Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Improved Durability of a Modular Axial Fixator ...

Electronic data

  • MAF FEA Study (Full Text)_Rev-006

    Accepted author manuscript, 6.13 MB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Improved Durability of a Modular Axial Fixator for Stable and Unstable Proximal Femoral Fractures: A Patient-Specific Finite Element Analysis

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Improved Durability of a Modular Axial Fixator for Stable and Unstable Proximal Femoral Fractures: A Patient-Specific Finite Element Analysis. / Celik, H. Kursat; Icen, Mustafa; Ozdemir, Hakan et al.
In: Journal of Medical Devices, Vol. 18, No. 1, 011007, 09.05.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Celik HK, Icen M, Ozdemir H, Rennie AEW. Improved Durability of a Modular Axial Fixator for Stable and Unstable Proximal Femoral Fractures: A Patient-Specific Finite Element Analysis. Journal of Medical Devices. 2024 May 9;18(1):011007. Epub 2024 Apr 29. doi: 10.1115/1.4065414

Author

Bibtex

@article{25566c6a107340e69087568cd555c0ee,
title = "Improved Durability of a Modular Axial Fixator for Stable and Unstable Proximal Femoral Fractures: A Patient-Specific Finite Element Analysis",
abstract = "Femoral neck fractures, comprising 8–10% of all bodily fractures in the elderly, often necessitate alternatives to extensive surgical interventions. Despite limited research, external fixators are considered promising. This study evaluates the design and durability of a novel modular axial fixator (MAF) for stable and unstable proximal femoral fractures, using numerical method-based engineering analysis. Employing patient-specific CT scan data, three-dimensional (3D) solid modeling, and finite element analysis (FEA), the MAF-bone fixation is examined in eight simulation scenarios under static loading conditions. FEA results show a peak femur head displacement of 7.429 mm in FEA 001, with Schanz screw no. 2 reaching the maximum equivalent stress at 431.060 MPa in FEA-006. Notably, the 7.429-mm displacement improves stability compared to previous studies, yet interfragmentary movement surpasses the 100–200 μm reference range for primary fracture healing, posing challenges to direct healing despite enhanced stability. This study validates the durability of the innovative MAF for femoral neck fractures through engineering simulations. It contributes to understanding MAF durability issues, with implications for improving medical implant design in the industry. Simulation results offer opportunities for optimizing structure and production, enhancing the MAF's design, and ultimately benefiting medical implant manufacturing.",
author = "Celik, {H. Kursat} and Mustafa Icen and Hakan Ozdemir and Rennie, {Allan E.W.}",
year = "2024",
month = may,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1115/1.4065414",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
journal = "Journal of Medical Devices",
issn = "1932-6181",
publisher = "ASME International",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Improved Durability of a Modular Axial Fixator for Stable and Unstable Proximal Femoral Fractures

T2 - A Patient-Specific Finite Element Analysis

AU - Celik, H. Kursat

AU - Icen, Mustafa

AU - Ozdemir, Hakan

AU - Rennie, Allan E.W.

PY - 2024/5/9

Y1 - 2024/5/9

N2 - Femoral neck fractures, comprising 8–10% of all bodily fractures in the elderly, often necessitate alternatives to extensive surgical interventions. Despite limited research, external fixators are considered promising. This study evaluates the design and durability of a novel modular axial fixator (MAF) for stable and unstable proximal femoral fractures, using numerical method-based engineering analysis. Employing patient-specific CT scan data, three-dimensional (3D) solid modeling, and finite element analysis (FEA), the MAF-bone fixation is examined in eight simulation scenarios under static loading conditions. FEA results show a peak femur head displacement of 7.429 mm in FEA 001, with Schanz screw no. 2 reaching the maximum equivalent stress at 431.060 MPa in FEA-006. Notably, the 7.429-mm displacement improves stability compared to previous studies, yet interfragmentary movement surpasses the 100–200 μm reference range for primary fracture healing, posing challenges to direct healing despite enhanced stability. This study validates the durability of the innovative MAF for femoral neck fractures through engineering simulations. It contributes to understanding MAF durability issues, with implications for improving medical implant design in the industry. Simulation results offer opportunities for optimizing structure and production, enhancing the MAF's design, and ultimately benefiting medical implant manufacturing.

AB - Femoral neck fractures, comprising 8–10% of all bodily fractures in the elderly, often necessitate alternatives to extensive surgical interventions. Despite limited research, external fixators are considered promising. This study evaluates the design and durability of a novel modular axial fixator (MAF) for stable and unstable proximal femoral fractures, using numerical method-based engineering analysis. Employing patient-specific CT scan data, three-dimensional (3D) solid modeling, and finite element analysis (FEA), the MAF-bone fixation is examined in eight simulation scenarios under static loading conditions. FEA results show a peak femur head displacement of 7.429 mm in FEA 001, with Schanz screw no. 2 reaching the maximum equivalent stress at 431.060 MPa in FEA-006. Notably, the 7.429-mm displacement improves stability compared to previous studies, yet interfragmentary movement surpasses the 100–200 μm reference range for primary fracture healing, posing challenges to direct healing despite enhanced stability. This study validates the durability of the innovative MAF for femoral neck fractures through engineering simulations. It contributes to understanding MAF durability issues, with implications for improving medical implant design in the industry. Simulation results offer opportunities for optimizing structure and production, enhancing the MAF's design, and ultimately benefiting medical implant manufacturing.

U2 - 10.1115/1.4065414

DO - 10.1115/1.4065414

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

JO - Journal of Medical Devices

JF - Journal of Medical Devices

SN - 1932-6181

IS - 1

M1 - 011007

ER -