Abstract
Introduction
Cerclages regain interest due to a rising number of periprosthetic fractures. The contact distribution at the circumferential cerclage-bone interface is still unknown. Local interface pressure depends on the amount of contact area. Cortical damage at the interface would provoke cerclage loosening. Therefore, the contact area, the bone pressure along the interface and the cortical resistance underneath loaded cerclages were determined in an ex vivo model.
Materials and methods
Human diaphyseal femoral bone was used with differing cross-sectional geometry. Bone contact points of fixed 1.5 mm wire and 1.7 mm cable cerclages were identified from axial radiographs. Pressure distribution at the cerclage-bone interface was recorded with a pressure-measuring film using a distraction setup with two cortical half shells. Bone shells with installed cerclages were separated with up to 400 N force and were subsequently analyzed histologically to detect cortical damage.
Results
Both cerclage types exhibited a point contact fixation with non-loaded spanned zones in-between. Cables cover larger contact areas. Both cerclages exhibited an inhomogeneous interface pressure distribution depending on the bone surface geometry. Histology revealed intact cortical bone without cortical affection after loading of both cerclage types.
Conclusion
Point contact fixation of the cerclages installs non-loaded, spanned zones where the periosteum is not compressed, rendering a strangulation of the blood supply unlikely. Cortical bone withstands static concentric pressure produced by the cerclage. Cortical groove formation is attributed to instability under functional load and not to weakness of the cortex itself.
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Introduction
Cerclages are widely used in small animal surgery [1], but as a stand-alone implant for human long bones, they are too weak to fulfill the requirements of functional aftercare [2]. The unsatisfactory results of cerclages as primary fixation devices such as nonunions or bone resorption at cerclage contact sites are mainly evoked by an increased instability at the fracture site [2, 3]. However, the belief of a strangled blood supply owing to cerclage application is still present [4, 5]. Nowadays the situation has changed especially due to a rising number of periprosthetic fractures, because implants penetrating the medullary cavity are of restricted use since the intramedullary canal is blocked by the prosthesis stem.
The stability of a cerclage as a circumferential and extraosseous fixation device depends on its lasting tension, so that an investigation on the cerclage bone interface mechanics helps evaluating and explaining the biological aspects. Since the periosteum plays an essential role in fracture healing, especially when the intramedullary blood supply might be affected by an implant [6], a possible impairment of the periosteum by the cerclage is considered of importance. Blood flow is impeded at the bone contact area on an implant [7]. Plates with reduced bone contact surface show less early temporary bone porosity due to less damage to the blood supply [8]. Analogical to the low contact plates, cerclages with a cogwheel-like undersurface were designed to minimize the contact area at the cerclage-bone interface [9, 10]. They failed wide clinical application due to their insufficient fixation properties. In vivo studies revealed no adverse effect of cerclages on bone viability and periosteal blood supply when applied without damage to large vessels [2, 3, 9, 11]. Interestingly, in vivo experiments exhibited no difference in fracture healing, irrespective of whether the cerclage was placed below or above the periosteum [12]. Devitalized cortical bone segments, fixed by cerclages, showed a complete revascularization [13]. A rationale for the discrepancy between observed experimental phenomena and surgical perception is still lacking. The influence of bone geometry on cerclage application and interface contact area had not been focused on yet. The normal anteroposterior and lateral radiographs provide only limited information on the contact zones between the bone and the cerclage. Computed tomography slices are disturbed by metal artifacts of the cerclage.
Load transmission from the cerclage to the bone has been widely investigated for tension band wiring [14, 15], but there is little information available on the load transmission area of cerclages as centripetal load carriers on the diaphysis of a bone.
Therefore, the contact area at the circumferential cerclage-bone interface was determined by axial radiographs from a section of the femoral shaft and the pressure distribution at the cerclage-bone interface was determined with a pressure measurement film, being widely used for intraarticular pressure distribution evaluation [16] or pressure formation detection within a fracture gap [15]. The influence of loaded cerclages on the ex vivo cortical surface was examined histologically. This paper will give another approach to better understand the mechanobiology of cerclages.
Materials and methods
Fresh-frozen (−20 °C) human femoral diaphyseal bones were used in this study. Soft tissues were removed prior to testing and bones were kept moist with physiologic saline solution. Two different bone geometries, representing the anterior and posterior aspects of the femoral shaft were chosen. Fragments of 25-mm-length were cut from the mid-diaphysis of the femur and the intramedullary canal was reamed up to 20 mm diameter. The fragment was cut lengthwise into two half shells. Two different cerclages were investigated: wire Ø 1.5 mm (ref. nr. 291.130, Synthes GmbH, Solothurn, Switzerland) and cable Ø 1.7 mm (ref. nr. 298.801). Axial radiographs were taken from a femoral shaft segment with fixed cerclages to visualize the cerclage/bone contact zones.
The prepared diaphyseal bone shells were mounted on two metal half cylinders with a diameter of 20 mm forming a full circle. The upper metal half cylinder was rigidly attached to the actuator and the lower half cylinder was affixed to the 25-kN load cell of a servo-hydraulic testing system (Bionix 858.20; MTS Systems, Eden Prairie, MN, USA) (Fig. 1). For assessment of the radial pressure underneath the cerclage, a pressure sensor (Model 5033, TekScan Inc., South Boston, MA, USA) was placed on the upper bone shell, covering approximately a third of the total bone circumference. Pressure distribution was registered with n = 6 repeated measurements per group. The setup allowed controlled separation of the bony half-shells and measurement of the resulting distraction force as described previously [17]. The cerclages were fixed around the cortical half shells. Subsequently the constructs were loaded in a quasi-static, non-destructive range at 40 N/s to a plateau of 200 N load. The pressure distribution at the cerclage-bone interface along the cerclage was recorded during the load plateau. A maximum load of 200 N was chosen to allow a comparison between the different cerclage types, while assuring a strictly linear elastic behavior of the cerclage.
Bone specimens without underlying pressure sensor were loaded up to 400 N and subsequently histologically examined to detect cortical surface affection using a basic-fuchsin staining.
For statistical analysis of the pressure distribution a binary approach was chosen by dividing the cerclage-bone area into loaded and unloaded regions. Loaded contact was defined at ≥0.5 MPa contact pressure. Analysis of the pressure distribution was done by a custom-made software routine (Matlab R2010a; The Mathworks, Natick, MA, USA). Statistical analysis was performed with the use of SPSS software (SPSS 19.0; SPSS, Chicago, IL, USA). Data did not reveal normal distribution within each group as indicated by the Shapiro–Wilk Test. For the detection of significant differences between the two cerclage types regarding percentage of loaded interface zones, the Mann–Whitney U test was used. Significance was defined at p < 0.05.
Results
Cerclage-bone contact area is dependent on bone geometry. Two investigated bone shapes are illustrated in Figs. 2, 3. One characteristic section shows a plateau to be spanned by the cerclage; the other one incorporates a hump as present in various anatomical locations. On the bony section with a plateau (Fig. 2), the cable cerclage generated pressure on 52 % ± 2 of the spanned area whereas the wire cerclage generated pressure on 39 % ± 1 of the spanned area. This difference was significant between the two cerclage type groups (p = 0.003). On the bony section with the hump (Fig. 3) the cable cerclage generated pressure on 31 % ± 3 of the spannend area, whereas the wire cerclage generated pressure on 29 % ± 0.1 of the spanned area with no significant difference between the two cerclage type groups. The non-circular geometry of the femoral shaft leads to a spanning of the cerclage from deflection point to deflection point with non-loaded zones in between (Fig. 4). On the femoral shaft, cerclages provide a point-contact fixation. Histological evaluation of the cerclage-bone interface after load application revealed an intact cortical surface with no cortical affection (Fig. 5).
Discussion
This study investigated on the pressure distribution at the cerclage-bone interface of the femoral shaft, which is related to the circumferential geometry of the bone. Due to the fact that the femoral shaft does not represent an idealized round tube, pressure measurement underneath the cerclage revealed an uneven pressure distribution with peak loaded areas, especially the deflection points of the cerclage and low to non-loaded areas, in particular the spanned bone sections, indicating a point-contact fixation. The concept of point contact fixation was successfully introduced in plate osteosynthesis to ameliorate the blood supply of the underlying bone. The axial radiographs and pressure distribution profile at the cerclage-bone interface endorse this concept, too. In lag screw or compression plate fixation, where high local pressure is applied on the screw hole or at the plate-bone contact point, no pressure-induced bone necrosis has been reported either [10, 18, 19]. Living bone can tolerate static compression up to the limit of mechanical strength but not exceeding it [2, 19]. In our study, static loading of the bone before histological examination was performed with a maximum load of 400 N to prevent unraveling and loosening of the wire cerclage. The histologic examination revealed no bone surface affection by the cerclage, indicating no groove formation on the bone as reported by Baumann [20].
As implication to clinical practice, the cortex withstands static concentric pressure and it is unlikely to produce a cortical surface fracture by cerclage tightening, when the fracture is properly reduced. Furthermore, no grade cutting of the cerclage into the cortical bone has to be expected in a congruently reduced fracture. As already discussed by Jones [21], the groove formation is not induced by the weakness of the cortex itself, but the micromovement between the cerclage and the bone at high strain induces the bone loss. Bone surface resorption can be evoked by the so-called loose-lock stability [2], which is typically observed in loosened cerclages. In vivo, no cortical bone resorption was seen under well-tightened cerclages [22]; in contrast, a bony ingrowth in terms of callus formation was found [23]. In vivo experiments [23] with a spring-locked cerclage providing a constant tension revealed no shortening travel of the cerclage during fracture healing, which might have occurred during cortical bone resorption and grade cutting. Analyzing the radiographs from the case reports on cerclage pressure-induced bone necrosis [4, 5], in all cases fracture instability due to insufficient reduction or fixation could be detected, supporting the motion-induced bone necrosis theory [2].
On the bony section with plateau, wire cerclages exhibited significantly less loaded zones compared with cable cerclages, which could be explained by the higher flexibility of cable cerclages leading to a closer adaption to the bone surface. The bony section with hump revealed no significant difference in the percentage of loaded zones in between the two cerclage types, demonstrating that the spanning effect also exists for cables. With a more flexible construct like the cable cerclage, fracture reduction and its maintenance might be easier to achieve. A wire as a stiffer construct will deform with loss of stability; the cable offers to a certain degree an elastic element which to a certain range compensates the loss of stability and shifts it towards a reversible displacement, the so-called relative stability.
Concerning the footprint of cerclages, its structure is of importance. In the cross-sectional view, solid wires show a circular surface, whereas cables, consisting of wire bundles including several strands, lead to half the cross-sectional contact area of solid wires as shown in histological preparations of Fernandez et al. [2]. They also observed that half the amount of periost was affected by a cable cerclage compared with a solid wire, but in both cases, in accordance to our histologic findings and to Franke et al. [23], the underlying cortical surface was intact and not affected by the cerclage. Our pressure-measuring film was not sensitive enough to detect these differences along the cerclage in the micrometer range. Similar to our results of interface pressure distribution along the cerclage, the histological preparation of the in vivo study of Fernandez et al. [2] revealed a small area between wire cerclage and bone, filled with soft tissue, which corresponds to the non-loaded zones detected in our study, where the cerclage spans the bone without contact.
Conclusion
Cerclage-bone interface contact is dependent on surface geometry of the bone. On the femoral shaft, cerclages provide a point contact fixation, a blood-supply preserving principle, which is already well established in plate osteosynthesis.
Cortical damage and bone resorption have to be attributed to micromotion, since cortical bone is stable enough to withstand the centripetal forces of the loaded cerclage without being damaged. The findings suggest reconsidering cerclage as an additional fixation tool, particularly for periprosthetic fracture treatment.
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Acknowledgments
We thank Ursula Eberli, MSc, for her excellent technical assistance and Dirk Nehrbass, DVM and Mauro Bluvol for the brilliant histological images.
Conflict of interest
The authors are not compensated and there are no other institutional subsidies, corporate affiliations, or funding sources supporting this work unless clearly documented and disclosed. Implants were kindly donated by Synthes GmbH, Solothurn, Switzerland.
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This work was performed at the AO Research Institute Davos, Switzerland.
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Lenz, M., Perren, S.M., Gueorguiev, B. et al. Underneath the cerclage: an ex vivo study on the cerclage-bone interface mechanics. Arch Orthop Trauma Surg 132, 1467–1472 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00402-012-1572-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00402-012-1572-x