Biomechanical determination of the relationship between femoral neck lesion size and the risk of pathological fracture
Autor: | Mert Osman Topkar, Bülent Erol, Onur Basci, Barış Çaypınar |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Adult
medicine.medical_specialty Bone Screws Femoral Neck Fractures Fracture Fixation Internal 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Cadaver Materials Testing Fracture fixation medicine Humans Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Femoral neck 030222 orthopedics business.industry 030229 sport sciences Bone fracture Anatomy medicine.disease Compression (physics) Biomechanical Phenomena Surgery Fractures Spontaneous medicine.anatomical_structure Orthopedic surgery Fracture (geology) business Osteoporotic Fractures |
Popis: | Purpose Half of the pathological fractures of the proximal femur occur in the neck region. We evaluate the relationship between the defect size within the femoral neck and the risk of pathological fracture. Methods After creating metastasis-like lesions in the neck regions of 21 human cadaver femurs, compression was applied to simulate single-limp stance type loading. First, a loading of 600 Newtons (N) was applied to the 35%-defected femoral necks. If the bone fracture did not occur, the defect size was increased to 45% and the 600 N force was applied again. If no fracture was observed then the defect size was increased to 55% and the bones were loaded again. The 55%-defected bones with no fractures were loaded until a fracture was detected. Results There were no fractures with the 35%- and 45%-defected femurs until 600 N was applied. However, when the defect size was increased to 55%, 3 bones were fractured before reaching 600 N. The fractures occurred at an average of 455 N in the 3 bones. At a compression of 600 N, 18 bones (84%) were intact, and the loading was continued. 18 femurs with 55%-defected neck regions had an average endurance of 1270 N compression (range 750-2800 N). Conclusions This study showed that even very osteoporotic bones with large metastases can withstand high forces of compressive loading. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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