A Comparison of Generic and Subject‐Specific Finite Element Models of Distal Femur Fractures Treated With Locking Plates
Gareth Buhl, Pankaj Pankaj

TL;DR
This study compares generic and personalized computer models of femur fractures treated with plates to see how much personalization affects results.
Contribution
A novel modeling approach is introduced to assess the impact of subject-specificity in distal femur fracture simulations.
Findings
Subject-specificity significantly affects bone strains at screw-bone interfaces.
Plate stresses and far cortex motions are minimally influenced by subject-specific factors.
The influence of subject-specificity decreases as healing progresses.
Abstract
While the need for employing subject‐specific computational biomechanics models for treatment planning in orthopaedics is being increasingly voiced, it has not been clear when such specificity is essential and for which questions simpler models might be adequate. This study uses a novel modelling approach to generate finite element models to examine the influence of subject‐specificity in the treatment of distal femur fractures. Three subject‐specific finite element models are created from clinical CT scans, and the proposed approach is employed to impose identical fractures and locking plate treatments upon them. Additionally, the performance of the generic two‐material model based on a Sawbones fourth generation femur is also evaluated. Interfragmentary motions, plate stresses, and strains at the screw‐bone interface are examined due to a physiological loading at different stages of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthopaedic implants and arthroplasty · Bone fractures and treatments · Orthopedic Infections and Treatments
