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Novel Research about Biomechanics and Biomaterials Used in Hip, Knee and Related Joints



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Autore: Kretzer J. Philippe Visualizza persona
Titolo: Novel Research about Biomechanics and Biomaterials Used in Hip, Knee and Related Joints Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2021
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (358 p.)
Soggetto topico: Information technology industries
Soggetto non controllato: 28 mm small head
acetabular revision
acetabulum
adhesion
anodic polarization
arthroplasty
articulating spacer
asymptomatic stem modularity
backside wear
bearing thickness
biomaterial
biomaterials
biomechanical study
biomechanics
biomedical rheology
blood metal ions
bone graft substitutes
bone stock
bone tumor
bovine calf serum
calcium
calcium phosphate
cement spacer
centrifugal casting
ceramics
CF/PEEK
chromium
coating
cobalt
cobalt-chrome alloy
composite
corrosion
cross-linked
cup-inlay stability
cytokines
debonding
decision making model
disassembly forces
dual taper modular hip stem
electrocautery
elementary geometrical shape model
experimental simulation
fatigue behavior
fibers
fixation
fretting corrosion
granules
head-neck junction
head-taper junction
hip arthroplasty
hip cup system
hip replacement
hip spacer
implant
implant deformation
implant-cement interface
in vivo osteomyelitis model
infection prophylaxis
inflammation
interchangeability
ion implantation
joint replacement
knee joint
mechanical properties
mechanically assisted crevice corrosion
megaendoprosthesis
meniscal replacement
meniscus
metal ions
metal particles
metal wear
metal-on-cement articulation
metal-on-metal articulation
metal-on-metal THA
Metasul
migration
modular acetabular cup
musculoskeletal multibody simulation
n/a
non metallic
numerical simulation
orthopaedic tribology
oxford unicompartmental knee arthroplasty
patellar component
patellofemoral joint
PEEK-OPTIMA™
periprosthetic joint infection
periprosthetic joint infections
phosphorus
PMMA
poly-ether-ether-ketone (PEEK)
polycarbonate-urethane
polyetheretherketone
porous implants
precision casting
primary stability
radiolucent
relative motion
residual stress
retrieval analysis
retrieval study
revision hip arthroplasty
Roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis
shear thinning
silicon nitride
spine
Staphylococcus epidermidis
strain distribution
surface alteration
surface roughness
surface treatment
synovium
tantalum
taper connection
third body wear
third-body wear
threshold
Ti6Al4V
titanium
titanium alloy
total hip arthroplasty
total hip replacement
total knee arthroplasty
total knee replacement
trunnion failure
trunnionosis
tumor
two-stage revision
UHMWPE
ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMW-PE)
Vertebral body replacement (VBR)
vertebral fracture
viscosity
volumetric wear
wear
zirconium oxide particles
Persona (resp. second.): Van Der StraetenCatherine
KretzerJ. Philippe
Sommario/riassunto: Joint replacement is a very successful medical treatment. However, the survivorship of hip, knee, shoulder, and other implants is limited. The degradation of materials and the immune response against degradation products or an altered tissue loading condition as well as infections remain key factors of their failure. Current research in biomechanics and biomaterials is trying to overcome these existing limitations. This includes new implant designs and materials, bearings concepts and tribology, kinematical concepts, surgical techniques, and anti-inflammatory and infection prevention strategies. A careful evaluation of new materials and concepts is required in order to fully assess the strengths and weaknesses and to improve the quality and outcomes of joint replacements. Therefore, extensive research and clinical trials are essential. The main aspects that are addressed in this Special Issue are related to new material, design and manufacturing considerations of implants, implant wear and its potential clinical consequence, implant fixation, infection-related material aspects, and taper-related research topics. This Special Issue gives an overview of the ongoing research in those fields. The contributions were solicited from researchers working in the fields of biomechanics, biomaterials, and bio- and tissue-engineering.
Titolo autorizzato: Novel Research about Biomechanics and Biomaterials Used in Hip, Knee and Related Joints  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910557308003321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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