Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study

Berk T, Zderic I, Varga P, Schwarzenberg P, Berk K, Grüneweller N, Pastor T, Halvachizadeh S, Richards G, Gueorguiev B, Pape H-C (2023)
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery .

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | E-Veröff. vor dem Druck | Englisch
 
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Autor*in
Berk, Till; Zderic, Ivan; Varga, Peter; Schwarzenberg, Peter; Berk, Karlyn; Grüneweller, NiklasUniBi; Pastor, Tatjana; Halvachizadeh, Sascha; Richards, Geoff; Gueorguiev, Boyko; Pape, Hans-Christoph
Abstract / Bemerkung
BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: The surgical fixation of a symphyseal diastasis in partially or fully unstable pelvic ring injuries is an important element when stabilizing the anterior pelvic ring. Currently, open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) by means of plating represents the gold standard treatment. Advances in percutaneous fixation techniques have shown improvements in blood loss, surgery time, and scar length. Therefore, this approach should also be adopted for treatment of symphyseal injuries. The technique could be important since failure rates, following ORIF at the symphysis, remain unacceptably high. The aim of this biomechanical study was to assess a semi-rigid fixation technique for treatment ofsuch anterior pelvic ring injuries versus current gold standards of plate osteosynthesis.; METHODS: An anterior pelvic ring injury type III APC according to the Young and Burgess classification was simulated in eighteen composite pelvises, assigned to three groups (n=6) for fixation with either a single plate, two orthogonally positioned plates, or the semi-rigid technique using an endobutton suture implant. Biomechanical testing was performed in a simulated upright standing position under progressively increasing cyclic loadingat 2Hz until failure or over 150,000cycles. Relative movements between the bone segments were captured by motion tracking.; RESULTS: Initial quasi-static and dynamic stiffness, as well as dynamic stiffness after 100,000 cycles, was not significantly different among the fixation techniques (p≥0.054).). The outcome measures for total displacement after 20,000, 40,000, 60,000, 80,000, and 100,000 cycles were associated with significantly higher values for the suture technique versus double plating (p=0.025), without further significant differences among the techniques (p≥0.349). Number of cycles to failure and load at failure were highest for double plating (150,000±0/100.0±0.0 N), followed by single plating (132,282±20,465/91.1±10.2 N), and the suture technique (116,088±12,169/83.0±6.1 N), with significantly lower values in the latter compared to the former (p=0.002)and nofurther significant differences among the techniques (p≥0.329).; CONCLUSION: From a biomechanical perspective, the semi-rigid technique for fixation of unstablepubic symphysis injuries demonstrated promising results with moderate to inferior behaviour compared to standard plating techniques regarding stiffness, cycles to failureand load atfailure. This knowledge could lay the foundation for realization offurther studies with larger sample sizes, focusing on the stabilization of the anterior pelvic ring. © 2023. The Author(s).
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery
eISSN
1863-9941
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2982192

Zitieren

Berk T, Zderic I, Varga P, et al. Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery . 2023.
Berk, T., Zderic, I., Varga, P., Schwarzenberg, P., Berk, K., Grüneweller, N., Pastor, T., et al. (2023). Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00068-023-02333-6
Berk, Till, Zderic, Ivan, Varga, Peter, Schwarzenberg, Peter, Berk, Karlyn, Grüneweller, Niklas, Pastor, Tatjana, et al. 2023. “Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study”. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery .
Berk, T., Zderic, I., Varga, P., Schwarzenberg, P., Berk, K., Grüneweller, N., Pastor, T., Halvachizadeh, S., Richards, G., Gueorguiev, B., et al. (2023). Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery .
Berk, T., et al., 2023. Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery .
T. Berk, et al., “Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study”, European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery , 2023.
Berk, T., Zderic, I., Varga, P., Schwarzenberg, P., Berk, K., Grüneweller, N., Pastor, T., Halvachizadeh, S., Richards, G., Gueorguiev, B., Pape, H.-C.: Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery . (2023).
Berk, Till, Zderic, Ivan, Varga, Peter, Schwarzenberg, Peter, Berk, Karlyn, Grüneweller, Niklas, Pastor, Tatjana, Halvachizadeh, Sascha, Richards, Geoff, Gueorguiev, Boyko, and Pape, Hans-Christoph. “Substitutional semi-rigid osteosynthesis technique for treatment of unstable pubic symphysis injuries: a biomechanical study”. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery (2023).

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