TL 18096 - Biomechanical comparison of plantar-to-dorsal and dorsal-to-plantar screw fixation strength for subtalar arthrodesis

Authors

  • Alexandre Leme Godoy-Santos Instituto de Ortopedia e Traumatologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil
  • Nileshkumar Chaudhari University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, US
  • Ramon Rodriguez University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, US
  • Shouchen Dun University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, US
  • Cesar de Cesar Netto Medstar Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore, MD, US
  • Ashish Shah University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, US

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30795/scijfootankle.2019.v13.1058

Keywords:

Subtalar joint, Arthrodesis, Arthritis

Abstract

Introduction: Arthrodesis of the subtalar joint is performed for various arthritic and instability problems to correct alignment and relieve pain. Use of compression screws is the most common fixation method. Screws may be oriented from dorsal to plantar or plantar to dorsal. Arguments favoring one approach over another are based more on “expert opinion” than on hard data. Methods: Eight matched pairs of cadaver feet underwent subtalar joint arthrodesis with two 7.3-mm cannulated screws. Randomization was used to assign the screw orientation, such that one foot in each pair was assigned dorsal to the plantar screw orientation (DP group), with the other foot plantar to the dorsal orientation (PD group). The standard surgical technique with fluoroscopy was used for each approach. Following fixation, each specimen was loaded to failure with a Bionix 858 MTS device, applying a downward axial force at a distance to create torque. Torque to failure was compared between DP and PD groups using the Student’s T-test, with p = 0.05 used to determine statistical significance.  Results: The statistical analysis demonstrated that the mean torque to failure slightly favored the DP group (37.3 N-m) compared with the PD group (32.2 N-m). However, the difference between the two groups was not statistically significant (p = 0.55). Conclusion: In subtalar arthrodesis, there is no significant difference in construct strength between the dorsal-to-plantar and plantar-to-dorsal screw orientation. The approach chosen by the surgeon should be based on factors other than the biomechanical strength of the screw orientation.

Published

2019-11-11

How to Cite

Godoy-Santos, A. L., Chaudhari, N., Rodriguez, R., Dun, S., Netto, C. de C., & Shah, A. (2019). TL 18096 - Biomechanical comparison of plantar-to-dorsal and dorsal-to-plantar screw fixation strength for subtalar arthrodesis. Scientific Journal of the Foot & Ankle, 13(Supl 1), 79S. https://doi.org/10.30795/scijfootankle.2019.v13.1058