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Computational wear prediction of a total knee
replacement
from in vivo kinematics
B. J. Fregly, W. G. Sawyer, M. K. Harman, and S. A. Banks
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Wear of ultra-high molecular weight
polyethylene bearings in total knee replacements remains a major
limitation to the longevity of these clinically successful devices.
Few design tools are currently available to predict mild wear in
implants based on varying kinematics, loads, and material
properties. This paper reports the implementation of a computer
modeling approach that uses fluoroscopically measured motions as
inputs and predicts patient-specific implant damage using
computationally efficient dynamic contact and tribological
analyses. Multibody dynamic simulations of two activities (gait and
stair) with two loading conditions (70–30 and 50–50 medial–lateral
load splits) were generated from fluoroscopic data to predict
contact pressure and slip velocity time histories for individual
elements on the tibial insert surface. These time histories were
used in a computational wear analysis to predict the depth of
damage due to wear and creep experienced by each element. Predicted
damage areas, volumes, and maximum depths were evaluated against a
tibial insert retrieved from the same patient who provided the in
vivo motions. Overall, the predicted damage was in close agreement
with damage observed on the retrieval. The gait and stair
simulations separately predicted the correct location of maximum
damage on the lateral side, whereas a combination of gait and stair
was required to predict the correct location on the medial side.
Predicted maximum damage depths were consistent with the retrieval
as well. Total computation time for each damage prediction was less
than 30 min. Continuing refinement of this approach will provide a
robust tool for accurately predicting clinically relevant wear in
total knee replacements.
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