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Trauma

BIOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF OPERATIVE METHODS IN TREATMENT OF EXTRA-ARTICULAR FRACTURE OF THE PROXIMAL TIBIA

International Society for Fracture Repair (ISFR)



Abstract

Background

To establish relative fixation strengths of a single lateral locking plate, a double locking plate, and a tibial nail in treatment of proximal tibial extra-articular fractures.

Methods

Three groups of composite tibial synthetic bones consisting of 5 specimens per group were included; lateral plating (LP) using a LCP-PLT (locking compression plate-proximal lateral tibia), double plating (DP) using a LCP-PLT and a LCP-MPT (locking compression plate-medial proximal tibia), and intramedullary nailing (IN) using an ETN (expert tibial nail). To simulate a comminuted fracture model, a gap osteotomy measuring 1 cm was cut 8 cm below the joint. For each tibia, a minimal preload of 100N was applied before loading to failure. A vertical load was applied at 25mm/min until tibia failure.

Results

For axial loading, fixation strength of DP (14387.3N, SD=1852.1) was 17.5% greater than that of LP (12249.3N, SD=1371.6), and 60% less than that of IN (22879.6N, SD=1578.8) (p<0.001). For ultimate displacement in axial loading, similar results were observed for LP (5.74mm, SD=1.01) and DP (4.45mm, SD=0.96), with a larger displacement for IN (5.84mm, SD=0.99).

Conclusion

In biomechanical testing of a comminuted proximal tibial fracture model, DP proved stronger than LP in terms of ultimate strength. IN proved strongest; however, DP may be an acceptable alternative for minimally invasive osteosynthesis, which may be technically difficult to fix using a nail.