| Literature DB >> 32650836 |
Sen Wang1, Jian Yu1, Xin Ma2, Dahang Zhao1, Xiang Geng1, Jiazhang Huang1, Xu Wang1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Arthroscopic ankle arthrodesis (AAA) is a standard surgical method for the treatment of advanced traumatic ankle arthritis and has become more popular due to its advantages. To fix the tibiotalar joint, the use of three percutaneous screws is considered to have better mechanical stability than the use of two screws. However, it is sometimes difficult to insert three screws because they might block each other due to the small area of the tibiotalar joint surface and the large diameter of the screws; few articles illustrate how to insert three screws without the screws disturbing each other. The purpose of this study is to explore possible screw configurations of tripod fixation in arthroscopic ankle arthrodesis that avoid the collision of screws and yield better biomechanical performance.Entities:
Keywords: Arthroscopic ankle arthrodesis; Biomechanics; Finite element method; Screw configuration
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32650836 PMCID: PMC7350182 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-020-01767-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Fig. 1Schematic diagrams of the modeling and analysis procedure
Interaction definition [14]
| Contact | Interaction type |
|---|---|
| Tibia and talus | Frictional, coefficient of friction is 0.1 |
| Screws and tibia | Tie |
| Screws and talus | Frictionless |
Fig. 2Different views of 5 screws configurations. (Images are front, left, and top views of each configuration, respectively.) (The home-run screw is labeled “S1” in white. The anterolateral screw is labeled “S2” in gray. The medial screw is labeled “S3” in black.)
A list of details of five possible screw configurations
| Screw configurations | From | To | Length inside the bone (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|
1 Posteromedial home-run | S1 posteromedial | Talar head-neck junction | 56.1 |
| S2 anterolateral | Posteromedial corner of talus | 48.6 | |
| S3 medial | Lateral process of talus | 55.8 | |
| Total length | 160.5 | ||
2 Posteromedial home-run | S1 posteromedial | Talar head-neck junction | 56 |
| S2 anterolateral | Posterolateral corner of talus | 60 | |
| S3 anteromedial | Lateral process of talus | 57.3 | |
| Total length | 173.3 | ||
3 Posteromedial home-run | S1 posteromedial | Talar head-neck junction | 55.9 |
| S2 anterolateral | Posteromedial corner of talus | 37.7 | |
| S3 anteromedial | Posterolateral corner of talus | 56.8 | |
| Total length | 150.4 | ||
4 Posterolateral home-run | S1 posterolateral | Talar head-neck junction | 58.8 |
| S2 anterolateral | Posteromedial corner of talus | 44.8 | |
| S3 medial | Lateral process of talus | 59.7 | |
| Total length | 163.3 | ||
5 Posterolateral home-run | S1 posterolateral | Talar head-neck junction | 58 |
| S2 anterolateral | Posteromedial corner of talus | 45.4 | |
| S3 medial | Posterolateral corner of talus | 47.4 | |
| Total length | 150.8 | ||
Fig. 3The maximum/mean micromotion of the articular surface and maximum/mean pressure at the contact surface for four stress scenarios
Fig. 4Micromotion contour plot (bottom view) showing the distribution of the micromotions on the contact surface of the tibia