| Literature DB >> 35591612 |
Salome Hagelstein1, Michael Seidenstuecker1, Adalbert Kovacs2, Roland Barkhoff3, Sergej Zankovic1.
Abstract
Bioabsorbable implants have become the focus of the latest research for new bone implant materials. With favorable characteristics such as compatible mechanical characteristics, no long-term side effects, and even osteogenesis enhancing properties they seem to be the future of osteosynthesis. Besides these characteristics, they must perform on the same level as traditional implant materials regarding their mechanical support for bone healing. A particular focus in the research for bioabsorbable implants has been on metal alloys, as these have particularly good mechanical properties such as excellent maximum force and high stability. This study focused on the shear strength of new bioabsorbable zinc and magnesium pins in comparison to traditional implants such as K-wires and cancellous bone screws in bone-implant connections. During quasi-static and fatigue loading experiments, magnesium pins (MAGNEZIX, Syntellix AG, Hannover, Germany) and new zinc silver pins (Zn-6Ag) by Limedion (Limedion GmbH., Mannheim, Germany) were compared with conventional osteosynthetic materials. The pins made of the new bioabsorbable alloys withstood the cyclic loads to the same extent as the conventional osteosynthesis materials. In the quasi-static loading, it was shown that the novel Zn-6Ag from Limedion has the same shear strength as the magnesium pin from Syntellix, which is already in clinical use. In addition, the zinc pin showed significantly better shear strength compared to osteosynthesis with K-wires (p < 0.05).Entities:
Keywords: bioabsorbable implant; fixation performance; osteosynthesis; shear testing; zinc alloy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35591612 PMCID: PMC9101395 DOI: 10.3390/ma15093280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.748
This table lists the implants, their number, and dimensions used for shear testing.
| Implant | Material | Serial No. | n | Dimensions [mm] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ø | Length | ||||
| Cancellous bone screw | Stainless steel | 207.030 | 3 | 4 | 30 |
| K-wire | Stainless steel | LX166S | 6 | 1.6 | 150 |
| MAGNEZIX pin | Mg alloy | 1127.030 | 5 | 2.7 | 30 |
| Zinc pin | Zn-6Ag | - | 3 | 2.7 | 30 |
Figure 1Scheme of the experimental set-up of the shear testing.
Maximum forces measured in shear testing with mean and standard deviation (SD).
| Implant | Mean [N] | SD [N] |
|---|---|---|
| K-wire | 119.96 | 4.43 |
| Cancellous bone screw | 204.84 | 36.98 |
| MAGNEZIX pin | 159.69 | 4.94 |
| Zinc pin | 166.56 | 15.14 |
Figure 2This figure shows the average force-displacement curves of the MAGNEZIX pin, the zinc pin, the cancellous screw, and the K-wire under quasi-static load.
Figure 3X-ray of the zinc pins (down low) and the MAGNEZIX pins (up high) after quasi-static testing and failure with Siremobil-ISO C from Siemens (Siemens AG, Munich, Germany).
Figure 4Average maximum shear strengths of the implants measured in this study in comparison to the literature by Augat et al. [5] and Lenz et al. [44] (both with n = 6).