4.6 Article

Synthetic PVA Osteochondral Implants for the Knee Joint: Mechanical Characteristics During Simulated Gait

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
卷 49, 期 11, 页码 2933-2941

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/03635465211028566

关键词

knee; articular cartilage; biomechanics of cartilage; cartilage repair; hydrogel; implant

资金

  1. National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 AR057343]
  2. NIH [KL2RR000458]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that femoral osteochondral defects cause a redistribution of contact stress during simulated gait. The results showed that polyvinyl alcohol implants combined with porous metal bases can significantly improve joint contact mechanics, especially the implants consisting of a 20% PVA disk mounted on a pTi base demonstrated significant improvements in most parameters.
Background: Although polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) implants have been developed and used for the treatment of femoral osteochondral defects, their effect on joint contact mechanics during gait has not been assessed. Purpose/Hypothesis: The purpose was to quantify the contact mechanics during simulated gait of focal osteochondral femoral defects and synthetic PVA implants (10% and 20% by volume of PVA), with and without porous titanium (pTi) bases. It was hypothesized that PVA implants with a higher polymer content (and thus a higher modulus) combined with a pTi base would significantly improve defect-related knee joint contact mechanics. Study Design: Controlled laboratory study. Methods: Four cylindrical implants were manufactured: 10% PVA, 20% PVA, and 10% and 20% PVA disks mounted on a pTi base. Devices were implanted into 8 mm-diameter osteochondral defects created on the medial femoral condyles of 7 human cadaveric knees. Knees underwent simulated gait and contact stresses across the tibial plateau were recorded. Contact area, peak contact stress, the sum of stress in 3 regions of interest across the tibial plateau, and the distribution of stresses, as quantified by tracking the weighted center of contact stress throughout gait, were computed for all conditions. Results: An osteochondral defect caused a redistribution of contact stress across the plateau during simulated gait. Solid PVA implants did not improve contact mechanics, while the addition of a porous metal base led to significantly improved joint contact mechanics. Implants consisting of a 20% PVA disk mounted on a pTi base significantly improved the majority of contact mechanics parameters relative to the empty defect condition. Conclusion: The information obtained using our cadaveric test system demonstrated the mechanical consequences of femoral focal osteochondral defects and provides biomechanical support to further pursue the efficacy of high-polymer-content PVA disks attached to a pTi base to improve contact mechanics.

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