• J Trauma · May 2006

    Fracture strain and stability with additional locking screws in intramedullary nailing: a biomechanical study.

    • Murali K Sayana, Benjamin J Davis, Birender Kapoor, Aziz Rahmatalla, and Nicola Maffulli.
    • Department of Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery, Keele University School of Medicine, Staffordshire, England.
    • J Trauma. 2006 May 1; 60 (5): 1053-7.

    BackgroundWe studied the effect of additional locking screws on fracture strain and stability in tibial intramedullary nailing.MethodsWe drilled an additional diaphyseal locking hole into 8-mm solid tibial nails 185 mm from the proximal end of the nail, and locked it proximally and distally. An osteotomy was produced 4.5 cm distal to the additional hole, and the construct loaded axially, in flexion, extension, and torsion. The nails were also tested for their fatigue strength.ResultsWith the additional locking screw, strain increased proximally during loading in neutral and flexion. Strain decreased on loading in extension. The extra locking screw decreased strain close to the osteotomy site in all loading positions. A significant reduction in angular motion at the osteotomy site occurred with the addition of the extra locking screw. The nails survived the fatigue test, although the stress increased around the additional locking holeConclusionsNails with additional locking options, by altering strain and motion at the fracture site, may have the clinical potential to affect fracture healing.

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