Influence of tension-band plates on the mechanical loading of the femoral growth plate during guided growth due to coronal plane deformities

Introduction: Correction of knee malalignment by guided growth using a tension-band plate is a common therapy to prevent knee osteoarthritis among other things. This approach is based on the Hueter-Volkmann law stating that the length growth of bones is inhibited by compression and stimulated by tension. How the locally varying mechanical loading of the growth plate is influenced by the implant has not yet been investigated. This study combines load cases from the gait cycle with personalized geometry in order to investigate the mechanical influence of the tension-band plates. Methods: Personalized finite element models of four distal femoral epiphyses of three individuals, that had undergone guided growth, were generated. Load cases from the gait cycles and musculoskeletal modelling were simulated with and without implant. Morphological features of the growth plates were obtained from radiographs. 3D geometries were completed using non-individual Magnetic Resonance Images of age-matched individuals. Boundary conditions for the models were obtained from instrumented gait analyses. Results: The stress distribution in the growth plate was heterogenous and depended on the geometry. In the insertion region, the implants locally induced static stress and reduced the cyclic loading and unloading. Both factors that reduce the growth rate. On the contralateral side of the growth plate, increased tension stress was observed, which stimulates growth. Discussion: Personalized finite element models are able to estimate the changes of local static and cyclic loading of the growth plate induced by the implant. In future, this knowledge can help to better control growth modulation and avoid the return of the malalignment after the treatment. However, this requires models that are completely participant-specific in terms of load cases and 3D geometry.

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