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Biomechanical analysis of posteromedial tibial plateau split fracture fixation
Authors:Zhi-Min Zeng  Cong-Feng Luo  Sven PutnisBing-Fang Zeng
Affiliation:
  • a Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Shanghai Sixth People''s Hospital affiliated to Shanghai JiaoTong University. 600 Yisan Road. Shanghai, 200233, PR China
  • b Trauma & Orthopaedic Department, St. George''s Hospital, London, UK
  • Abstract:The purpose of this study was to compare the biomechanical strength of four different fixation methods for a posteromedial tibial plateau split fracture. Twenty-eight tibial plateau fractures were simulated using right-sided synthetic tibiae models. Each fracture model was randomly instrumented with one of the four following constructs, anteroposterior lag-screws, an anteromedial limited contact dynamic compression plate (LC-DCP), a lateral locking plate, or a posterior T-shaped buttress plate. Vertical subsidence of the posteromedial fragment was measured from 500 N to 1500 N during biomechanical testing, the maximum load to failure was also determined.It was found that the posterior T-shaped buttress plate allowed the least subsidence of the posteromedial fragment and produced the highest mean failure load than each of the other three constructs (P = 0.00). There was no statistical significant difference between using lag screws or an anteromedial LC-DCP construct for the vertical subsidence at a 1500 N load and the load to failure (P > 0.05).This study showed that a posterior-based buttress technique is biomechanically the most stable in-vitro fixation method for posteromedial split tibial plateau fractures, with AP screws and anteromedial-based LC-DCP are not as stable for this type of fracture.
    Keywords:Split fractures   Tibial plateau   Posteromedial fragment   Fixation   Biomechanics
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