Literature DB >> 20016391

A biomechanical comparison of a biodegradable volar locked plate with two titanium volar locked plates in a distal radius fracture model.

Kajetan Klos1, Sascha Rausch, Mike Löffler, Rosemarie Fröber, Konrad Hofmeier, Mark Lenz, Gunther O Hofmann, Thomas Mückley.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Volar plating is commonly used in the management of distal radius fractures; bioresorbable plates have attractive features. We compared a bioresorbable plate with a latest generation and an established locked titanium plate.
METHODS: Twenty-four fresh-frozen radii (12 pairs) were assigned to three mean bone mineral density-matched groups of eight radii each. A standardized extraarticular distal radius fracture was created and plated using one implant type per group. Postplating stiffness and displacement were studied in a first axial-loading test (15 cycles at 250 N). Next, biodegradation was simulated by 4 weeks' immersion in phosphate-buffered saline, followed by a second axial test. Finally, the specimens underwent cyclic loading (2,400 cycles at 250 N).
RESULTS: It is clear from the initial test that the LCP plate was significantly stiffer and displaced less than the bioresorbable plate. The outcome of the postimmersion tests is that one bioresorbable plate failed early on after 4 weeks' immersion, and the remaining bioresorbable plates and the T plates did not differ significantly. Cyclic tests conclude that the LCP plate was significantly superior to the other systems. One T plate and four of the bioresorbable plates failed, but none of the LCP plates failed. In the bioresorbable constructs, stability, time to failure, and bone mineral density were significantly correlated.
CONCLUSIONS: The LCP plate was biomechanically superior and may be generally recommended for the volar plating of distal radius fractures. Except one plate failure, the bioresorbable plate was similar to the T plate in the quasi-static tests and should, therefore, be considered for clinical studies, with patient selection confined, initially, only to candidates with good bone stock quality.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20016391     DOI: 10.1097/TA.0b013e3181b28962

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma        ISSN: 0022-5282


  2 in total

1.  Functional Outcome and Complications at 2.5 Years Following Volar Locking Plate Fixation of Distal Radius Fractures.

Authors:  Robert J MacFarlane; David Miller; Lynn Wilson; Carl Meyer; Cronan Kerin; David James Ford; Graham Cheung
Journal:  J Hand Microsurg       Date:  2015-01-27

2.  Utility of the cortical thickness of the distal radius as a predictor of distal-radius bone density.

Authors:  Sascha Rausch; Kajetan Klos; Florian Gras; Hristo Kostov Skulev; Albrecht Popp; Gunther Olaf Hofmann; Thomas Mückley
Journal:  Arch Trauma Res       Date:  2013-06-01
  2 in total

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