Biomechanical comparison of pin and nitinol bone staple fixation to pin and tension band wire fixation for the stabilization of canine olecranon osteotomies

Vet Comp Orthop Traumatol. 2017 Sep 12;30(5):324-330. doi: 10.3415/VCOT-17-02-0025. Epub 2017 Aug 1.

Abstract

Objective: To compare the initial biomechanical properties of olecranon osteotomies stabilized with intramedullary pins and a Nitinol bone staple to osteotomies stabilized with pin and tension band wire fixation.

Study design: Ex vivo mechanical evaluation on cadaveric bones.

Material and methods: Ten pairs of cadaveric forelimbs from skeletally mature Greyhounds with an olecranon osteotomy stabilized with either a pin and Nitinol bone staple or a pin and tension band wire. A single load to failure was applied to each specimen through the triceps tendon. Biomechanical properties were compared based on stiffness, yield load, and maximum load to failure and load at 2 mm of axial displacement.

Results: Specimens stabilized with the bone staple were biomechanically superior in all the variables tested. There was significantly greater stiffness (118.0 ± 25.9 N/mm versus 70.1 ± 40.4 N/mm; p = 0.005), yield load (319.0 ± 99.8 N versus 238.0 ± 42.5 N; p = 0.03), maximum load sustained (385.0 ± 99.2 N versus 287.0 ± 37.4 N; p = 0.009), and load at 2 mm of axial displacement (218.0 ± 51.5 N versus 138.0 ± 48.7 N; p = 0.002) in specimens stabilized with pins and a Nitinol bone staple than specimens stabilized with pin and tension band wire fixation.

Clinical significance: The pin and Nitinol bone staple construct provides a biomechanically superior alternative to pin and tension band wire fixation for stabilization of olecranon osteotomies, and its use warrants further clinical investigation.

Keywords: Olecranon osteotomy; biomechanical; bone staple; nitinol; pin and tension band wire.

MeSH terms

  • Alloys*
  • Animals
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Bone Wires*
  • Dogs / injuries
  • Dogs / surgery*
  • Fracture Fixation, Internal / instrumentation
  • Fracture Fixation, Internal / methods
  • Fracture Fixation, Internal / veterinary*
  • Olecranon Process
  • Osteotomy / veterinary*

Substances

  • Alloys
  • nitinol