Non-invasive characterization of total hip arthroplasty by means of passive acceleration measurement

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Abstract

This paper presents a non-invasive measurement method to detect and characterize failures and material imperfections in total joint prostheses based on acceleration measurement. Therefore, a prototype sensor has been developed to fulfill the requirements of a medical-technical sensor. This sensor has been tested on patients with total hip arthroplasty. Special emphasis is put on the real-time processing of measurement data by means of intelligent signal processing as well as reliable and repeatable measurement procedures, including standardized positions for the sensor front-end and a standardized motion-sequence the patient is performing.

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Lieschnegg, M., Zacherl, M., Lechner, B., Weger, C., & Fuchs, A. (2010). Non-invasive characterization of total hip arthroplasty by means of passive acceleration measurement. International Journal on Smart Sensing and Intelligent Systems, 3(1), 75–87. https://doi.org/10.21307/ijssis-2017-380

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