) Article Background and Objectives: Hip fractures constitute the most debilitating complication of osteoporosis with steadily increasing incidences in the aging population. Their intramedullary nailing can be challenging because of poor anchorage in the osteoporotic femoral head. Cement augmentation of Proximal Femoral Nail Antirotation (PFNA) blades demonstrated promising results by enhancing cut-out resistance in proximal femoral fractures. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of augmentation on the fixation strength of TFN-ADVANCED(TM) Proximal Femoral Nailing System (TFNA) blades and screws within the femoral head and compare its effect when they are implanted in centre or anteroposterior off-centre position. Materials and Methods: Eight groups were formed out of 96 polyurethane low-density foam specimens simulating isolated femoral heads with poor bone quality. The specimens in each group were implanted with either non-augmented or cement-augmented TFNA blades or screws in centre or anteroposterior off-centre positions, 7 mm anterior or posterior. Mechanical testing was performed under progressively increasing cyclic loading until failure, in setup simulating an unstable pertrochanteric fracture with a lack of posteromedial support and load sharing at the fracture gap. Varus-valgus and head rotation angles were monitored. A varus collapse of 5° or 10° head rotation was defined as a clinically relevant failure. Results: Failure load (N) for specimens with augmented TFNA head elements (screw/blade centre: 3799 ± 326/3228 ± 478; screw/blade off-centre: 2680 ± 182/2591 ± 244) was significantly higher compared with respective non-augmented specimens (screw/blade centre: 1593 ± 120/1489 ± 41; screw/blade off-centre: 515 ± 73/1018 ± 48), p < 0.001. For both non-augmented and augmented specimens failure load in the centre position was significantly higher compared with the respective off-centre positions, regardless of the head element type, p < 0.001. Augmented off-centre TFNA head elements had significantly higher failure load compared with non-augmented centrally placed implants, p < 0.001. Conclusions: Cement augmentation clearly enhances the fixation stability of TFNA blades and screws. Non-augmented blades outperformed screws in the anteroposterior off-centre position. Positioning of TFNA blades in the femoral head is more forgiving than TFNA screws in terms of failure load. MDPI 2021-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8465598/ /pubmed/34577822 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina57090899 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sermon, An
Hofmann-Fliri, Ladina
Zderic, Ivan
Agarwal, Yash
Scherrer, Simon
Weber, André
Altmann, Martin
Knobe, Matthias
Windolf, Markus
Gueorguiev, Boyko
Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws
title Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws
title_full Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws
title_fullStr Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws
title_short Impact of Bone Cement Augmentation on the Fixation Strength of TFNA Blades and Screws
title_sort impact of bone cement augmentation on the fixation strength of tfna blades and screws
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8465598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34577822
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/medicina57090899
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