AI Article Synopsis

  • Surgical treatment of supracondylar femoral fractures can be difficult, and using a wire cerclage is suggested to enhance fracture reduction prior to plate osteosynthesis, although it poses challenges like periosteum denudation.
  • A study conducted on non-osteoporotic human femora tested the effects of wire cerclage on load to failure, comparing results from fractures treated with only a locking plate versus those reinforced with a cerclage.
  • Results showed that specimens with the wire cerclage had a significantly higher mean load to failure (3100 N) compared to those treated with just the plate (2450 N), indicating the cerclage greatly enhances the strength of the fracture fixation.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Surgical treatment of supracondylar femoral fractures can be challenging. An additional wire cerclage is a suggested way to facilitate fracture reduction prior to plate osteosynthesis. Denudation to the periosteum remains a problematic disadvantage of this procedure. This study analyzed the effect of an additional wire cerclage on the load to failure in plate osteosynthesis of oblique supracondylar femoral shaft fractures.

Materials And Methods: On eight pairs of non-osteoporotic human femora (mean age 74 years; range 57-95 years), an unstable AO/OTA 32-A2.3 fracture was established. All specimens were treated with a polyaxially locking plate. One femur of each pair was randomly selected to receive an additional fracture fixation with a wire cerclage. A servohydraulic testing machine was used to perform an incremental cyclic axial load with a load to the failure mode.

Results: Specimens stabilized with solely plate osteosynthesis failed at a mean load of 2450 N (95% CI: 1996-2904 N). In the group with an additional wire cerclage, load to failure was at a mean of 3100 N (95% CI: 2662-3538 N) (p = 0.018). Compression deformation with shearing of the condyle region through cutting of screws out of the condylar bone was the most common reason for failure in both groups of specimens. Whereas axial stiffness was comparable between both groups (p = 0.208), plastic deformation of the osteosynthesis constructs differed significantly (p = 0.035).

Conclusions: An additional wire cerclage significantly increased the load to failure. Therefore, an additional cerclage represents more than just a repositioning aid. With appropriate fracture morphology, a cerclage can significantly improve the strength of the osteosynthesis.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8215035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00402-020-03586-1DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

wire cerclage
24
additional wire
20
load failure
20
plate osteosynthesis
16
supracondylar femoral
12
cerclage
8
increased load
8
failure plate
8
femoral shaft
8
cerclage load
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!