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Experimental Biomechanics Lab Gives Students Hands-on Experience Evaluating Joint Replacements

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Author(s)

Tamara Chapman

Senior Managing Editor

Senior Managing Editor"

Tamara.Chapman@du.edu

Feature  •

The fall 2019 edition of the 快活app Magazine is now out! This story originally published in the magazine. To view all the stories from the fall magazine, including feature stories on Chancellor Emerita Rebecca Chopp and 快活app's role in the success of the Denver Green School, please visit听.听

Experimental Biomechanics Lab

It鈥檚 a Thursday in early June, and at the听鈥檚 Experimental Biomechanics Lab, it鈥檚 time to replace some knees. Ten of them, in fact.听

On hand for the job: One highly skilled surgeon; a smattering of students to help Chadd Clary, of the听, monitor and collect data; and five cadavers, each of which will host two of the substitute knees. 听

As the day progresses, the surgeon tries a range of procedures for the replacements. Once the new devices are in place, the surgeon bends and extends each knee to gauge flexion and range of motion. The engineers, meanwhile, tend to their data-capture tasks 鈥 made more difficult when conducted with fingers crossed. If all adheres to plan, the day鈥檚 work could inform how other surgeons implant a new generation of replacements into living humans.听

鈥淭he nice thing about working in our lab is we鈥檙e very practical,鈥 says Clary, noting that the many evaluation projects underway could make a difference in mere months, affecting everything from implant design to a patient鈥檚 satisfaction with a procedure.

Launched in 2016 as a complement to the Ritchie School鈥檚 extensive orthopedic biomechanics enterprise, the lab not only provides evaluation of the surgical techniques associated with joint replacement; it also tests devices in the design stage. These studies, Clary says, typically are commissioned by manufacturers seeking independent confirmation of their own product research. They rely on the 快活app lab to identify design glitches, verify product claims and help secure FDA approval.听

鈥淐ompanies are out there developing new devices, and they want to be able to put them into patients. But they never put them into patients first,鈥 he says.听

The summer before his junior year, Gary Doan, now a master鈥檚 student in mechanical engineering, took on a research project that mixed his interest in medicine and anatomy with his aptitude for math and physics. 鈥淢y project was exploring osteophytes, which are bone growths in the back part of the knee, and how they affect flexion and extension of the knee,鈥 he says.听

Working with computer-aided drafting technology and a 3D printer, Doan was able to create synthetic osteophytes that were implanted in five cadavers just ahead of a total knee replacement, allowing surgeons to better understand how the growths can impede the performance of an artificial joint.听

Not all of the work requires surgeons and scalpels. Much of the testing enlists state-of-the-art technology to assess an implant鈥檚 durability and capacity. 鈥淲e are using [highly sophisticated] machines to apply all the loading conditions the patient will experience: climbing stairs, stumbling, walking and deep knee bends,鈥 Clary says. 听

For master鈥檚 student Brittany Marshall, the opportunity to collaborate on device evaluations represents ideal preparation for a career in orthopedic advances. 鈥淵ou can learn so much from other [researchers] around you,鈥 she says, adding that though her own thesis focuses on hip replacements, she has chipped in on projects related to shoulders and knees 鈥 all in the hope of helping others extend their activities or overcome pain.听

As Clary sees it, that hope is the lab鈥檚 reason for being. 鈥淎 lot of times, when you do research, you鈥檙e working on areas that may be transformational, but your research may not actually affect people鈥檚 lives for years and years,鈥 he says. But when a new device is introduced, it could help a senior citizen climb stairs or, for that matter, a quarterback toss a Hail Mary pass.听