The purpose of the present study was to document the osteotomy plane for the thrust plate prosthesis, and to evaluate the question whether the geometry of the thrust plate itself correlates with the range of motion after implantation and whether the osteointegration area can be optimised. For the first part of the study, the two-dimensional geometry of the osteotomy was demonstrated in 12 computer-reconstructed femurs after performing a virtual cut at a CCD angle of 135 degrees. In the second part we constructed a prototype of an I-TPP with an optimised thrust plate and corpus geometry. In a final step, we documented the range of motion with computer-aided movement mapping. The results showed a wide variance in osteotomy geometry in the 12 femurs. With the I-TAP we were able to obtain a much better surface adaptation of the thrust plate. Movement mapping showed a much lower range of motion in the I-TPP implant.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/bmte.1999.44.3.64DOI Listing

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