DocumentCode
3802457
Title
Acetabular Loading in Active Abduction
Author
Ane Kristan;Bla Mavcic;Matej Cimerman;Ale Iglic;Martin Tonin;Toma Slivnik;Veronika Kralj-Iglic;Matej Daniel
Author_Institution
Med. Center Univ., Ljubljana
Volume
15
Issue
2
fYear
2007
Firstpage
252
Lastpage
257
Abstract
Operative fixation of fragments in acetabular fracture treatment is not strong enough to allow weight bearing before the bone is healed. In some patients, even passive or active nonweight-bearing exercises could lead to dislocation of fragments and posttraumatic osteoarthritis. Therefore, early rehabilitation should avoid loading the acetabulum in the regions of fracture lines. The aim of the paper is to estimate acetabular loading in nonweight-bearing upright, supine, and side-lying leg abduction. Three-dimensional mathematical models of the hip joint reaction force and the contact hip stress were used to simulate active exercises in different body positions. The absolute values of the hip joint reaction force and the peak contact hip stress are the highest in unsupported supine abduction (1.3 MPa) and in side-lying abduction (1.2 MPa), lower in upright abduction (0.5 MPa), and the lowest in supported supine abduction (0.2 MPa). All body positions the hip joint reaction force and the peak contact hip stress are the highest in the posterior-superior quadrant of acetabulum, followed by anterior-superior quadrant, posterior-inferior quadrant, and finally anterior-inferior quadrant. Spatial distribution of the average acetabular loading shows that early rehabilitation should be planned according to location of the fracture lines.
Keywords
"Hip","Stress","Mathematical model","Bones","Osteoarthritis","Biomechanics","Medical treatment","Laboratories","Surgery","Leg"
Journal_Title
IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2007.897023
Filename
4237172
Link To Document