股骨头坏死骨吸收区对股骨头内应力分布及疾病进展的影响

Translated title of the contribution: Effects of bone-resorptive lesion on stress distribution of the femoral head and on progression in patients with osteonecrosis of the femoral head
  • Guangbo Liu
  • , Yuqian Mei
  • , Haiyang Ma
  • , Qiang Lu
  • , Haoye Meng
  • , Qi Quan
  • , Yuxuan Zhang
  • , Jun Zhao
  • , Huo Li
  • , Aiyuan Wang
  • , Haili Xin
  • , Duanduan Chen
  • , Shibi Lu
  • , Jiang Peng*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To investigate effects of bone-resorptive lesion on stress distribution of femoral head and on progression in patients with osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH). Methods: From April 2014 to September 2018, a total of 155 femoral heads from 94 patients diagnosed with ARCO stage II and III ONFH were retrospectively reviewed, including 77 males and 17 females with aged 39.90±10.45 years old (ranged from 18-64 years). The hips were divided into two groups according to whether there were bone-resorptive lesions. Further, we compared whether there was statistical difference between the two groups in staging. Then, a case of ARCO II hip joint without bone-resorptive lesion was selected from the included patients. Six femoral head with different diameters of spherical bone-resorptive lesion of 5 mm, 7 mm, 10 mm, 14 mm, 18 mm, and 23 mm were simulated. The influence of bone-resorptive lesion on the stress distribution of necrotic area and a spherical shell extending 1 mm radially around the bone-resorptive lesion was investigated by finite element method in slow walking conditions. Results: Of the 155 ONFH hips, 67 hips are complicated by bone-resorptive lesions, of which 17 were ARCO II, 50 were ARCO III. A total of 88 hips did not contain bone-resorptive lesions, of which 58 were ARCO II, ARCO III 30 cases. The proportion of ARCO stage II in the group with bone-resorptive lesions was significantly higher than that in the group without bone-resorptive lesions (χ2=25.03, P=0.000). The finite element stress distribution cloud diagram showed that there was a stress concentration area around the bone-resorptive lesions. The maximum von Mises stress around bone-resorptive lesions in the models that contained a synthetic bone-resorptive lesions were significantly higher than those reported in the matched, non-synthetic bone-resorptive lesions finite element models (t=3.139, P=0.026). The values for maximum von Mises stress around bone-resorptive lesions were 6.94±1.78 MPa and 5.01±0.35 MPa for the group with synthetic bone-resorptive lesions and the group non-synthetic bone-resorptive lesions, respectively. There was a positive correlation between the diameter of bone-resorptive lesions and the maximum and mean von Mises stress of necrotic areas as well as the maximum von Mises stress around bone-resorptive lesions. Conclusion: Bone-resorptive lesions can increase the maximum stress and average stress in the necrotic area. The larger the bone-resorptive lesion, the more the stress increases. There is a stress concentration area around the bone-resorptive lesions, which may accelerate the collapse of the femoral head.

Translated title of the contributionEffects of bone-resorptive lesion on stress distribution of the femoral head and on progression in patients with osteonecrosis of the femoral head
Original languageChinese (Traditional)
Pages (from-to)408-416
Number of pages9
JournalChinese Journal of Orthopaedics
Volume40
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2020

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