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Research

INVESTIGATION OF THE INFLUENCE OF MATERIAL PROPERTIES ON OSTEOCHONDRAL GRAFT FIXATION: A FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS

The British Orthopaedic Research Society (BORS) Annual Meeting, Leeds, England, September 2018.



Abstract

Osteochondral (OC) grafting is one available method currently used to repair full thickness cartilage lesions with good results clinically when grafting occurs in patients with specific positive prognostic factors. However, there is poor understanding of the effect of individual patient and surgical factors. With limited tissue availability, development of Finite Element (FE) models taking into account these variations is essential. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of altering the material properties of OC grafts and their host environment through computer simulation.

A generic FE model (ABAQUS CAE 2017) of a push-out test was developed as a press-fit bone cylinder (graft) sliding inside a bone ring (host tissue). Press-fit fixation was simulated using an interference fit. Overlap between host and graft (0.01mm–0.05mm) and coefficient of friction (0.3–0.7) were varied sequentially. Bone Young's moduli (YM) were varied individually between graft and host within the range of otherwise derived tissue moduli (46MPa, 82MPa, 123MPa).

Increasing both overlap and frictional coefficient increased peak dislodging force independently (overlap: 490% & frictional coefficient: 176% across range tested). Increasing bone modulus also increased dislodging force, with host bone modulus (107%, 128%, and 140% increase across range, when Graft YM = 123MPa, 82 MPa, and 46MPa, respectively) having a greater influence than graft modulus (28%, 19% and 10% increase across range, when Host YM = 123 MPa, 82MPa and 46MPa, respectively).

As anticipated increasing overlap and friction caused an increase in force necessary to dislodge the graft. Importantly, differentially changing the graft and host material properties changed the dislodging force indicating that difference between graft and host may be an important factor in the success or failure clinically of osteochondral grafting.