Fatigue strength of a wire passing through a cannulated screw: implications for closure of the sternum following cardiac surgery

RS Jutley, Duncan Shepherd, David Hukins

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

It has been proposed that the incidence of sternal dehiscence can be decreased by passing the wires used for sternotomy closure through cannulated screws. However, there is a potential risk of fatigue failure as a result of the wire moving against the screw, e.g. during coughing and sneezing. The system of cannulated screws and wire was subjected to static tensile testing to failure. Five tests were performed and failure occurred at 388 +/- 34 N (mean +/- SD). Ten cyclic tests were then performed. Sinusoidal loading was applied at 10 Hz with peak forces in the range 10-90 per cent of the static failure force, at a constant load ratio R = 10. The test with the lowest peak force reached run-out at 6 x 10(6) cycles. The others failed by the ends of the wire closures becoming untwisted (one test), the wire fracturing at the twist (three tests) or the wire fracturing at the screw (five tests). However, calculations based on these results suggest that fatigue failure is unlikely to occur as a result of regular breathing or continuous coughing or sneezing.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)221-226
Number of pages6
JournalEngineering in Medicine
Volume217
Publication statusPublished - 17 Mar 2003

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