Acetabular morphology and resurfacing design.

The bony surfaces of 18 archaeological hemipelves were scanned using a 3D laser surface scanner and CyDir software on a Silicon Graphics workstation. The acetabular area was selected and point data from the approximately spherical bone surface saved. These data were input to a MATLAB routine that ca...

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Päätekijät: Thompson, M, Dawson, T, Kuiper, J, Northmore-Ball, MD, Tanner, K
Aineistotyyppi: Journal article
Kieli:English
Julkaistu: 2000
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author Thompson, M
Dawson, T
Kuiper, J
Northmore-Ball, MD
Tanner, K
author_facet Thompson, M
Dawson, T
Kuiper, J
Northmore-Ball, MD
Tanner, K
author_sort Thompson, M
collection OXFORD
description The bony surfaces of 18 archaeological hemipelves were scanned using a 3D laser surface scanner and CyDir software on a Silicon Graphics workstation. The acetabular area was selected and point data from the approximately spherical bone surface saved. These data were input to a MATLAB routine that calculated the radius and centre of the best-fit sphere. The goodness of fit was estimated using the mean and standard deviation of the distance of the bone surface points from the sphere surface. Eight points, at approximately equal distances around the acetabular rim, were selected with reference to bony landmarks. A plane containing three of these points served as an orientation reference plane. The vectors joining the eight rim points to the centre of the best-fit sphere were found. The angles between these vectors and the normal to the reference plane were calculated. Paired angles were summed to give the angle subtended by the acetabular rim in four directions. The overall mean angle was 158 degrees (range of mean angles 145 degrees -173 degrees ). The largest individual angles, some exceeding 180 degrees, were in the superior-inferior direction, while the mean angle in the anterior-posterior direction, i.e. that controlling flexion-extension, was 152 degrees. Males had larger subtended angles than females, although the difference was not statistically significant. Simulated reaming increased all angles by approximately 10 degrees. The subtended angles are important parameters in the design of the acetabular component of a hip replacement and particularly important in resurfacing hip replacement when the volume available is tightly constrained.
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spelling oxford-uuid:99c1fbce-36f7-4348-81b3-5cb7bd1ced042022-03-27T00:16:35ZAcetabular morphology and resurfacing design.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:99c1fbce-36f7-4348-81b3-5cb7bd1ced04EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2000Thompson, MDawson, TKuiper, JNorthmore-Ball, MDTanner, KThe bony surfaces of 18 archaeological hemipelves were scanned using a 3D laser surface scanner and CyDir software on a Silicon Graphics workstation. The acetabular area was selected and point data from the approximately spherical bone surface saved. These data were input to a MATLAB routine that calculated the radius and centre of the best-fit sphere. The goodness of fit was estimated using the mean and standard deviation of the distance of the bone surface points from the sphere surface. Eight points, at approximately equal distances around the acetabular rim, were selected with reference to bony landmarks. A plane containing three of these points served as an orientation reference plane. The vectors joining the eight rim points to the centre of the best-fit sphere were found. The angles between these vectors and the normal to the reference plane were calculated. Paired angles were summed to give the angle subtended by the acetabular rim in four directions. The overall mean angle was 158 degrees (range of mean angles 145 degrees -173 degrees ). The largest individual angles, some exceeding 180 degrees, were in the superior-inferior direction, while the mean angle in the anterior-posterior direction, i.e. that controlling flexion-extension, was 152 degrees. Males had larger subtended angles than females, although the difference was not statistically significant. Simulated reaming increased all angles by approximately 10 degrees. The subtended angles are important parameters in the design of the acetabular component of a hip replacement and particularly important in resurfacing hip replacement when the volume available is tightly constrained.
spellingShingle Thompson, M
Dawson, T
Kuiper, J
Northmore-Ball, MD
Tanner, K
Acetabular morphology and resurfacing design.
title Acetabular morphology and resurfacing design.
title_full Acetabular morphology and resurfacing design.
title_fullStr Acetabular morphology and resurfacing design.
title_full_unstemmed Acetabular morphology and resurfacing design.
title_short Acetabular morphology and resurfacing design.
title_sort acetabular morphology and resurfacing design
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AT dawsont acetabularmorphologyandresurfacingdesign
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