Background: Surgical treatments of benign primary bone tumors of the femur face the challenge of limiting tissue damage and contamination while providing sufficient stabilization to avoid fracture. While no clear treatment guidelines exist, surgical treatment commonly consists of femoral fenestration and curettage with optional filling and plating of the defect. Mono- or bicortical plating of distal femoral defects aim to reduce fracture risk and have been shown to increase axial stability. However, it remains unclear whether plating increases torsional stability of the affected femur.
Questions/purposes: This biomechanical study aimed to determine how much additional stability can be achieved by mono- or bicortical plating of femoral defects after fenestration. The following hypotheses were investigated: 1. Preventive plating of distal femur bone defects enhances torsional stability when compared to femoral fenestration alone. 2. A condition close to the intact (nonpathological) bone can be achieved by bone plating. 3. Defect shape influences torsional stability.
Patients And Methods: Thiel embalmed human femora (n = 24) were left intact or subjected to the following surgical treatments (A) defect creation via fenestration, (B) defect with short monocortical plating, (C) defect with long bicortical plating. All femora were torsion tested in midstance position using pre-cycling and testing until failure. Quantitative computed tomography pre and post testing allowed bone mineral density calculation and crack path analysis. Finite element analysis provided insight into defect shape variations.
Results: Torsion experiments showed no relevant enhancement of torsional stability due to mono- or bicortical plating. There were no significant differences in maximum torque between unplated and plated femora with defect (defect: 35.38 ± 7.53 Nm, monocortical plating: 37.77 ± 9.82 Nm, bicortical plating: 50.27 ± 9.72 Nm, p > 0.05). Maximum torque for all treatment groups was significantly lower compared to intact femora (155-200 Nm, p < 0.001). Cracks originated predominantly from the proximal posterior corner of the defect and intersected with screw holes in plated femora. The influence of variations of the defect corner shapes had no significant influence on maximum torque and angle.
Conclusion: This biomechanical study shows that mono- or bicortical plating is not an effective preventive treatment against torsional failure of femora with distal defects as the resulting maximum torque was drastically reduced compared to intact femora. Thus, the initial hypotheses have to be rejected. As habitual loading of the femur includes a combination of axial and torsional loading, the observed lack of prevention against torsional failure might help to explain the occurrence of fractures despite plating. Future research towards ameliorating clinical outcome should address the role of defect filling with bone cement or bone grafts regarding the improvement of torsional stability after primary bone tumor treatment in the femur.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2024.106798 | DOI Listing |
J Hand Surg Glob Online
November 2024
The Curtis National Hand Center, MedStar Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore, MD.
Purpose: Osteoporotic patients are at risk of peri-implant fractures after distal radius fixation. A unicortical screw in the proximal hole of the plate can theoretically decrease stress riser formation by eliminating the hole in the far bone cortex. This construct has been proposed in orthopedic literature to prevent peri-implant fractures but has not been tested in an osteoporotic distal radius model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mech Behav Biomed Mater
January 2025
Department of Orthopedics and Trauma, Medical University of Graz, Auenbruggerplatz 5, 8036, Graz, Austria. Electronic address:
Background: Surgical treatments of benign primary bone tumors of the femur face the challenge of limiting tissue damage and contamination while providing sufficient stabilization to avoid fracture. While no clear treatment guidelines exist, surgical treatment commonly consists of femoral fenestration and curettage with optional filling and plating of the defect. Mono- or bicortical plating of distal femoral defects aim to reduce fracture risk and have been shown to increase axial stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCraniomaxillofac Trauma Reconstr
September 2024
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Centro Universitário Serra dos Órgãos (UNIFESO), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Original Article. The surgical treatment of mandibular fractures has undergone several changes over the past 100 years, since the use of wires and intermaxillary fixation, until today where most of the fractures are treated with internal fixation using plates and screws. For the correct use of this hardware, the surgeon must have adequate knowledge of jaw anatomy to prevent complications during the insertion of screws like in fractures of the mandibular body and angle, when the screws of the plate installed in the compression zone can damage the inferior alveolar nerve within the mandibular canal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile many humeral shaft fractures can be successfully treated with nonoperative management, compression plating techniques using at least three or four screws on either side of the fracture are the current gold standard. We hypothesized that a less rigid construct using compression with only two screws on either side of the fracture can provide adequate strength for uneventful fracture union. This is a retrospective review of all the patients who underwent open reduction and compression plate fixation for acute diaphyseal humerus fractures (ADHFs) at an academic Level-1 urban trauma center between 2018 and 2023.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Orthop Trauma
October 2024
Department for Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA.
Objectives: A variable pitch locking screw is intended to provide interfragmentary compression combined with fixed angle stability of locking plate constructs. The objective of this study was to compare variable pitch locking screws (3.5-mm KreuLock Ti locking compression screws, Arthrex Inc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!