| Literature DB >> 31766685 |
Carlo Francesco Grottoli1, Alberto Cingolani1, Fabio Zambon2, Riccardo Ferracini3,4, Tomaso Villa2, Giuseppe Perale1,5.
Abstract
Total hip arthroplasty (THA) is a surgical procedure for the replacement of hip joints with artificial prostheses. Several approaches are currently employed in the treatment of this kind of defect. Overall, the most common method involves using a quite invasive metallic support (a Burch-Schneider ring). Moreover, valid alternatives and less invasive techniques still need to be supported by novel material development. In this work, we evaluated the performance of SmartBone®, a xenohybrid bone graft composed of a bovine bone matrix reinforced with biodegradable polymers and collagen, as an effective support in acetabular prosthesis reconstruction. Specifically, the material's mechanical properties were experimentally determined (E = ~1.25 GPa, Ef = ~0.34 GPa, and Et = ~0.49 GPa) and used for simulation of the hip joint system with a SmartBone® insert. Moreover, a comparison with a similar case treated with a Burch-Schneider ring was also conducted. It was found that it is possible to perform THA revision surgeries without the insertion of an invasive metal support and it can be nicely combined with SmartBone®'s osteointegration characteristics. The material can withstand the loads independently (σmax = ~12 MPa) or be supported by a thinner titanium plate in contact with the bone in the worst cases. This way, improved bone regeneration can be achieved.Entities:
Keywords: 3D reconstruction; bone substitute; computational model; total hip arthroplasty
Year: 2019 PMID: 31766685 PMCID: PMC6963854 DOI: 10.3390/jfb10040053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Biomater ISSN: 2079-4983
Mechanical properties for compression, bending, and torsion of SmartBone®.
| Test | Max Stress (MPa) | Max Strain (-) | Elastic Modulus (GPa) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Compression | 25.8 + 7.9 | 0.024 + 0.005 | 1.2456 + 0.2259 |
| Bending | 23.8 + 4.2 | 0.0765 + 0.009 | 0.3406 + 0.063 |
| Torsion | 25.5 + 4.4 | 0.058 + 0.009 | 0.4906 + 0.1037 |
Figure 1ESEM image of SmartBone® well evidencing its open porous structure and the presence of both the natural mineral structure (white) and the polymeric coating (light gray).
Figure 2Two different views of pathological CAD model treated with a Burch–Schneider ring.
Figure 3Pelvis pathological model treated with a Burch–Schneider ring: (a) von Mises stress distribution (data are expressed in megapascals) and (b) displacement distribution (data are expressed in millimeters).
Figure 4Pelvis pathological model treated with SmartBone®.
Figure 5Pelvis pathological model treated with SmartBone®: (a) von Mises stress distribution (data are expressed in megapascals) and (b) displacement distribution (data are expressed in millimeters).
Figure 6Detail of the stresses on the residual acetabular area in the case treated with SmartBone®.
Figure 73D reconstruction of the acetabulum model. Constraints are highlighted in blue.
Figure 8Acetabulum physiological model: (a) von Mises stress distribution (data are expressed in megapascals) and (b) displacement distribution (data are expressed in millimeters).