Migration and cyclic motion of a new short-stemmed hip prosthesis--a biomechanical in vitro study.

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Migration and cyclic motion of a new short-stemmed hip prosthesis--a biomechanical in vitro study. / Westphal, F M; Bishop, N; Honl, M; Hille, E; Püschel, Klaus; Morlock, M M.

In: CLIN BIOMECH, Vol. 21, No. 8, 8, 2006, p. 834-840.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Westphal, FM, Bishop, N, Honl, M, Hille, E, Püschel, K & Morlock, MM 2006, 'Migration and cyclic motion of a new short-stemmed hip prosthesis--a biomechanical in vitro study.', CLIN BIOMECH, vol. 21, no. 8, 8, pp. 834-840. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16806616?dopt=Citation>

APA

Westphal, F. M., Bishop, N., Honl, M., Hille, E., Püschel, K., & Morlock, M. M. (2006). Migration and cyclic motion of a new short-stemmed hip prosthesis--a biomechanical in vitro study. CLIN BIOMECH, 21(8), 834-840. [8]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16806616?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Westphal FM, Bishop N, Honl M, Hille E, Püschel K, Morlock MM. Migration and cyclic motion of a new short-stemmed hip prosthesis--a biomechanical in vitro study. CLIN BIOMECH. 2006;21(8):834-840. 8.

Bibtex

@article{25b829b504c646699d0f37f0ce80cd7b,
title = "Migration and cyclic motion of a new short-stemmed hip prosthesis--a biomechanical in vitro study.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Uncemented, short-stemmed hip prostheses have been developed to reduce the risk of stress shielding and to preserve femural bone stock. The long-term success of these implants is yet uncertain. Prerequisite for osseointegration is sufficient primary stability. In this study the cyclic motion and migration patterns of a new short-stemmed hip implant were compared with those for two clinically successful shaft prostheses. METHODS: The prostheses were implanted in paired fresh human femura and loaded dynamically (gait cycle) with increasing load (max 2,100 N) up to 15,000 cycles. Relative displacements between prosthesis and bone were recorded using a 3D-video analysis system. FINDINGS: The short stem displayed a biphasic migration pattern with stabilisation at maximum load. Initial migration was predominantly into varus and was greater than that for the shaft prostheses. Failure occurred in cases of poor bone quality and malpositioning. Cyclic motion of the short prosthesis was less than that for the shaft prostheses. Surface finish showed no effect. System stiffness for the new stem was lower than for the shaft prostheses. INTERPRETATION: The new stem tended to migrate initially more than the shaft prostheses, but stabilised when cortical contact was achieved or the cancellous bone was compacted sufficiently. Bone quality and correct positioning were important factors for the short stem. The lower cyclic motion of the new stem should be favourable for bony ingrowth. The lower system bending stiffness with the new implant indicated a more physiological loading of the bone and should thereby reduce the effects of stress shielding.",
author = "Westphal, {F M} and N Bishop and M Honl and E Hille and Klaus P{\"u}schel and Morlock, {M M}",
year = "2006",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "21",
pages = "834--840",
journal = "CLIN BIOMECH",
issn = "0268-0033",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Migration and cyclic motion of a new short-stemmed hip prosthesis--a biomechanical in vitro study.

AU - Westphal, F M

AU - Bishop, N

AU - Honl, M

AU - Hille, E

AU - Püschel, Klaus

AU - Morlock, M M

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - BACKGROUND: Uncemented, short-stemmed hip prostheses have been developed to reduce the risk of stress shielding and to preserve femural bone stock. The long-term success of these implants is yet uncertain. Prerequisite for osseointegration is sufficient primary stability. In this study the cyclic motion and migration patterns of a new short-stemmed hip implant were compared with those for two clinically successful shaft prostheses. METHODS: The prostheses were implanted in paired fresh human femura and loaded dynamically (gait cycle) with increasing load (max 2,100 N) up to 15,000 cycles. Relative displacements between prosthesis and bone were recorded using a 3D-video analysis system. FINDINGS: The short stem displayed a biphasic migration pattern with stabilisation at maximum load. Initial migration was predominantly into varus and was greater than that for the shaft prostheses. Failure occurred in cases of poor bone quality and malpositioning. Cyclic motion of the short prosthesis was less than that for the shaft prostheses. Surface finish showed no effect. System stiffness for the new stem was lower than for the shaft prostheses. INTERPRETATION: The new stem tended to migrate initially more than the shaft prostheses, but stabilised when cortical contact was achieved or the cancellous bone was compacted sufficiently. Bone quality and correct positioning were important factors for the short stem. The lower cyclic motion of the new stem should be favourable for bony ingrowth. The lower system bending stiffness with the new implant indicated a more physiological loading of the bone and should thereby reduce the effects of stress shielding.

AB - BACKGROUND: Uncemented, short-stemmed hip prostheses have been developed to reduce the risk of stress shielding and to preserve femural bone stock. The long-term success of these implants is yet uncertain. Prerequisite for osseointegration is sufficient primary stability. In this study the cyclic motion and migration patterns of a new short-stemmed hip implant were compared with those for two clinically successful shaft prostheses. METHODS: The prostheses were implanted in paired fresh human femura and loaded dynamically (gait cycle) with increasing load (max 2,100 N) up to 15,000 cycles. Relative displacements between prosthesis and bone were recorded using a 3D-video analysis system. FINDINGS: The short stem displayed a biphasic migration pattern with stabilisation at maximum load. Initial migration was predominantly into varus and was greater than that for the shaft prostheses. Failure occurred in cases of poor bone quality and malpositioning. Cyclic motion of the short prosthesis was less than that for the shaft prostheses. Surface finish showed no effect. System stiffness for the new stem was lower than for the shaft prostheses. INTERPRETATION: The new stem tended to migrate initially more than the shaft prostheses, but stabilised when cortical contact was achieved or the cancellous bone was compacted sufficiently. Bone quality and correct positioning were important factors for the short stem. The lower cyclic motion of the new stem should be favourable for bony ingrowth. The lower system bending stiffness with the new implant indicated a more physiological loading of the bone and should thereby reduce the effects of stress shielding.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 21

SP - 834

EP - 840

JO - CLIN BIOMECH

JF - CLIN BIOMECH

SN - 0268-0033

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -