4.5 Article

Fully Implanted Prostheses for Musculoskeletal Limb Reconstruction After Amputation: AnIn VivoFeasibility Study

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 1012-1021

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-020-02645-3

Keywords

Orthopedic; Vascularization; Subdermal; Endoprosthesis; Osseointegration; Animal model

Funding

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shiver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health [K12HD073945]
  2. University of Tennessee Office of Research and Engagement
  3. University of Tennessee Department of Mechanical, Aerospace and Biomedical Engineering

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The study confirmed the importance of successful skin healing and postoperative care in implanting endoprostheses in a rabbit model of hindlimb amputation. Adjusting the surgical incision to preserve vasculature, increasing the radii size on the endoprostheses to reduce skin stress, and collecting radiographs pre-surgery to match the bone pin size were all key factors contributing to successful outcomes.
Previous prostheses for replacing a missing limb following amputation must be worn externally on the body. This limits the extent to which prostheses could physically interface with biological tissues, such as muscles, to enhance functional recovery. The objectives of our study were to (1) test the feasibility of implanting a limb prosthesis, or endoprosthesis, entirely within living skin at the distal end of a residual limb, and (2) identify effective surgical and post-surgical care approaches for implanting endoprostheses in a rabbit model of hindlimb amputation. We iteratively designed, fabricated, and implanted unjointed endoprosthesis prototypes in six New Zealand White rabbits following amputation. In the first three rabbits, the skin failed to heal due to ishemia and dehiscence along the sutured incision. The skin of the final three subsequent rabbits successfully healed over the endoprotheses. Factors that contributed to successful outcomes included modifying the surgical incision to preserve vasculature; increasing the radii size on the endoprostheses to reduce skin stress; collecting radiographs pre-surgery to match the bone pin size to the medullary canal size; and ensuring post-operative bandage integrity. These results will support future work to test jointed endoprostheses that can be attached to muscles.

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