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Ex Vivo Equine Medial Tibial Plateau Contact Pressure With an Intact Medial Femoral Condyle, With a Medial Femoral Condylar Defect, and After Placement of a Transcondylar Screw Through the Condylar Defect
Author(s) -
Bonilla Alvaro G.,
Williams Jarred M.,
Litsky Alan S.,
Santschi Elizabeth M.
Publication year - 2015
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.2014.12242.x
Subject(s) - anatomy , condyle , contact area , medicine , plateau (mathematics) , biomechanics , contact mechanics , contact force , cartilage , knee flexion , orthodontics , ex vivo , biomedical engineering , materials science , in vivo , composite material , biology , mathematical analysis , physics , mathematics , microbiology and biotechnology , quantum mechanics , finite element method , thermodynamics
Objective To determine ex vivo contact data on the equine medial tibial plateau loaded by an intact medial femoral condyle (MFC), by an MFC with an osteochondral defect, and with a screw inserted in lag fashion through the MFC defect. Study Design Ex vivo experiment. Animals Stifles (n = 6). Horses (n = 4). Methods Stifle joints were axially loaded to 1800 N at 155°, 145°, and 130°, under 3 conditions: Intact, MFC with a 15 mm circular osteochondral defect, and with a transcondylar screw inserted in lag fashion through the defect. An electronic pressure sensor (Tekscan®) on the medial tibial plateau recorded contact area, force, peak pressure, and contact maps. Stress load (N/cm 2 ) was calculated for the entire medial plateau and in 3 sub‐regions; cranial, caudal, and central. Significance was set at P ≤ .05. Results Flexion increased force, contact area, and stress load for all conditions. An MFC defect significantly reduced force at both flexion angles and contact area at 145°. The transcondylar screw returned force to intact values at 130° and reduced contact area in extension. Intact MFC contact maps revealed pressure peaks on the central cartilage at all angles and contact pressure and area expansion and caudal movement with flexion. Contact maps with an MFC defect amplified the caudal and abaxial pressure movement during flexion, and the screw did not further change them. Conclusions Stifle flexion increases force, contact area, and stress load on the medial tibial plateau and is most pronounced caudally. An MFC defect alters load on the medial tibial plateau, and a transcondylar screw may reverse some of those changes.