Chatterjee, Subhomoy ; Kobylinski, Sabine ; Basu, Bikramjit (2018) Finite Element Analysis to Probe the Influence of Acetabular Shell Design, Liner Material, and Subject Parameters on Biomechanical Response in Periprosthetic Bone Journal of Biomechanical Engineering, 140 (10). ISSN 0148-0731
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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1115/1.4040249
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/1.4040249
Abstract
The implant stability and biomechanical response of periprosthetic bone in acetabulum around total hip joint replacement (THR) devices depend on a host of parameters, including design of articulating materials, gait cycle and subject parameters. In this study, the impact of shell design (conventional, finned, spiked, and combined design) and liner material on the biomechanical response of periprosthetic bone has been analyzed using finite element (FE) method. Two different liner materials: high density polyethylene–20% hydroxyapatite–20% alumina (HDPE–20%HA–20%Al2O3) and highly cross-linked ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene (HC-UHMWPE) were used. The subject parameters included bone condition and bodyweight. Physiologically relevant load cases of a gait cycle were considered. The deviation of mechanical condition of the periprosthetic bone due to implantation was least for the finned shell design. No significant deviation was observed at the bone region adjacent to the spikes and the fins. This study recommends the use of the finned design, particularly for weaker bone conditions. For stronger bones, the combined design may also be recommended for higher stability. The use of HC-UHMWPE liner was found to be better for convensional shell design. However, similar biomechanical response was captured in our FE analysis for both the liner materials in case of other shell designs. Overall, the study establishes the biomechanical response of periprosthetic bone in the acetabular with preclinically tested liner materials together with new shell design for different subject conditions.
Item Type: | Article |
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Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to ASME. |
Keywords: | Artificial Organs; Biomechanics; Prostheses. |
ID Code: | 116156 |
Deposited On: | 22 Mar 2021 05:28 |
Last Modified: | 22 Mar 2021 05:28 |
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