Moon Jun-Gyu, Shukla Dave R, Fitzsimmons James S, An Kai-Nan, O'Driscoll Shawn W
Biomechanics Laboratory, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN; Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Korea University Guro Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
Biomechanics Laboratory, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
J Hand Surg Am. 2019 Dec;44(12):1098.e1-1098.e8. doi: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2019.03.002. Epub 2019 May 14.
Various radial head prosthesis designs are currently in use. Few studies compare different prosthetic designs. We hypothesized that increasing a cementless implant stem's length would reduce stem-bone micromotion, with both short and long neck cuts. We also hypothesized that a minimum stem length might be required for the initial fixation strength of a press-fit implant.
In 16 fresh-frozen cadaveric elbows (8 pairs), the radial head and neck were cut either 10 or 21 mm below the top of the head. Modular cementless stems were inserted and sequentially lengthened in 5-mm increments. Micromotion under eccentric loading was tested after each incremental change.
Incremental lengthening of the prosthetic stem and the amount of neck resection (10-mm cut vs 21-mm cut) both had a significant effect on micromotion. After a 10-mm radial head-neck resection, we observed a significant decrease in micromotion with stem lengths of 25 mm or greater, whereas with 21 mm of neck resection there was no further reduction in micromotion with increased stem length. These differences can be explained, at least in part, by the concept of the cantilever quotient: the ratio of the head-neck length outside the bone to the total length of the implant.
The length of the stem affects the initial stability of press-fit radial head prostheses when the level of head and neck resection is at the minimum (ie, 10 mm) for currently available prosthetic designs. At this resection level, stems 25 mm or greater had significantly higher initial stability, but all stem lengths tested had mean micromotion values within the threshold for bone ingrowth.
The length of a radial head prosthetic stem affects the initial stability of press-fit radial head prostheses when the level of head and neck resection is at the minimum (ie, 10 mm) for currently available prosthetic designs.
目前有多种桡骨头假体设计在使用。很少有研究比较不同的假体设计。我们假设,增加非骨水泥型植入物柄的长度会减少柄与骨之间的微动,无论采用短颈截骨还是长颈截骨。我们还假设,压配式植入物的初始固定强度可能需要一定的最小柄长度。
在16个新鲜冷冻的尸体肘部(8对)中,桡骨头和颈部在头顶部下方10或21毫米处截断。插入模块化非骨水泥型柄,并以5毫米的增量依次加长。每次增量变化后测试偏心加载下的微动。
假体柄的增量加长和颈部截骨量(10毫米截骨与21毫米截骨)均对微动有显著影响。在进行10毫米的桡骨头 - 颈部截骨后,我们观察到柄长度为25毫米或更长时微动显著降低,而在进行21毫米的颈部截骨时,随着柄长度增加微动没有进一步降低。这些差异至少部分可以通过悬臂商的概念来解释:即骨外的头 - 颈长度与植入物总长度的比值。
当对于现有假体设计而言头颈部截骨水平处于最小值(即10毫米)时,柄的长度会影响压配式桡骨头假体的初始稳定性。在这个截骨水平,25毫米或更长的柄具有显著更高的初始稳定性,但所有测试的柄长度的平均微动值都在骨长入阈值范围内。
当对于现有假体设计而言头颈部截骨水平处于最小值(即10毫米)时,桡骨头假体柄部的长度会影响压配式桡骨头假体的初始稳定性。