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Biomechanics of a calcar loading and a shortened tapered femoral stem: Comparative in‐vitro testing of primary stability and strain distribution
Author(s) -
Freitag Tobias,
Bieger Ralf,
Kiefer Hartmuth,
Dornacher Daniel,
Reichel Heiko,
Ignatius Anita,
Dürselen Lutz
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of experimental orthopaedics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.597
H-Index - 18
ISSN - 2197-1153
DOI - 10.1186/s40634-021-00388-1
Subject(s) - calcar , stress shielding , biomechanics , femur , materials science , cadaver , biomedical engineering , implant , anchoring , stress (linguistics) , anatomy , surgery , medicine , structural engineering , engineering , linguistics , philosophy
Purpose The most common femoral short stems available on the market can, in principle, be divided with regard to their anchoring concepts into a calcar loading and a shortened tapered design. The purpose of this study was to compare the primary stability and stress‐shielding of two short stems, which correspond to these two different anchoring concepts. Methods Using seven paired fresh frozen human cadaver femurs, primary axial and rotational stabilities under dynamic load (100–1600 N) were evaluated by miniature displacement transducers after 100,000 load cycles. Changes in cortical strains were measured before and after implantation of both stem types to detect implant‐specific load transmission and possible stress‐shielding effects. Results Reversible and irreversible micromotions under dynamic load displayed no significant differences between the two implants. Implantation of either stem types resulted in a reduction of cortical strains in the proximal femur, which was less pronounced for the calcar loading implant. Conclusions Both short stems displayed comparable micromotions far below the critical threshold above which osseointegration may disturbed. Neither short stem could avoid proximal stress‐shielding. This effect was less pronounced for the calcar loading short stem, which corresponds to a more physiological load transmission.

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