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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The relationship between stress shielding and bone resorption around total hip stems and the effects of flexible materials

TLDR
The methods presented in this paper can be used to establish optimal stem-design characteristics or check the adequacy of designs in preclinical testing procedures.
Abstract
Bone resorption around hip stems is a disturbing phenomenon, although its clinical significance and its eventual effects on replacement longevity are as yet uncertain. The relationship between implant flexibility and the extent of bone loss, frequently established in clinical patient series and animal experiments, does suggest that the changes in bone morphology are an effect of stress shielding and a subsequent adaptive remodeling process. This relationship was investigated using strain-adaptive bone-remodeling theory in combination with finite element models to simulate the bone remodeling process. The effects of stem material flexibility, bone flexibility, and bone reactivity on the process and its eventual outcome were studied. Stem flexibility was also related to proximal implant/bone interface stresses. The results sustain the hypothesis that the resorptive processes are an effect of bone adaptation to stress shielding. The effects of stem flexibility are confirmed by the simulation analysis. It was also established that individual differences in bone reactivity and mechanical bone quality (density and stiffness) may account for the individual variations found in patients and animal experiments. Flexible stems reduce stress shielding and bone resorption. However, they increase proximal interface stresses. Hence, the cure against bone resorption they represent may develop into increased loosening rates because of interface debonding and micromotion. The methods presented in this paper can be used to establish optimal stem-design characteristics or check the adequacy of designs in preclinical testing procedures.

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PEEK Biomaterials in Trauma, Orthopedic, and Spinal Implants

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Biomedical applications of polymer-composite materials: a review

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Biomaterials in orthopaedics.

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3D bioactive composite scaffolds for bone tissue engineering.

TL;DR: This review will consider the ideal properties of bioactive composite 3D scaffolds and examine recent use of polymers, hydrogels, metals, ceramics and bio-glasses in BTE.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Porous-coated hip replacement. The factors governing bone ingrowth, stress shielding, and clinical results

TL;DR: Fixation by the ingrowth of bone or of fibrous tissue both appeared to be stable, but bone ingrowth gave better clinical results, and the results after five years showed no deterioration with time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive bone-remodeling theory applied to prosthetic-design analysis

TL;DR: The development and application of computer-simulation methods to predict stress-related adaptive bone remodeling, in accordance with 'Wolff's Law' are developed and applied to investigate the relation between 'stress shielding' and bone resorption in the femoral cortex around intramedullary prostheses.
Book

The Mechanical Adaptations of Bones

TL;DR: The Princeton Legacy Library as mentioned in this paper uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bone remodeling I: theory of adaptive elasticity

TL;DR: A thermomechanical continuum theory involving a chemical reaction and mass transfer between two constituents is developed in this article as a model for bone remodeling, which describes an elastic material which adapts its structure to applied loading.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of stem size and extent of porous coating on femoral bone resorption after primary cementless hip arthroplasty.

TL;DR: The theoretic degree of stress shielding of the femoral shaft in bending was calculated for cases with complete canal filling and a radiographic appearance of bone ingrowth and there was a strong correlation between this theoretic factor and the observed bone resorption.
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