Biomechanical comparison between BioScrew and titanium alloy interference screws for bone—patellar tendon—bone graft fixation in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction

David N.M. Caborn(University of Kentucky), William P. Urban(University of Kentucky), Darren L. Johnson(University of Kentucky), John Nyland(University of Kentucky), David Pienkowski(University of Kentucky)
Arthroscopy The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery
April 1, 1997
Cited by 117

Abstract

This investigation compared the maximum load at failure of BioScrew (Linvatec Corp, Largo, FL) and titanium alloy interference screw femoral fixation using a human cadaveric model that approximated the anatomical orientation and physiological strain rate of in vivo bone-patellar tendon-bone (BPTB) graft loading following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Eighteen fresh-frozen human BPTB allografts (10-mm wide, 10-mm thick, 25-mm long bone plugs) with either BioScrew or titanium alloy (Ti 6A14V) screw (7 x 25 mm) fixation were compared for maximum load at failure at a strain rate of 20 mm/minute. Nine cadaver femurs with bone mineral densities of 0.88 +/- 0.18 g/cm2 (anterior/posterior) and 1.3 +/- 0.24 g/cm2 (lateral) received the allografts. No statistical differences were observed in maximum load at failure (P = .95) or failure mode (P = .11) between specimens fixed with either screw type. When biomechanically tested with anatomic orientation and at functionally relevant strain rates, the BioScrew provided maximum load at failure equal to a titanium alloy screw.


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