• Title of article

    A preliminary biomechanical study of a novel carbon–fibre hip implant versus standard metallic hip implants

  • Author/Authors

    Bougherara، نويسنده , , Habiba and Zdero، نويسنده , , Rad and Dubov، نويسنده , , Anton and Shah، نويسنده , , Suraj and Khurshid، نويسنده , , Shaheen and Schemitsch، نويسنده , , Emil H. and Zdero، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    121
  • To page
    128
  • Abstract
    Total hip arthroplasty is a widespread surgical approach for treating severe osteoarthritis of the human hip. Aseptic loosening of standard metallic hip implants due to stress shielding and bone loss has motivated the development of new materials for hip prostheses. cally, a three-dimensional finite element (FE) model that mimicked hip implants was used to compare a new hip stem to two commercially available implants. The hip implants simulated were a novel CF/PA12 carbon–fibre polyamide-based composite hip stem, the Exeter hip stem (Stryker, Mahwah, NJ, USA), and the Omnifit Eon (Stryker, Mahwah, NJ, USA). A virtual axial load of 3 kN was applied to the FE model. Strain and stress distributions were computed. Experimentally, the three hip stems had their distal portions rigidly mounted and had strain gauges placed along the surface at 3 medial and 3 lateral locations. Axial loads of 3 kN were applied. Measurements of axial stiffness and strain were taken and compared to FE analysis. erall linear correlation between FE model versus experimental strains showed reasonable results for the lines-of-best-fit for the Composite (Pearson R2 = 0.69, slope = 0.82), Exeter (Pearson R2 = 0.78, slope = 0.59), and Omnifit (Pearson R2 = 0.66, slope = 0.45), with some divergence for the most distal strain locations. From FE analysis, the von Mises stress range for the Composite stem was much lower than that in the Omnifit and Exeter implants by 200% and 45%, respectively. The preliminary experiments showed that the Composite stem stiffness (1982 N/mm) was lower than the metallic hip stem stiffnesses (Exeter, 2460 N/mm; Omnifit, 2543 N/mm). This is the first assessment of stress, strain, and stiffness of the CF/PA12 carbon–fibre hip stem compared to standard commercially-available devices.
  • Keywords
    Exeter , Omnifit Eon , Finite element , Hip stem , Carbon–fibre polyamide 12 , Biomechanics
  • Journal title
    Medical Engineering and Physics
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Medical Engineering and Physics
  • Record number

    1731174