The Knee
Volume 18, Issue 1 , Pages 51-54, January 2011

Biomechanical analysis of posteromedial tibial plateau split fracture fixation

  • Zhi-Min Zeng

      Affiliations

    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital affiliated to Shanghai JiaoTong University. 600 Yisan Road. Shanghai, 200233, PR China
    • Tel.: +86 21 64369181x8800; fax: +86 21 64083239.
  • ,
  • Cong-Feng Luo

      Affiliations

    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital affiliated to Shanghai JiaoTong University. 600 Yisan Road. Shanghai, 200233, PR China
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +86 21 64369181x8800; fax: +86 21 64083239.
  • ,
  • Sven Putnis

      Affiliations

    • Trauma & Orthopaedic Department, St. George's Hospital, London, UK
  • ,
  • Bing-Fang Zeng

      Affiliations

    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital affiliated to Shanghai JiaoTong University. 600 Yisan Road. Shanghai, 200233, PR China
    • Tel.: +86 21 64369181x8800; fax: +86 21 64083239.

Received 26 September 2009; received in revised form 28 December 2009; accepted 6 January 2010. published online 01 February 2010.

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 500N to 1500N 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 1500N 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

 

PII: S0968-0160(10)00007-4

doi:10.1016/j.knee.2010.01.006

The Knee
Volume 18, Issue 1 , Pages 51-54, January 2011