Publications by authors named "Lee Etchels"

An important aspect in evaluating the resilience of hip replacement designs is testing their performance under adverse conditions that cause edge loading of the acetabular liner. The representation of edge loading conditions in finite element models is computationally challenging due to the changing contact locations, need for fine meshes, and dynamic nature of the system. In this study, a combined mesh and mass-scaling sensitivity study was performed to identify an appropriate compromise between convergence and solution time of explicit finite element analysis in investigating edge loading in hip replacement devices.

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Article Synopsis
  • After hip replacement, instability at the joint can cause harmful edge loading between the femoral head and the acetabular liner, which could lead to fracturing of the polyethylene liner.
  • The study aimed to assess the impact of inertia and elastoplastic material properties on predicting kinematics and plastic strain accumulation, revealing that a more complex model was necessary for accurate predictions.
  • Factors such as cup orientation and design changes can influence plastic strain accumulation, suggesting that future liner designs should utilize dynamic elastoplastic models to enhance performance under edge loading conditions.
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Patient imaging and explant analysis has shown evidence of edge loading of hard-on-hard hip replacements in vivo. Experimental hip simulator testing under edge loading conditions has produced increased, clinically-relevant, wear rates for hard-on-hard bearings when compared to concentric conditions. Such testing, however, is time consuming and costly.

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Current clinical data suggest a higher failure rate for internal fixation in Vancouver type B1 periprosthetic femoral fracture (PFF) fixations compared to long stem revision in B2 fractures. The aim of this study was to compare the biomechanical performance of several fixations in the aforementioned fractures. Finite element models of B1 and B2 fixations, previously corroborated against in vitro experimental models, were compared.

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Periprosthetic femoral fracture (PFF) fixation failures are still occurring. The effect of fracture stability and loading on PFF fixation has not been investigated and this is crucial for optimum management of PFF. Models of stable and unstable PPFs were developed and used to quantify the effect of fracture stability and loading in a single locking plate fixation.

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