4.6 Article

Design and Fabrication of a Customized Partial Hip Prosthesis Employing CT-Scan Data and Lattice Porous Structures

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 10, Pages 6902-6913

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.0c06144

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Mexican National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT) [CB 253365, FOINS 297683]

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With the projected increase in the global elderly population, the importance of prosthetic devices for this demographic is growing. Additive manufacturing and self-supported cellular structures in prosthetic design offer significant opportunities to improve the physical and mechanical properties of hip implants. The use of tomography data and internal gyroid-type cell structures in designing personalized partial hip implants can help emulate bone density and fine-tune mechanical properties to match the replaced bone tissue.
As a larger elderly human population is expected worldwide in the next 30 years, the occurrence of aging-associated illnesses will also be increased. The use of prosthetic devices by this population is currently important and will be even more dramatic in the near future. Hence, the design of prosthetic devices able to reduce some of the problems associated with the use of current components, such as stress shielding, reduced mobility, infection, discomfort, etc., becomes relevant. The use of additive manufacturing (AM) and the design fabrication of self-supported cellular structures in the biomedical area have opened up important opportunities for controlling the physical and mechanical properties of hip implants, resulting in specific benefits for the patients. Different studies have reported the development of hip prosthetic designs employing AM, although there are still opportunities for improvement when it comes to customized design and tuning of the physical and mechanical properties of such implants. This work shows the design and manufacture by AM of a personalized stainless-steel partial hip implant using tomography data and self-supported triply periodic minimal surface (TPMS) cell structures; the design considers dimensional criteria established by international standards. By employing tomography data, the external dimensions of the implant were established and the bone density of a specific patient was calculated; the density and mechanical properties in compression of the implant were modulated by employing an internal gyroid-type cell structure. Using such a cell structure, the patient's bone density was emulated; also, the mechanical properties of the implant were fine-tuned in order to make them comparable to those reported for the bone tissue replaced by the prosthesis. The implant design and manufacturing methodology developed in this work considered the clinical condition of a specific patient and can be reproduced and adjusted for different types of bone tissue qualities for specific clinical requirements.

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