Compartmental Force and Contact Location Sensing in Instrumented Total Knee Replacements

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Date
2020-09
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American English
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Elsevier
Abstract

For the past three decades, total knee replacement has become the main solution for progressed knee injuries and diseases. Due to a lack of postoperative in vivo data, a universal correlation between intra- and postoperative soft tissue balance in the knee joint has not been established. In this work, an instrumented knee implant design with six piezoelectric transducers embedded in the tibial bearing is proposed. The aim of the presented device is to measure the total and compartmental forces as well as to track the location of contact points on the medial and lateral compartments of the bearing. A numerical analysis using finite element software is first performed to obtain the best sensory system arrangement inside the bearing. The chosen design is then used to fabricate a prototype of the device. Several experiments are designed and performed using the prototype, and the ability of the proposed system to track the location and magnitude of applied compartmental forces on the bearing is evaluated. The experimental results show that the instrumented knee bearing is able to accurately measure the compartmental force quantities with a maximum error of 2.6% of the peak axial load, and the CP locations with a maximum error of less than 1 mm.

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Safaei M, Meneghini RM, Anton SR. Compartmental force and contact location sensing in instrumented total knee replacements. Med Eng Phys. 2020;83:64-72. doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2020.07.011
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Medical Engineering & Physics
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Article
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