有限元法
镁
股骨颈
镁合金
材料科学
医学
口腔正畸科
结构工程
冶金
工程类
骨质疏松症
内科学
作者
Yunwei Cui,Kai Ding,Hongzhi Lv,Xiaodong Cheng,Zixi Fan,Dacheng Sun,Yifan Zhang,Yifan Zhang,Wei Chen,Yingze Zhang,Yingze Zhang
标识
DOI:10.3389/fbioe.2024.1448527
摘要
Purposes: The magnesium alloy bionic cannulated screw (MABCS) was designed in a previous study promoting cortical-cancellous biphasic healing of femoral neck fractures. The main purpose was to analyze the bore diameters that satisfy the torsion standards and further analyze the optimal pore and implantation direction for stabilizing femoral neck fractures. Methods: The MABCS design with bionic holes with a screw diameter of less than 20% met the torsion standard for metal screws. The MABCS was utilized to repair the femoral neck fracture via Abaqus 6.14 software, which simulated the various stages of fracture healing to identify the optimal biomechanical environment for bionic hole size (5%, 10%, 15%, and 20%) and implantation direction (0°, 45°, 90°, and 135°). Results: The stress distribution of the MABCS fracture fixation model is significantly improved with an implantation orientation of 90°. The MABCS with a bionic hole and a screw diameter of 10% provides optimal stress distribution compared with the bionic cannulated screw with diameters of 5%, 15%, and 20%. In addition, the cannulated screw fixation model with a 10% bionic hole size has optimal bone stress distribution and better internal fixation than the MABCS fixation models with 5%, 15%, and 20% screw diameters. Conclusion: In summary, the MABCS with 10% screw diameter bionic holes has favorable biomechanical characteristics for stabilizing femoral neck fractures. This study provides a biomechanical foundation for further optimization of the bionic cannulated screw.
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