External Fixator Clamp Reuse Degrades Clamp Mechanical Performance

To determine the effects of clamp reuse for the Kirschner-Ehmer (KE); Securos; and the IMEX-SK clamp. Experimental bench test of mechanical properties. Specially designed fixtures were used to mechanically test 18 clamps of each type with respect to 6 mechanical variables: fixator pin slippage, conn...

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Published inVeterinary surgery Vol. 38; no. 4; pp. 530 - 536
Main Authors GILLEY, ROBERT S, BEASON, DAVID P, SNYDER, DAVID M, BOSTON, RAYMOND C, RADIN, ALEX, KAPATKIN, AMY S, SMITH, GAIL K, SOSLOWSKY, LOUIS J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Malden, USA Malden, USA : Blackwell Publishing Inc 01.06.2009
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Summary:To determine the effects of clamp reuse for the Kirschner-Ehmer (KE); Securos; and the IMEX-SK clamp. Experimental bench test of mechanical properties. Specially designed fixtures were used to mechanically test 18 clamps of each type with respect to 6 mechanical variables: fixator pin slippage, connecting bar slippage, fixator pin rotation, connecting bar rotation, and clockwise and counterclockwise clamp-bolt axis pivot. Each clamp was tested 6 times for each variable at 7.68 Nm of clamp-bolt tightening torque. Results were compared using repeated measures ANOVA. For the IMEX-SK clamp, a significant degradation in the force required to cause slippage was found for connecting bar slippage and fixator pin rotation; however, this clamp also had a significant increase in the force to initiate slippage for clockwise clamp-bolt axis pivot with reuse. The Securos clamp had significant degradation in connecting bar slippage, connecting bar rotation, and fixator pin rotation whereas the KE clamp had significant degradation in connecting bar slippage only. All 3 external fixator clamp types degraded in 1 or more movement variables in their ability to resist motion with reuse. The IMEX and Securos clamps were more subject to degradation than the KE clamp and this may have clinical importance for fixator composite rigidity. Fracture-reduction stability is related to the ability to resist motion within a clamp. The unpredictable nature of degradation we found cautions against repeated use. Clinicians should consider reuse of external fixator clamps with the knowledge that repeated use degrades clamp mechanical performance.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-950X.2009.00521.x
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ArticleID:VSU00521
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Funded by a Departmental Research Grant provided by the Department of Clinical Studies, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania.
Presented in part at the 31st Annual Conference of the Veterinary Orthopedic Society in Big Sky, MN, February 22–27, 2004.
Dr. Kapatkin's current address is the Department of Surgical & Radiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California—Davis, Davis, CA.
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Dr. Kapatkin’s current address is the University of California-Davis, Department of Surgical & Radiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, Davis, CA.
ISSN:0161-3499
1532-950X
1532-950X
DOI:10.1111/j.1532-950X.2009.00521.x