Guest guest Posted December 13, 2000 Report Share Posted December 13, 2000 > Anatomical Reconstruction Of Extramedullary Stem Best In Total Hip > Replacement > 12/12/2000 11:36:18 AM > By > > Anatomical reconstruction of the extramedullary stem to restore normal hip > biomechanics has advantages over other stem designs, researchers find. > > Stability of the implant and the transfer of stress after total hip > replacement are affected by the design of the extramedullary stem. Most > designs result in micromotions in the interfacial region that allow bone > regrowth. > > Investigators conducted a biomechanical study of seven different > extramedullary stem designs. These were 1) anatomical case reconstruction > based on computed tomography data; 2) -15 degrees retroverted case; 3) +15 > degrees anteverted case; 4) medial case with femoral neck shortened 10 mm; > 5) lateral case with femoral neck elongated 10 mm; 6) varus case with CCD > angle 127 degrees and 7) valgus case with CCD angle 143 degrees. > > In all seven variations, the intramedullary shape was anatomically > reconstructed using computed tomography data. > > Results showed that the anatomical reconstruction of the extramedullary stem > gave the lowest micromotions and the lowest interfacial stresses. The > anteverted and the lateralized cases gave the worst results. > > The investigators conclude that " the present results could be taken as > biomechanical arguments for the requirement of anatomical reconstruction of > not only the intramedullary shape but also the extramedullary parameters. " > > For more information on Still's Disease please visit the International Still's Disease Foundation at http://www.stillsdisease.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.