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Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children

OBJECTIVES: Clinically, it is very difficult to prevent pathological fracture caused by high recurrence rate of osteolytic disease of proximal femur in children. At present, there is no consensus in clinical studies of which internal fixation method can significantly reduce the probability of recurr...

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Autores principales: Wang, Yi‐chen, Yang, Dan, Zhao, Li‐hua, Xiao, Bo, Ma, Qi‐chao, Dong, Liang‐chao, Li, Xiang, Zhang, Yu‐guo, Zhang, Zi‐ming, Luo, Yi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9891963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36597674
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/os.13591
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author Wang, Yi‐chen
Yang, Dan
Zhao, Li‐hua
Xiao, Bo
Ma, Qi‐chao
Dong, Liang‐chao
Li, Xiang
Zhang, Yu‐guo
Zhang, Zi‐ming
Luo, Yi
author_facet Wang, Yi‐chen
Yang, Dan
Zhao, Li‐hua
Xiao, Bo
Ma, Qi‐chao
Dong, Liang‐chao
Li, Xiang
Zhang, Yu‐guo
Zhang, Zi‐ming
Luo, Yi
author_sort Wang, Yi‐chen
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Clinically, it is very difficult to prevent pathological fracture caused by high recurrence rate of osteolytic disease of proximal femur in children. At present, there is no consensus in clinical studies of which internal fixation method can significantly reduce the probability of recurrence of pathological fracture. The study aims to research the mechanical properties of different internal fixations in the treatment of osteolytic lesions of proximal femur in children by finite element analysis, and to find out the optimal treatment. METHODS: Based on finite element analysis, the osteolytic disease models of the femoral neck and intertrochanter in a child (8‐year‐old, boy) were established respectively, and different internal fixation models (plate and titanium elastic intramedullary nails, TENs) were assembled. For the osteolytic lesion of the femoral neck: model A1 was assembled with a plate; model A2 with two TENs crossing the physis; model A3 with two TENs without crossing the physis. And for pertrochanteric osteolytic lesion: model B1 was assembled with a plate, model B2 with two TENs crossing the physis and model B3 with two TENs without crossing the physis. The Eccentric bearing load, torsional restraintal restraint of calcar femorale and composite load were analyzed for each models. RESULTS: When the yield strain of each model is reached, the stress concentration points are located in the proximal and distal femoral calcar. In the model of femoral neck lesions, the failure load of model A1 and model A2 are the same (1250 N), and the failure load of model A3 (980 N) is significantly lower than that of the former two; in the model of intertrochanteric lesions, the failure load of model B2 is the largest (1350 N), and the failure load of model B1 (1220 N) is lower than that of model B3 (1260 N), but both are smaller than that of model B2. CONCLUSION: Through finite element analysis, TENs through the epiphyseal plate, is found to be the better internal fixation method for femoral neck lesions and intertrochanteric lesions under two different working conditions. The results of clinical correlation study provide new biomechanical information for orthopedic doctors to consider different treatment options for osteolytic lesions of proximal femur.
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spelling pubmed-98919632023-02-02 Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children Wang, Yi‐chen Yang, Dan Zhao, Li‐hua Xiao, Bo Ma, Qi‐chao Dong, Liang‐chao Li, Xiang Zhang, Yu‐guo Zhang, Zi‐ming Luo, Yi Orthop Surg Research Articles OBJECTIVES: Clinically, it is very difficult to prevent pathological fracture caused by high recurrence rate of osteolytic disease of proximal femur in children. At present, there is no consensus in clinical studies of which internal fixation method can significantly reduce the probability of recurrence of pathological fracture. The study aims to research the mechanical properties of different internal fixations in the treatment of osteolytic lesions of proximal femur in children by finite element analysis, and to find out the optimal treatment. METHODS: Based on finite element analysis, the osteolytic disease models of the femoral neck and intertrochanter in a child (8‐year‐old, boy) were established respectively, and different internal fixation models (plate and titanium elastic intramedullary nails, TENs) were assembled. For the osteolytic lesion of the femoral neck: model A1 was assembled with a plate; model A2 with two TENs crossing the physis; model A3 with two TENs without crossing the physis. And for pertrochanteric osteolytic lesion: model B1 was assembled with a plate, model B2 with two TENs crossing the physis and model B3 with two TENs without crossing the physis. The Eccentric bearing load, torsional restraintal restraint of calcar femorale and composite load were analyzed for each models. RESULTS: When the yield strain of each model is reached, the stress concentration points are located in the proximal and distal femoral calcar. In the model of femoral neck lesions, the failure load of model A1 and model A2 are the same (1250 N), and the failure load of model A3 (980 N) is significantly lower than that of the former two; in the model of intertrochanteric lesions, the failure load of model B2 is the largest (1350 N), and the failure load of model B1 (1220 N) is lower than that of model B3 (1260 N), but both are smaller than that of model B2. CONCLUSION: Through finite element analysis, TENs through the epiphyseal plate, is found to be the better internal fixation method for femoral neck lesions and intertrochanteric lesions under two different working conditions. The results of clinical correlation study provide new biomechanical information for orthopedic doctors to consider different treatment options for osteolytic lesions of proximal femur. John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd 2023-01-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9891963/ /pubmed/36597674 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/os.13591 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Orthopaedic Surgery published by Tianjin Hospital and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Wang, Yi‐chen
Yang, Dan
Zhao, Li‐hua
Xiao, Bo
Ma, Qi‐chao
Dong, Liang‐chao
Li, Xiang
Zhang, Yu‐guo
Zhang, Zi‐ming
Luo, Yi
Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children
title Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children
title_full Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children
title_fullStr Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children
title_full_unstemmed Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children
title_short Finite Element Analysis of Mechanical Characteristics of Internal Fixation for Treatment of Proximal Femoral Osteolytic Lesions in Children
title_sort finite element analysis of mechanical characteristics of internal fixation for treatment of proximal femoral osteolytic lesions in children
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9891963/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36597674
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/os.13591
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