AI Article Synopsis

  • A study investigated the biomechanical stability of a fractured patella by adding a third cannulated screw to a traditional two-screw configuration in a tension band construct, using finite element simulations.
  • The simulations tested various screw placements (superficial and deep) and configurations, showing that a third screw significantly decreased gap openings in the fractured bone, particularly when two screws were deeply placed.
  • Results indicated that the extra screw improved stability more effectively in the absence of an anterior wire, with gap reductions of up to 73.5% in certain positions, suggesting potential changes to surgical practices for patellar fractures.

Article Abstract

Background: Two parallel cannulated screws along with an anterior wire to construct a tension band is a popular approach in transverse patellar fractures. However, the optimal screw proximity, either deep or superficial screw placements, remains controversial. Hence, a new concept of the addition of a third screw to form a triangular configuration along with the original two parallel screws was proposed in this study. Therefore, the biomechanical effect of the additional third screw on the stability of the fractured patella was investigated with finite element (FE) simulation.

Methods: An FE knee model including the distal femur, proximal tibia, and fractured patella (type AT/OTA 34-C) was developed in this study. Four different screw configurations, including two parallel cannulated screws with superficial (5-mm proximity) and deep (10-mm proximity) placements and two parallel superficial screws plus a third deep screw, and two parallel deep screws plus a third superficial screw, with or without the anterior wire, were considered for the simulation.

Results: Results indicated that the addition of a third screw increased stability by reducing the dorsal gap opening when two parallel screws were deeply placed, particularly on the fractured patella without an anterior wire. However, the third screw was of little value when two parallel screws were superficially placed. In the existence of two deep parallel screws and the anterior wire, the third screw reduced the gap opening by 23.5% (from 1.15 mm to 0.88 mm) and 53.6% (from 1.21 mm to 0.61 mm) in knee flexion 45° and full extension, respectively. Furthermore, in the absence of the anterior wire, the third screw reduced the gap opening by 73.5% (from 2 mm to 0.53 mm) and 72.2% (from 1.33 mm to 0.37 mm) in knee flexion 45° and full extension, respectively.

Conclusion: Based on the results, a third cannulated screw superficially placed (5-mm proximity) is recommended to increase stability and maintain contact of the fractured patella, fixed with two parallel cannulated screws deeply placed (10-mm proximity), particularly when an anterior wire was not used. Furthermore, the third screw deeply placed is not recommended in a fractured patella with two parallel superficial screws.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7666768PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12891-020-03744-xDOI Listing

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