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Dive into the research topics where Blaž Mavčič is active.

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Featured researches published by Blaž Mavčič.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2002

Mathematical estimation of stress distribution in normal and dysplastic human hips

Blaž Mavčič; Borut Pompe; Vane Antolič; Matej Daniel; Aleš Iglič; Veronika Kralj-Iglič

By using a mathematical model of the adult human hip in the static one‐legged stance position of the body, the forces acting on the hip, peak stress in the hip joint and other relevant radiographic and biomechanical parameters were assessed. The aims were to examine if the peak stress in dysplastic hips is higher than in normal hips and to find out which biomechanical parameters contribute significantly to higher peak stress. The average normalized peak stress in dysplastic hips (7.1 kPa/N) was markedly higher (≈︁100%) than the average normalized peak stress in normal hips (3.5 kPa/N). The characteristic parameters that contributed to higher peak stress in dysplastic hips included the smaller lateral coverage of the femoral head, the larger interhip distance, the wider pelvis, and the medial position of the greater trochanter. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that stress distribution over weight‐bearing surface of the hip joint is the relevant parameter for assessment of the risk for developing coxarthrosis.


Acta Orthopaedica | 2005

The Bernese periacetabular osteotomy: clinical, radiographic and mechanical 7–15-year follow-up of 26 hips

Marko Kralj; Blaž Mavčič; Vane Antolič; Aleš Iglič; Veronika Kralj-Iglič

Background The Bernese periacetabular osteotomy is used in dysplastic hips to increase the load-bearing area of the hip and to prevent osteoarthritis.The aim of our work was to determine the contact hip stress before and after the osteotomy and to compare the relief of stress with the long-term radiographic and clinical outcome. Patients and methods We followed 26 dysplastic hips (26 patients) for 7–15 years after the index operation. Clinical evaluation was based on the WOMAC score, osteoarthrosis was evaluated with the Tönnis classification, the angles of lateral (CE) and anterior (VCA) femoral coverage were measured, and biomechanical parameters were studied. Results Periacetabular osteotomy increased the mean CE from 15° to 37°, and the mean VCA from 22° to 38°. The mean normalized peak contact stress was reduced from 5.2 to 3.0 kPa/N. Four hips required total hip arthroplasty after an average of 4.5 years, 8 hips showed considerable arthrosis progression, and 14 hips had no or mild arthrosis at follow-up. Preoperative WOMAC score, preoperative Tönnis grade and postoperative normalized peak contact stress were the most important predictors of outcome. Interpretation The Bernese periacetabular osteotomy improves the mechanical status of the hip. Long-term success depends on the grade of arthrosis preoperatively and on the magnitude of operative correction of the contact hip stress.   ▪


Journal of Biomechanics | 1999

Mathematical modelling of stress in the hip during gait

M. Ipavec; Richard A. Brand; Douglas R. Pedersen; Blaž Mavčič; Veronika Kralj-Iglič; Aleš Iglič

A mathematical model is developed for calculating the contact stress distribution in the hip for a known resultant hip force and characteristic geometrical parameters. Using a relatively simple single nonlinear algebraic equation, the model can be readily applied in clinical practice to estimate the stress distribution in the most frequent body positions of everyday activities. This is demonstrated by analyzing the data on the resultant hip force obtained from laboratory observations where a stance period of gait is considered.


Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics | 2008

Shear stress in epiphyseal growth plate is a risk factor for slipped capital femoral epiphysis.

Oskar Zupanc; Miran Križančič; Matej Daniel; Blaž Mavčič; Vane Antolič; Aleš Iglič; Veronika Kralj-Iglič

Background: Slipping of the capital femoral epiphysis is an important orthopaedic problem of early adolescence. Many hypotheses about its etiology have been examined, yet the underlying mechanisms have not yet been fully elucidated. We examined elevated shear stress in the epiphyseal growth plate and elevated contact hip stress exerted on the femoral head as risk factors for slipping of the capital femoral epiphysis. Methods: Two groups of hips were compared: a group of 100 hips contralateral to the slipped ones and a group of 70 age- and gender-matched healthy hips. The characteristics of individual hips were incorporated by means of geometrical parameters determined from standard anteroposterior radiographs. Shear stress was calculated by using a mathematical model where the femoral neck was considered to function as an elastic rod. Contact hip stress was calculated by the HIPSTRESS method. Results: Hips contralateral to the slipped ones had higher average shear stress (0.81 vs 0.51 MPa; P < 0.001) and more vertically inclined physeal angle (55.4 vs 63.2 degrees.; P < 0.001) in comparison to healthy hips. Shear stress in the contralateral hips to the slipped ones remained significantly higher even when normalized to the body weight (1400 vs 1060 Pa/N; P < 0.001). There was no significant difference in the average contact hip stress (1.86 vs 1.74 MPa; P = 0.145). Conclusions: Elevated shear stress, but not elevated contact stress, is a risk factor for slipping of the capital femoral epiphysis. Level of evidence: III (prognostic study, case-control study).


Journal of Arthroplasty | 2014

The impact of leg length discrepancy on clinical outcome of total hip arthroplasty: comparison of four measurement methods.

Matej Keršič; Drago Dolinar; Vane Antolič; Blaž Mavčič

In a single-surgeon series of 119 patients with unilateral primary uncemented total hip arthroplasty, four leg-length discrepancy measurement methods (absolute, relative, trochanteric, standardized-trochanteric) were analyzed for their impact on WOMAC score, Oxford Hip Score and self-perceived leg-length discrepancy. After adjustment for age, gender and BMI, postoperative WOMAC scores correlated only with clinical absolute measurements of leg elongation (P=0.05). Self-perceived leg-length discrepancy corresponded best to the clinically measured relative leg-length discrepancy (11 mm perceived vs. 7 mm unperceived; P=0.04) while there was no significant correspondence with radiographic measurements or leg elongation magnitudes. Within the <10 mm range of mean postoperative leg length discrepancy in the studied series, its impact on the overall clinical satisfaction was detectable but not considerable.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2005

Shape and Size of Giant Unilamellar Phospholipid Vesicles Containing Cardiolipin

Nejc Tomšiè; Blaž Babnik; Darko Lombardo; Blaž Mavčič; Maša Kandušer; A. Iglič; Veronika Kralj-Iglič

The effect of cardiolipin content on the shape and size of giant palmitoyloleylphosphatidylcholine/cardiolipin vesicles was studied. Unilamellar vesicles were prepared in sugar solution by the method of electroformation, from mixtures containing up to 50% weight ratio of cardiolipin. At room temperature the vesicles containing cardiolipin exhibited abrupt changes in the curvature of the vesicle contour indicating regions of phase separation. The deviations from the spherical shape were larger if vesicles were made from mixtures with a higher content of cardiolipin. Numerous vesicles with soft fluctuating walls were observed. The estimated size of the vesicles containing cardiolipin was found to be smaller than the size of pure palmitoyloleylphosphatidylcholine vesicles.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2000

Peak contact stress in human hip during gait

Blaž Mavčič; Vane Antolič; Richard A. Brand; Aleš Iglič; Veronika Kralj-Iglič; Doug R. Pedersen

Abstract The contact stress in a human hip is not uniform and it changes with different body positions. The changing location of the peak contact stress during gait may indicate the predilection sites for further development of osteoarthritis in the hip. On the basis of laboratory measurements and by using mathematical models of forces and stresses in human hip we determined the points of the peak contact stress in successive phases of gait. Results show that the peak stress points are mostly located in the posterior-medial portion of the weight bearing area, which corresponds well to the clinical observations. It is also shown that in the pathological conditions of hip dysplasia the peak contact stress trajectory is located more laterally and anteriorly.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2016

Does Preoperative Antimicrobial Prophylaxis Influence the Diagnostic Potential of Periprosthetic Tissues in Hip or Knee Infections

Klemen Bedenčič; Martina Kavčič; Nataša Faganeli; Rene Mihalič; Blaž Mavčič; Jožica Dolenc; Zlatka Bajc; Rihard Trebše

BackgroundUndiagnosed low-grade prosthetic joint infections (PJI) are recognized as an important reason for early failure of presumably aseptic revisions. Preoperatively administered antimicrobial prophylaxis reduces the incidence of PJI but it may reduce the sensitivity of microbiologic periprosthetic tissue cultures and consequently increase the incidence of undiagnosed septic prosthetic joint failures, which can lead to catastrophic serial revisions.Questions/purposesWe wished to determine whether administration of preoperative antibiotics decreases the likelihood of diagnosing PJI in patients undergoing revision hip or knee arthroplasty in whom infection is suspected.MethodsWe prospectively enrolled and evaluated 40 patients (29 with THAs and 11 with TKAs) who met the following inclusion criteria: older than 18 years, with suspected PJI of unknown cause, undergoing surgical revision. After arthrotomy, three tissue samples were obtained for microbiologic analysis and diagnosis, and antimicrobial prophylaxis (cefazolin 2 g intravenously) then was administered. Later during the procedure, but before débridement and irrigation, the second set of three tissue samples was obtained from the same surgical area and was cultured. Tissue concentration of prophylactic antibiotic was verified with the second set of samples. A positive culture result was defined as one or more positive cultures (growth on agar at or before 14 days). We then compared the yield on the microbiologic cultures obtained before administration of antibiotics with the yield on the cultures obtained after antibiotics were administered. An a priori analysis was performed; with the numbers available, we had 98% power to detect a difference in diagnostic sensitivity of 33%.ResultsWith the numbers available, we found no difference in the likelihood that an infection would be diagnosed between the samples obtained before and after administration of antimicrobial prophylaxis (odds ratio [OR] for positive microbial culture = 0.99; 95% CI, 0.40–2.48; p = 0.99). All measured tissue concentrations of cefazolin were greater than the minimum inhibitory concentration, therefore we found that antibiotic prophylaxis was adequate at the time of second-set tissue specimen recovery.ConclusionsResults from this small, prospective series suggest that preoperative antimicrobial prophylaxis may be administered safely even in patients undergoing revision hip or knee arthroplasty in which microbiologic sampling is planned without compromising the diagnostic sensitivity of tissue sample cultures. However, before applying our results more generally, our findings need to be confirmed in larger, multicenter studies that would allow evaluation by sex, procedure, bacteriology, and other potentially important factors.Level of EvidenceLevel I, diagnostic study.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2000

Weight bearing area during gait in normal and dysplastic hips

Blaž Mavčič; Vane Antolič; Richard A. Brand; Aleš Iglič; Marija Ipavec; Veronika Kralj-Iglič; Doug R. Pedersen

The size and the shape of the weight bearing area in adult human hips depend on the forces acting in the hip and therefore change during the body motion. In this work the size and the shape of the weight bearing area in several phases of gait are estimated. The forces acting in the hip were determined through laboratory measurements and analyzed by mathematical models. The dysplastic hips are distinguished from the normal ones by a smaller center-edge angle of Wiberg while the time course of the forces acting in the hip is assumed to be the same in both cases. It is shown how radial articular stress is distributed over the weight bearing area in both cases. In normal human hips the weight bearing area occupies a rather large portion of the acetabulum-femoral head contact area while in dysplastic hips stress distribution is unfavourably concentrated in a smaller weight bearing area.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2000

Evaluation of biomechanical status of dysplastic human hips

Borut Pompe; Vane Antolič; Aleš Iglič; Veronika Kralj-Iglič; Blaž Mavčič; Dragica Smrke

Abstract The evaluation of the biomechanical status of human hip joint was performed. Required parameters were assessed from standard antero-posterior rentgenographs and the value of contact stress on the weight bearing area is calculated. We analysed 45 dysplastic human hips and compared measured values to 81 healthy hips. The peak contact stress on the weight bearing area is considerably and statistically significantly higher in dysplastic hips compared to healthy hips. The Wiberg centre-edge angle is statistically significantly smaller in group of dysplastic hips compared to healthy hips.The evaluation of the biomechanical status of human hip joint was performed. Required parameters were assessed from standard antero-posterior rentgenographs and the value of contact stress on the weight bearing area is calculated. We analysed 45 dysplastic human hips and compared measured values to 81 healthy hips. The peak contact stress on the weight bearing area is considerably and statistically significantly higher in dysplastic hips compared to healthy hips. The Wiberg centre-edge angle is statistically significantly smaller in group of dysplastic hips compared to healthy hips.

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Aleš Iglič

University of Ljubljana

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Richard A. Brand

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research

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Matej Daniel

Czech Technical University in Prague

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A. Iglič

University of Ljubljana

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Blaž Babnik

University of Ljubljana

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M. Ipavec

University of Ljubljana

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