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Mechanical testing of spinal instrumentation.

Authors :
Ashman RB
Birch JG
Bone LB
Corin JD
Herring JA
Johnston CE 2nd
Ritterbush JF
Roach JW
Source :
Clinical orthopaedics and related research [Clin Orthop Relat Res] 1988 Feb; Vol. 227, pp. 113-25.
Publication Year :
1988

Abstract

Clinically, implant failure is often the result of fatigue from continuous cyclic loading. Because of the inadequacies of long-run cyclic testing, fatigue susceptibility of implants was investigated by means of strain measurements and stress analysis under physiologic loads. The implants were equipped with strain gauges during load-deformation testing, and the tensile stress (the component of stress-producing fatigue failure in metals) was calculated for that site on the implant. For metals most often implanted for spinal surgery, such as stainless steel and chrome-cobalt alloys, a stress exists, known as the endurance limit, below which failure will not occur, even if cycled indefinitely. By calculating the tensile stresses in an implant and relating them to the endurance limit, the implant's susceptibility to fatigue can be determined at the site of stress analysis without formal cyclic load testing.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0009-921X
Volume :
227
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical orthopaedics and related research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
3338201