Author :
Jiang, Ching-Chuan ; Lee, Ju-Hong ; Yuan, Tung-Tai
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Orthopaedic Surg., Nat. Taiwan Univ. Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
Abstract :
This is a preliminary research on the vibration arthrometry of artificial knee joint in vitro. Analyzing the vibration signals measured from the accelerometer on patella, there are 2 speed protocols in knee kinematics: 1) 20/s, the signal is called "physiological patellofemoral crepitus (PPC", and 2) 67°/s, the signal is called "vibration signal in rapid knee motion" The study has collected 14 patients who had revision total knee arthroplasty due to prosthetic wear or malalignment represent the failed total knee replacement (FTKR), and 12 patients who had just undergone the primary total knee arthroplasty in the past 2 to 6 months and have currently no knee pain represent the normal total knee replacement (NTKR). FTKR is clinically divided into 3 categories: metal wear, polyethylene wear of the patellar component, and no wear but with prosthesis malalignment. In PPC, the value of root mean square (rms) is used as a parameter; in vibration signals in rapid knee motion, autoregressive modeling is used for adaptive segmentation and extracting the dominant pole of each signal segment to calculate the spectral power ratios in f<100 Hz and f>500 Hz. It was found that in the case of metal wear, the rms value of PPC signal is far greater than a knee joint with polyethylene wear and without wear, i.e., PPC signal appears only in metal wear. As for vibration signals in rapid knee motion, prominent time-domain vibration signals could be found in the FTKR patients with either polyethylene or metal wear of the patellar component. The authors also found that for normal knee joint, the spectral power ratio of dominant poles has nearly 80% distribution in f<100 Hz, is between 50% and 70% for knee with polyethylene wear and below 30% for metal wear, whereas in f>500 Hz, spectral power ratio of dominant poles has over 30% distribution in metal wear but only nonsignificant distribution in polyethylene wear, no wear, and normal knee. The results show that vibration signals in r- - apid knee motion can be used for effectively detecting polyethylene wear of the patellar component in the early stage, while PPC signals can only be used to detect prosthetic metal wear in the late stage.
Keywords :
biomechanics; kinematics; medical signal processing; prosthetics; vibration measurement; wear; 100 Hz; 2 to 6 month; 500 Hz; autoregressive modeling; cartilage degeneration; failed total knee replacement patients; knee joint; knee kinematics; patellar component; physiological patellofemoral crepitus; prosthesis malalignment; prosthetic wear; rapid knee motion; revision total knee arthroplasty; vibration arthrometry; vibration signal; vibration signals; Current measurement; Failure analysis; In vitro; Knee; Motion detection; Motion measurement; Polyethylene; Prosthetics; Signal analysis; Vibration measurement; Aged; Biomechanics; Equipment Failure Analysis; Female; Humans; Knee Joint; Knee Prosthesis; Male; Materials Testing; Range of Motion, Articular; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Vibration;