Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model

Total hip arthroplasty (THA) is most likely one of the most successful surgical procedures in medicine. It is estimated that three in four patients live beyond the first post-operative year, so appropriate surgery is needed to alleviate an otherwise long-standing suboptimal functional level. However...

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Published in:Materials
Main Author: Salaha Z.F.M.; Ammarullah M.I.; Abdullah N.N.A.A.; Aziz A.U.A.; Gan H.-S.; Abdullah A.H.; Abdul Kadir M.R.; Ramlee M.H.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85159289861&doi=10.3390%2fma16093298&partnerID=40&md5=875a55cf5450eb011244d80cdd3fb8d2
id 2-s2.0-85159289861
spelling 2-s2.0-85159289861
Salaha Z.F.M.; Ammarullah M.I.; Abdullah N.N.A.A.; Aziz A.U.A.; Gan H.-S.; Abdullah A.H.; Abdul Kadir M.R.; Ramlee M.H.
Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
2023
Materials
16
9
10.3390/ma16093298
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85159289861&doi=10.3390%2fma16093298&partnerID=40&md5=875a55cf5450eb011244d80cdd3fb8d2
Total hip arthroplasty (THA) is most likely one of the most successful surgical procedures in medicine. It is estimated that three in four patients live beyond the first post-operative year, so appropriate surgery is needed to alleviate an otherwise long-standing suboptimal functional level. However, research has shown that during a complete THA procedure, a solid hip implant inserted in the femur can damage the main arterial supply of the cortex and damage the medullary space, leading to cortical bone resorption. Therefore, this study aimed to design a porous hip implant with a focus on providing more space for better osteointegration, improving the medullary revascularisation and blood circulation of patients. Based on a review of the literature, a lightweight implant design was developed by applying topology optimisation and changing the materials of the implant. Gyroid and Voronoi lattice structures and a solid hip implant (as a control) were designed. In total, three designs of hip implants were constructed by using SolidWorks and nTopology software version 2.31. Point loads were applied at the x, y and z-axis to imitate the stance phase condition. The forces represented were x = 320 N, y = −170 N, and z = −2850 N. The materials that were used in this study were titanium alloys. All of the designs were then simulated by using Marc Mentat software version 2020 (MSC Software Corporation, Munich, Germany) via a finite element method. Analysis of the study on topology optimisation demonstrated that the Voronoi lattice structure yielded the lowest von Mises stress and displacement values, at 313.96 MPa and 1.50 mm, respectively, with titanium alloys as the materials. The results also indicate that porous hip implants have the potential to be implemented for hip implant replacement, whereby the mechanical integrity is still preserved. This result will not only help orthopaedic surgeons to justify the design choices, but could also provide new insights for future studies in biomechanics. © 2023 by the authors.
MDPI
19961944
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Salaha Z.F.M.; Ammarullah M.I.; Abdullah N.N.A.A.; Aziz A.U.A.; Gan H.-S.; Abdullah A.H.; Abdul Kadir M.R.; Ramlee M.H.
spellingShingle Salaha Z.F.M.; Ammarullah M.I.; Abdullah N.N.A.A.; Aziz A.U.A.; Gan H.-S.; Abdullah A.H.; Abdul Kadir M.R.; Ramlee M.H.
Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
author_facet Salaha Z.F.M.; Ammarullah M.I.; Abdullah N.N.A.A.; Aziz A.U.A.; Gan H.-S.; Abdullah A.H.; Abdul Kadir M.R.; Ramlee M.H.
author_sort Salaha Z.F.M.; Ammarullah M.I.; Abdullah N.N.A.A.; Aziz A.U.A.; Gan H.-S.; Abdullah A.H.; Abdul Kadir M.R.; Ramlee M.H.
title Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
title_short Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
title_full Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
title_fullStr Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
title_full_unstemmed Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
title_sort Biomechanical Effects of the Porous Structure of Gyroid and Voronoi Hip Implants: A Finite Element Analysis Using an Experimentally Validated Model
publishDate 2023
container_title Materials
container_volume 16
container_issue 9
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ma16093298
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85159289861&doi=10.3390%2fma16093298&partnerID=40&md5=875a55cf5450eb011244d80cdd3fb8d2
description Total hip arthroplasty (THA) is most likely one of the most successful surgical procedures in medicine. It is estimated that three in four patients live beyond the first post-operative year, so appropriate surgery is needed to alleviate an otherwise long-standing suboptimal functional level. However, research has shown that during a complete THA procedure, a solid hip implant inserted in the femur can damage the main arterial supply of the cortex and damage the medullary space, leading to cortical bone resorption. Therefore, this study aimed to design a porous hip implant with a focus on providing more space for better osteointegration, improving the medullary revascularisation and blood circulation of patients. Based on a review of the literature, a lightweight implant design was developed by applying topology optimisation and changing the materials of the implant. Gyroid and Voronoi lattice structures and a solid hip implant (as a control) were designed. In total, three designs of hip implants were constructed by using SolidWorks and nTopology software version 2.31. Point loads were applied at the x, y and z-axis to imitate the stance phase condition. The forces represented were x = 320 N, y = −170 N, and z = −2850 N. The materials that were used in this study were titanium alloys. All of the designs were then simulated by using Marc Mentat software version 2020 (MSC Software Corporation, Munich, Germany) via a finite element method. Analysis of the study on topology optimisation demonstrated that the Voronoi lattice structure yielded the lowest von Mises stress and displacement values, at 313.96 MPa and 1.50 mm, respectively, with titanium alloys as the materials. The results also indicate that porous hip implants have the potential to be implemented for hip implant replacement, whereby the mechanical integrity is still preserved. This result will not only help orthopaedic surgeons to justify the design choices, but could also provide new insights for future studies in biomechanics. © 2023 by the authors.
publisher MDPI
issn 19961944
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
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