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A Mechanical Comparison of 4.5 mm Narrow and 3.5 mm Broad Plating Systems for Stabilization of Gapped Fracture Models
Author(s) -
Silbernagel John T.,
Johnson Ann L.,
Pijanowski Gerald J.,
Ehrhart Nichole,
Schaeffer David J.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
veterinary surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.652
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1532-950X
pISSN - 0161-3499
DOI - 10.1111/j.1532-950x.2004.04025.x
Subject(s) - plating (geology) , cancellous bone , bending , cantilever , composite material , materials science , three point flexural test , flexural strength , fracture (geology) , structural engineering , medicine , anatomy , geophysics , engineering , geology
Objective— To evaluate and compare the mechanical properties of 4.5 narrow and 3.5 broad plating systems using their respective cortical and cancellous screws in unstable, central, and eccentric gap fracture models. Study Design— Mechanical evaluation and comparison of 2 dynamic compression plate (DCP) systems. Sample population— Eighteen cortical and 30 cancellous gapped fracture models. Methods— DCP (4.5 mm narrow, 3.5 mm broad) with their respective cortical screws were applied to cortical bone density polyurethane foam blocks to construct center gap cortical fracture models that were tested in gap closing monotonic 4‐point bending. DCP (4.5 mm narrow, 3.5 mm broad) with their respective cancellous screws were applied to cancellous bone density polyurethane foam blocks to construct eccentric gap cancellous fracture models. The cancellous constructs were tested in monotonic gap opening and gap closing cantilever bending and in cyclic axial loading. Univariate and multivariate repeated measures ANOVA were used to compare the maximum loads at failure of the 4.5 mm constructs and 3.5 mm constructs. Results— The 4.5 mm narrow plating system withstood significantly higher loads at failure than the 3.5 mm broad plating system in 4‐point bending ( P <.0001) and gap opening cantilever bending ( P <.0001). The 4.5 mm system failed in gap closing cantilever bending by plastic deformation of the plate, whereas the 3.5 mm system failed by screw pullout. There was no difference between the 2 systems in cyclic axial loading. Conclusion— Results indicate that the 4.5 mm narrow plating system has a mechanical advantage over the 3.5 mm broad plating system for stabilization of gapped fracture models. Clinical Relevance— The 4.5 mm narrow plating system may be mechanically advantageous compared with the 3.5 mm broad plating system for stabilizing unreconstructed comminuted long bone fractures in large dogs.

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