COMPARISON OF THE TISSUE RESPONSE TO ABSORBABLE SELF-REINFORCED POLYLACTIDE SCREWS AND METALLIC SCREWS IN THE FIXATION OF CANCELLOUS BONE OSTEOTOMIES: AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY ON THE RABBIT DISTAL FEMUR

1997 
The availability of absorbable fracture-fixation devices for clinical use calls for better knowledge of the reaction of bone tissue to absorbable polyester implants as compared with similar metallic devices. To examine and compare the tissue response to biodegradable and metallic screws within cancellous bone, a transverse transcondylar osteotomy of the distal femur was fixed with absorbable self-reinforced polylevolactide screws in 35 rabbits and with stainless-steel screws in 35 rabbits. New bone formation and consolidation of the osteotomy were examined histologically, histomorphometrically, and microradiographically within standardized sample fields 1, 3, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 weeks postoperatively. The intact contralateral femur served as the control. A vigorous osteoconductive response to the polylevolactide screws was observed at 3 weeks postoperatively, and the osteoid surface fraction was significantly higher in all follow-ups than in the contralateral femora. In the femora with metallic screws, new bone formation was seen 3, 6, and 12 weeks postoperatively, but at 24, 36, and 48 weeks the osteoid surface fraction did not differ significantly from that of the intact control femora. The total bone area was significantly larger in the femora with self-reinforced polylevolactide screws than in the control bone 6-48 weeks postoperatively; in the femora with metallic screws, this was found only at 6 and 12 weeks. After 48 weeks, the femora fixed with metallic screws had statistically smaller total bone area than the intact control femora. Solid bone union was seen in 84% of the osteotomies in the self-reinforced polylevolactide group and in 76% of those in the metallic group after 3 weeks or more. No signs of degradation of the self-reinforced polyleuolactide implant and only a mild foreign-body reaction with no accumulations of inflammatory cells to either self-reinforced polylevolactide or metallic screws were observed during the follow-up period. Both types of screws seemed to induce an osteostimulatory response around their threads. This phenomenon was transient for metallic screws but lasted for at least 48 weeks for self-reinforced polylevolactide screws. The polylevolactide screw does not seem to cause osteopenia at the implantation site. The fixation properties of both self-reinforced polylevolactide screws and metallic screws appear to be sufficient for the fixation of small fragments of cancellous bone.
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