rogueMech
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2012
- 5
I had a surgeon I work with ask me if I could give him the mechanical details behind how surgical compression screws for bone work (ie
Now the main features of these types of screws are:
- Variable pitch; screw tip has a coarse thread while the head has a fine thread. The relative displacement of the bone fragments creates compression (the coarse section displaces further with each turn relative to the fine section)
- Tapered shaft; allows the later threads to dig into new material as the screw is screwed.
Visualizing all this is easy, but I can't seem to wrap my head around the math/FEA to prove it. Essentially, I'd like to get the numbers behind the compression on the bone the screw creates...
Any ideas?
Cheers,
Now the main features of these types of screws are:
- Variable pitch; screw tip has a coarse thread while the head has a fine thread. The relative displacement of the bone fragments creates compression (the coarse section displaces further with each turn relative to the fine section)
- Tapered shaft; allows the later threads to dig into new material as the screw is screwed.
Visualizing all this is easy, but I can't seem to wrap my head around the math/FEA to prove it. Essentially, I'd like to get the numbers behind the compression on the bone the screw creates...
Any ideas?
Cheers,