The sensitivity of the stiffness and thickness of a titanium inlay in a cementless PEEK femoral component to the micromotions and bone strain energy density

MEDICAL ENGINEERING & PHYSICS(2023)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Polyetheretherketone (PEEK) has been proposed as alternative material for total knee arthroplasty implants due to its low stiffness, which may reduce stress-shielding. In cementless fixation, a proper primary fixation is required for long-term fixation. Previous research showed that the lower stiffness of a cementless PEEK femoral component results in larger micromotions at the implant-bone interface compared to a cobalt-chrome femoral component. A titanium inlay on the PEEK implant surface may improve the primary fixation while maintaining the favourable stiffness properties. Therefore, the effect of thickness and stiffness of a titanium inlay on the primary fixation and stress-shielding was investigated. A finite element model of the femur and femoral component was created with five titanium inlay variants. The micromotions and strain energy density (SED) were quantified as outcome measures. The distal thin - proximal thick variant showed the largest resulting micromotions (51.2 mu m). Relative to the all-PEEK femoral component, the addition of a titanium inlay reduced the micromotions with 30 % to 40 % without considerably affecting the stress-shielding capacity (strain energy difference of 6 % to 10 %). Differences in micromotions (43.0-51.2 mu m) and SED between the variants were relatively small. In conclusion, the addition of a titanium inlay could lead to a reduction of the micromotions without substantially affecting the SED distribution.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Cementless femoral component,Finite element analysis,Micromotions,Polyetheretherketone,Strain energy density,Titanium inlay
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要