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Comparative Biomechanical Stability of Titanium Bone Fixation Systems in Metacarpal Fractures
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1995
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringBiomedical EngineeringOrthopedic BiomechanicsOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryMetacarpal FracturesSkeletal TraumaBiomechanicsBone RemodelingOsteoarthritisTorsional RigidityApex BendingAxial SkeletonIncreased RigidityDental BiomechanicsSurgical StabilizationFracture HealingComparative Biomechanical StabilityStructural MechanicsMedicine
The biomechanical properties of apex bending and torsional rigidity of 11 different titanium mini- and microplates (Leibinger and Synthes) were examined to evaluate the effects of plate design and thickness and screw size and design. Two hundred sixteen fresh-frozen human cadaveric metacarpal bones underwent a midshaft transverse osteotomy followed by application of one of the following plates: Synthes 1.5-mm and 2.0-mm five-hole linear plates; Leibinger linear 1.2-mm 5-hole, 1.7-mm 4-hole, 2.3-mm 4-hole plates; or Leibinger three-dimensional 1.2-mm 4-hole, 1.2-mm 8-hole, 1.7-mm 4-hole, 1.7-mm 8-hole, 2.3-mm 4-hole, and 2.3-mm 8-hole plates. The specimens were subjected to a three-point bending test with apex dorsal or apex volar loading or torsional loading. Analysis of variance statistical analysis revealed that increasing plate thickness and, more significantly, three-dimensional design were associated with increased rigidity.