Back to Search
Start Over
Supplemental medial small fragment fixation adds stability to distal femur fixation: A biomechanical study
- Source :
- Injury. 52(7)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Introduction: Bridge plating of distal femur fractures with lateral locking plates is susceptible to varus collapse, fixation failure, and nonunion. While medial and lateral dual plating has been described in clinical series, the biomechanical effects of dual plating of distal femur fractures have yet to be clearly defined. The purpose of this study was to compare dual plating to lateral locked bridge plating alone in a cadaveric distal femur gap osteotomy model. Materials and Methods: Gap osteotomies were created in eight matched pairs of cadaveric female distal femurs (average age: 64 yrs (standard deviation ± 4.4 yrs); age range: 57–68 yrs;) to simulate comminuted extraarticular distal femur fractures (AO/OTA 33A). Eight femurs underwent fixation with lateral locked plates alone and were matched with eight femurs treated with dual plating: lateral locked plates with supplemental medial small fragment non-locking fixation. Mechanical testing was performed on an ElectroPuls E10000 materials testing system using a 10 kN/100 Nm biaxial load cell. Specimens were subject to 25,000 cycles of cyclic loading from 100-1000 N at 2 Hz. Results: Two (2/8) specimens in the lateral only group failed catastrophically prior to completion of testing. All dual plated specimens survived the testing regimen. Dual plated specimens demonstrated significantly less coronal plane displacement (median 0.2 degrees, interquartile range [IQR], 0.0–0.5 degrees) compared to 2.0 degrees (IQR 1.9-3.3, p = 0.02) in the lateral plate only group. Dual plated specimens demonstrated greater bending stiffness compared to the lateral plated group (median 29.0 kN/degree, IQR 1.5–68.2 kN/degree vs median 0.50 kN/degree, IQR 0.23–2.28 kN/degree, p = 0.03). Conclusion: Contemporary fixation methods with a distal femur fractures are susceptible to mechanical failure and nonunion with lateral plates alone. Dual plate fixation in a cadaveric model of distal femur fractures underwent significantly less displacement under simulated weight bearing conditions and demonstrated greater stiffness than lateral plating alone. Given the significant clinical failure rates of lateral bridge plating in distal femur fractures, supplemental fixation should be considered, and dual plating of distal femurs augments mechanical stability in a clinically relevant magnitude.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_treatment
Nonunion
medicine.disease_cause
Osteotomy
Weight-bearing
Weight-Bearing
03 medical and health sciences
Fracture Fixation, Internal
0302 clinical medicine
Cadaver
Bone plate
Fracture fixation
Medicine
Humans
Femur
Fractures, Comminuted
General Environmental Science
Fixation (histology)
Aged
Orthodontics
030222 orthopedics
business.industry
030208 emergency & critical care medicine
Middle Aged
musculoskeletal system
medicine.disease
Biomechanical Phenomena
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Female
business
Cadaveric spasm
Bone Plates
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18790267
- Volume :
- 52
- Issue :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Injury
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....253dd522028b13ee87a261ffc5a5c967