| Literature DB >> 31650371 |
Abdulsalam Abdulaziz Al-Tamimi1,2, Carlos Quental3, Joao Folgado3, Chris Peach2,4, Paulo Bartolo5.
Abstract
The design of commercially available fixation plates and the materials used for their fabrication lead to the plates being stiffer than bone. Consequently, commercial plates are prone to induce bone stress shielding. In this study, three-dimensional fixation plates are designed using topology optimisation aiming to reduce the risk of bone stress shielding. Fixation plate designs were optimised by minimising the strain energy for three levels of volume reduction (i.e. 25%, 45% and 75%). To evaluate stress shielding, changes in bone stress due to the different fixation plate designs were determined on the fracture plane of an idealised shaft of a long bone under a four-point bending load considering the effect of a patient walking with crutches of a transverse fractured tibia. Topology optimisation is a viable approach to design less stiff plates with adequate mechanical strength considering high volume reductions, which consequently increased the stress transferred to the bone fracture plane minimising bone stress shielding.Entities:
Keywords: Fixation plates; Stress analysis; Stress shielding; Topology optimisation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31650371 PMCID: PMC7105442 DOI: 10.1007/s10237-019-01240-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomech Model Mechanobiol ISSN: 1617-7940
Fig. 1Load and boundary conditions considered for the fixation plate optimisation of a four-point bending load, b uniaxial compression, c torsional and d combination of the bending, compression and torsion loads
Fig. 2Bone-plate construct considered to determine stresses at the fracture plane
Change in the equivalent bending stiffness in comparison with the initial values for four- and eight-hole plates (19.27 and 16.22 N m2, respectively)
| Plate | Volume reduction (%) | Hole numbers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Equivalent stiffness change (%) | |||
| Four-hole plate | Eight-hole plate | ||
| Bending | 25 | − 3 | − 2 |
| 45 | − 5 | − 5 | |
| 75 | − 20 | − 61 | |
| Compression | 25 | − 15 | − 15 |
| 45 | − 17 | − 28 | |
| 75 | − 49 | − 71 | |
| Torsion | 25 | − 3 | − 31 |
| 45 | − 9 | − 33 | |
| 75 | − 49 | − 64 | |
| Combined | 25 | − 4 | − 4 |
| 45 | − 57 | − 7 | |
| 75 | − 92 | − 87 | |
Maximum von Mises stresses on the bone at the fracture plane for all considered designs
| Plate | Volume reduction (%) | Hole numbers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| von Mises stress (MPa) | |||
| Four-hole plate | Eight-hole plate | ||
| Initial designs | N/A | 17.59 | 15.37 |
| Bending | 25 | 17.95 | 15.38 |
| 45 | 19.93 | 15.93 | |
| 75 | 21.41 | 18.15 | |
| Compression | 25 | 17.94 | 15.46 |
| 45 | 19.89 | 15.58 | |
| 75 | 20.79 | 19.91 | |
| Torsion | 25 | 17.77 | 15.73 |
| 45 | 19.92 | 15.81 | |
| 75 | 20.03 | 18.25 | |
| Combined | 25 | 17.61 | 15.40 |
| 45 | 17.88 | 15.75 | |
| 75 | 22.96 | 21.07 | |
Fig. 3von Mises stresses at the bone fracture plane resulted from the initial designs and all of the 75% volume reduction optimised plates
Fig. 4Stress distribution on the optimised four- and eight-screw hole plates with 75% volume reduction and different loading conditions a bending, b compression, c torsion and d a combined load