|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
Worldwide experience with the Lcs* mobile bearing total knee
prosthesis has been unpar alleled both in terms of enduring
popularity and outstanding long-term clinical results. Buechel and
Pappas's design was based on the principles of; restoring
anatomical joint function to as near normal as possible, minimising
contact stresses to avoid wear and darn age to the bearing
surfaces. and finally the idea that constraint should refiect the
need for mobility, to avoid shear stresses and loosening of the
implant. In 1977, the LCS (R) knee was implanted by Dr. Frederick
Buechel. This was the first mobile bearing, tri-compartmental knee
implant. This was also the first to successfully address the key
issues ofloosening, wear and patello-femoral problems associated
with earlier designs. The unique design solution was the creation
of a common articulating geometry for the tibia and patella on the
distal femoral surface. This resulted in a tibial and patellar
articulation that was mobile in nature, but with an identical
radius of curvature and conformity. The mobile bearing concept was
considered sufficiently novel and unproven that the US FDA (Food
& Drug Administration) required that it be validated in an
Investigational Device Evaluation (IDE). An FDA IDE study involving
25 US surgeons was initiated in 1981. Validation of the clinical
success of the device in this study resulted in FDA approval of the
LCS, Knee (for cemented, tri-compartmental use) in 1985.
|
You may like...
Funny Story
Emily Henry
Paperback
R395
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.