| Literature DB >> 11820163 |
Abstract
A percutaneous osseointegrated anchoring device for above-knee implantation designed to enable permanent attachment of an artificial limb is described. In addition to a technical description, the two-stage operative procedure, together with the rehabilitation process in an 18-year-old man, is also detailed. Following amputation and complete healing of the soft tissues, a surface-structured metal pin capable of supporting large loads, is driven into the medullary canal of the thigh bone. A metal sleeve having an identical surface structure serves to close off the medullary canal and provide an interface with the soft tissues. Screwed to the end of the pin is a conical metal adapter to which is attached a silicone cylinder whose right-angled distal end is located subcutaneously and ends in a titanium mesh. The first part of the implantation procedure is concluded by closing the silicone cylinder with a plastic plug for 6 weeks to permit osseous integration and the ingrowth of tissue into the mesh. In a second step, the plastic plug is removed via a skin incision, and the permanent load-bearing metal adapter fitted. In the above-mentioned patient wound healing at the metal/tissue interface was complication-free, since the implanted silicone cylinder prevented the "wedge effect" caused by the build-up of "luxuriant" tissue. After a further healing phase of 6 weeks, rehabilitation with an exoprosthesis took only 2 weeks, after which time, the patient was able to walk without a walking aid, and returned to work.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11820163 DOI: 10.1515/bmte.2001.46.12.355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Tech (Berl) ISSN: 0013-5585 Impact factor: 1.411