Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique. / Colding-Rasmussen, Thomas; Schwarzenberg, Peter; Horstmann, Peter Frederik; Ottesen, Casper Bent Smedegaard; Garcia, Jorge San Jacinto; Hutchinson, Daniel John; Malkoch, Michael; Petersen, Michael Mørk; Varga, Peter; Tierp-Wong, Christian Nai En.

I: Bioengineering, Bind 10, Nr. 10, 1146, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Colding-Rasmussen, T, Schwarzenberg, P, Horstmann, PF, Ottesen, CBS, Garcia, JSJ, Hutchinson, DJ, Malkoch, M, Petersen, MM, Varga, P & Tierp-Wong, CNE 2023, 'Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique', Bioengineering, bind 10, nr. 10, 1146. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering10101146

APA

Colding-Rasmussen, T., Schwarzenberg, P., Horstmann, P. F., Ottesen, C. B. S., Garcia, J. S. J., Hutchinson, D. J., Malkoch, M., Petersen, M. M., Varga, P., & Tierp-Wong, C. N. E. (2023). Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique. Bioengineering, 10(10), [1146]. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering10101146

Vancouver

Colding-Rasmussen T, Schwarzenberg P, Horstmann PF, Ottesen CBS, Garcia JSJ, Hutchinson DJ o.a. Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique. Bioengineering. 2023;10(10). 1146. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering10101146

Author

Colding-Rasmussen, Thomas ; Schwarzenberg, Peter ; Horstmann, Peter Frederik ; Ottesen, Casper Bent Smedegaard ; Garcia, Jorge San Jacinto ; Hutchinson, Daniel John ; Malkoch, Michael ; Petersen, Michael Mørk ; Varga, Peter ; Tierp-Wong, Christian Nai En. / Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique. I: Bioengineering. 2023 ; Bind 10, Nr. 10.

Bibtex

@article{0a71aa61391d4a28a35d11a3dca14c4a,
title = "Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique",
abstract = "A novel in situ customizable osteosynthesis technique, Bonevolent{\texttrademark} AdhFix, demonstrates promising biomechanical properties under the expertise of a single trained operator. This study assesses inter- and intra-surgeon biomechanical variability and usability of the AdhFix osteosynthesis platform. Six surgeons conducted ten osteosyntheses on a synthetic bone fracture model after reviewing an instruction manual and completing one supervised osteosynthesis. Samples underwent 4-point bending tests at a quasi-static loading rate, and the maximum bending moment (BM), bending stiffness (BS), and AdhFix cross-sectional area (CSA: mm²) were evaluated. All constructs exhibited a consistent appearance and were suitable for biomechanical testing. The mean BM was 2.64 ± 0.57 Nm, and the mean BS was 4.35 ± 0.44 Nm/mm. Statistically significant differences were observed among the six surgeons in BM (p < 0.001) and BS (p = 0.004). Throughout ten trials, only one surgeon demonstrated a significant improvement in BM (p < 0.025), and another showed a significant improvement in BS (p < 0.01). A larger CSA corresponded to a statistically significantly higher value for BM (p < 0.001) but not for BS (p = 0.594). In conclusion, this study found consistent biomechanical stability both across and within the surgeons included, suggesting that the AdhFix osteosynthesis platform can be learned and applied with minimal training and, therefore, might be a clinically viable fracture fixation technique. The variability in BM and BS observed is not expected to have a clinical impact, but future clinical studies are warranted.",
keywords = "in situ customizable osteosynthesis, patient-specific osteosynthesis, surgical skills, usability, variability",
author = "Thomas Colding-Rasmussen and Peter Schwarzenberg and Horstmann, {Peter Frederik} and Ottesen, {Casper Bent Smedegaard} and Garcia, {Jorge San Jacinto} and Hutchinson, {Daniel John} and Michael Malkoch and Petersen, {Michael M{\o}rk} and Peter Varga and Tierp-Wong, {Christian Nai En}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 by the authors.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3390/bioengineering10101146",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Bioengineering",
issn = "2306-5354",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Biomechanical Variability and Usability of a Novel Customizable Fracture Fixation Technique

AU - Colding-Rasmussen, Thomas

AU - Schwarzenberg, Peter

AU - Horstmann, Peter Frederik

AU - Ottesen, Casper Bent Smedegaard

AU - Garcia, Jorge San Jacinto

AU - Hutchinson, Daniel John

AU - Malkoch, Michael

AU - Petersen, Michael Mørk

AU - Varga, Peter

AU - Tierp-Wong, Christian Nai En

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 by the authors.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - A novel in situ customizable osteosynthesis technique, Bonevolent™ AdhFix, demonstrates promising biomechanical properties under the expertise of a single trained operator. This study assesses inter- and intra-surgeon biomechanical variability and usability of the AdhFix osteosynthesis platform. Six surgeons conducted ten osteosyntheses on a synthetic bone fracture model after reviewing an instruction manual and completing one supervised osteosynthesis. Samples underwent 4-point bending tests at a quasi-static loading rate, and the maximum bending moment (BM), bending stiffness (BS), and AdhFix cross-sectional area (CSA: mm²) were evaluated. All constructs exhibited a consistent appearance and were suitable for biomechanical testing. The mean BM was 2.64 ± 0.57 Nm, and the mean BS was 4.35 ± 0.44 Nm/mm. Statistically significant differences were observed among the six surgeons in BM (p < 0.001) and BS (p = 0.004). Throughout ten trials, only one surgeon demonstrated a significant improvement in BM (p < 0.025), and another showed a significant improvement in BS (p < 0.01). A larger CSA corresponded to a statistically significantly higher value for BM (p < 0.001) but not for BS (p = 0.594). In conclusion, this study found consistent biomechanical stability both across and within the surgeons included, suggesting that the AdhFix osteosynthesis platform can be learned and applied with minimal training and, therefore, might be a clinically viable fracture fixation technique. The variability in BM and BS observed is not expected to have a clinical impact, but future clinical studies are warranted.

AB - A novel in situ customizable osteosynthesis technique, Bonevolent™ AdhFix, demonstrates promising biomechanical properties under the expertise of a single trained operator. This study assesses inter- and intra-surgeon biomechanical variability and usability of the AdhFix osteosynthesis platform. Six surgeons conducted ten osteosyntheses on a synthetic bone fracture model after reviewing an instruction manual and completing one supervised osteosynthesis. Samples underwent 4-point bending tests at a quasi-static loading rate, and the maximum bending moment (BM), bending stiffness (BS), and AdhFix cross-sectional area (CSA: mm²) were evaluated. All constructs exhibited a consistent appearance and were suitable for biomechanical testing. The mean BM was 2.64 ± 0.57 Nm, and the mean BS was 4.35 ± 0.44 Nm/mm. Statistically significant differences were observed among the six surgeons in BM (p < 0.001) and BS (p = 0.004). Throughout ten trials, only one surgeon demonstrated a significant improvement in BM (p < 0.025), and another showed a significant improvement in BS (p < 0.01). A larger CSA corresponded to a statistically significantly higher value for BM (p < 0.001) but not for BS (p = 0.594). In conclusion, this study found consistent biomechanical stability both across and within the surgeons included, suggesting that the AdhFix osteosynthesis platform can be learned and applied with minimal training and, therefore, might be a clinically viable fracture fixation technique. The variability in BM and BS observed is not expected to have a clinical impact, but future clinical studies are warranted.

KW - in situ customizable osteosynthesis

KW - patient-specific osteosynthesis

KW - surgical skills

KW - usability

KW - variability

U2 - 10.3390/bioengineering10101146

DO - 10.3390/bioengineering10101146

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37892877

AN - SCOPUS:85175168908

VL - 10

JO - Bioengineering

JF - Bioengineering

SN - 2306-5354

IS - 10

M1 - 1146

ER -

ID: 372245243