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Damage in a Distal Radius Fracture Model Treated With Locked Volar Plating After Simulated Postoperative Loading.

Authors :
Salas, Christina
Brantley, Justin A.
Clark, James
Reda Taha, Mahmoud
Myers, Orrin B.
Mercer, Deana
Source :
Journal of Hand Surgery (03635023); Jul2018, Vol. 43 Issue 7, p679.e1-679.e6, 1p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Purpose “Damage” is an engineering term defining a period between a state of material perfection and the onset of crack initiation. Clinically, it is a loss of fixation due to microstructural breakdown, indirectly measured as a reduction of stiffness of the bone-implant construct, normalized by the cross-sectional area and length of the bone. The purpose of this study was to characterize damage in a cadaver model of extra-articular distal radius fracture with dorsal comminution treated using 2-column volar distal radius plates. Methods Ten matched distal radii were randomly divided into 2 groups: group I specimens were treated with a volar distal radius plate with an independent, 2-tiered scaffold design; group II specimens (contralateral limbs) were treated with a volar plate with a single-head design for enhanced ulnar buttressing. Specimens were cyclically loaded to simulate a 6-month postoperative load-bearing period. We report damage after a defined protocol of cyclical loading and load to failure simulating a fall on an outstretched hand. Results Group II specimens experienced more damage under cyclic loading conditions than group I specimens. Group I specimens were stiffer than group II specimens under load-to-failure conditions. Ultimate force at failure in group I and group II specimens was not different. Specimens failed by plate bending (group I, n = 6/10; group II, n = 2/10) and fracture of the lunate facet (group I, n = 4/10; group II, n = 8/10). Conclusions Group I specimens had less screw cutout at the lunate facet than group II specimens under cyclic loading as indicated by lower damage measures and fewer facet fractures during load-to-failure testing. The overall strength of the construct is not affected by plate design. Clinical relevance Microstructural damage or a loss of fixation due to an overly rigid volar plate design may cause malunion or nonunion of fracture fragments and lead to bone-implant instability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03635023
Volume :
43
Issue :
7
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Hand Surgery (03635023)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
130376994
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhsa.2017.12.019