Comparison of trabecular bone behavior in core and whole bone samples using high-resolution modeling of a vertebral body

被引:0
|
作者
Noel M. Harrison
Peter E. McHugh
机构
[1] National University of Ireland,National Centre for Biomedical Engineering Science
[2] National University of Ireland,Department of Mechanical and Biomedical Engineering
关键词
Trabecular; Cancellous; Voxel; Vertebra; Basivertebral; Finite element;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Computational analysis of trabecular bone normally involves the modeling of (experimental tests of) cored samples. However, the lack of constraint on the sides of the extracted trabecular bone samples limits the information that can be inferred regarding true in situ behavior. Here, the element-by-element voxel-based finite element method was applied via, a custom-written software suite (FEEBE), to a 72 μm resolution model of an ovine vertebra. The difference between the apparent modulus of eight concentric core cylinders when modeled as part of the whole bone (containing 84 × 106 degrees of freedom) and independent of the whole bone was investigated. The results showed that cored trabecular bone apparent modulus depended significantly on the core diameter when modeled as an extracted core (r2 = 0.975) and as part of a whole bone (r2 = 0.986). The cause of this result was separated into the side-artifact effect and bone volume fraction (BV/TV) effect. For the independently modeled cores, the apparent modulus of an inner core region of interest varied with increasing thickness of the outer annulus. This was attributed to the side-artifact effect, given that the BV/TV of the core region was constant. Within the whole trabecular structure, the side artifact was eliminated as the entire bone structure was modeled. However, a BV/TV effect influenced the apparent modulus depending on the size of the core selected for determining apparent modulus. Changing the size of the core varied the overall BV/TV of the core, and this significantly (r2 = 0.999) influences the apparent modulus. Therefore, determining a ‘true’ apparent modulus for trabecular bone was not achievable. The independently modeled cores consistently under-predict the in vivo apparent modulus. It is recommended that if a ‘true’ apparent modulus is required, the BV/TV at which it is required needs to be first determined. Apparent modeling of entire bones at microscale resolution allowed regions of low and high tissue strains to be identified, consistent with patterns of trabecular bone remodeling and resorption reported in literature. The basivertebral vein cavity underwent the highest strains within the entire vertebral body, suggesting that failure might initiate here, despite containing visibly thicker struts and plate trabeculae. Although computationally expensive, analysis of the entire vertebral body provided a full picture of in situ trabecular bone deformation.
引用
收藏
页码:469 / 480
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Modeling the mechanical behavior of vertebral trabecular bone: Effects of age-related changes in microstructure
    Silva, MJ
    Gibson, LJ
    BONE, 1997, 21 (02) : 191 - 199
  • [22] In vivo trabecular bone morphologic and mechanical relationship using high-resolution 3-T MRI
    Alberich-Bayarri, Angel
    Marti-Bonmati, Luis
    Sanz-Requena, Roberto
    Belloch, Elena
    Moratal, David
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY, 2008, 191 (03) : 721 - 726
  • [23] Characterization of trabecular bone structure from high-resolution magnetic resonance images using fuzzy logic
    Carballido-Gamio, Julio
    Phan, Catherine
    Link, Thomas M.
    Majumdar, Sharmila
    MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2006, 24 (08) : 1023 - 1029
  • [24] Comparison of trabecular bone density at vertebral and radial sites using quantitative computed tomography
    Fujii, Y
    Chikawa, T
    Nakamura, T
    Goto, B
    Fujita, T
    OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL, 1996, 6 (06) : 486 - 490
  • [25] Non-invasive assessment of bone strength using high-resolution MRI of the radius: Relationship to trabecular microarchitecture and bone turnover.
    Majumdar, S
    van Rietbergen, B
    Newitt, D
    Garnero, P
    Delmas, P
    Bredella, M
    von Ingersleben, G
    Harris, S
    Chesnut, C
    Genant, H
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 1999, 14 : S138 - S138
  • [26] ASSESSMENT OF VERTEBRAL DEFORMATION WITH A HIGH-RESOLUTION FAN-BEAM BONE DENSITOMETER
    LANG, T
    FAN, B
    WU, C
    LI, J
    TAKADA, M
    GLUER, CC
    GENANT, H
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 1995, 10 : S367 - S367
  • [27] Changes in trabecular bone structure assessed by high-resolution MRI in patients after transplantation
    Link, TM
    NONINVASIVE ASSESSMENT OF TRABECULAR BONE ARCHITECTURE AND THE COMPETENCE OF BONE, 2001, 496 : 31 - 36
  • [28] On the Significance of Motion Degradation in High-resolution 3D μMRI of Trabecular Bone
    Bhagat, Yusuf A.
    Rajapakse, Chamith S.
    Magland, Jeremy F.
    Wald, Michael J.
    Song, Hee Kwon
    Leonard, Mary B.
    Wehrli, Felix W.
    ACADEMIC RADIOLOGY, 2011, 18 (10) : 1205 - 1216
  • [29] In vivo assessment of trabecular bone microarchitecture by high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography
    Boutroy, S
    Bouxsein, ML
    Munoz, F
    Delmas, PD
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM, 2005, 90 (12): : 6508 - 6515
  • [30] Effects of ageing on cortical and trabecular bone in radius and tibia: A high-resolution PQCT study
    Kaptoge, S.
    Dalzell, N.
    Morris, N.
    Koller, B.
    Ruegsegger, P.
    Berthier, A.
    Braak, L.
    Reeve, J.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2007, 22 (07) : 1136 - 1136