Finite element modelling of trabecular bone microstructure using emerging CT images

Author(s):  
Indranil Guha ◽  
Chamith S. Rajapakse ◽  
Xiaoliu Zhang ◽  
Gregory Chang ◽  
Punam K. Saha
2011 ◽  
Vol 278 (1721) ◽  
pp. 3067-3073 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Doube ◽  
Michał M. Kłosowski ◽  
Alexis M. Wiktorowicz-Conroy ◽  
John R. Hutchinson ◽  
Sandra J. Shefelbine

Many bones are supported internally by a latticework of trabeculae. Scaling of whole bone length and diameter has been extensively investigated, but scaling of the trabecular network is not well characterized. We analysed trabecular geometry in the femora of 90 terrestrial mammalian and avian species with body masses ranging from 3 g to 3400 kg. We found that bone volume fraction does not scale substantially with animal size, while trabeculae in larger animals' femora are thicker, further apart and fewer per unit volume than in smaller animals. Finite element modelling indicates that trabecular scaling does not alter the bulk stiffness of trabecular bone, but does alter strain within trabeculae under equal applied loads. Allometry of bone's trabecular tissue may contribute to the skeleton's ability to withstand load, without incurring the physiological or mechanical costs of increasing bone mass.


2001 ◽  
Vol 123 (6) ◽  
pp. 607-612 ◽  
Author(s):  
John T. Koontz ◽  
Guillaume T. Charras ◽  
Robert E. Guldberg

A finite element method to simulate the formation of an interconnected trabecular bone microstructure oriented with respect to applied in vivo mechanical forces is introduced and quantitatively compared to experimental data from a hydraulic bone chamber implant model. Randomly located 45 μm mineralized nodules were used as the initial condition for the model simulations to represent an early stage of intramembranous bone formation. Boundary conditions were applied consistent with the mechanical environment provided by the in vivo bone chamber model. A two-dimensional repair simulation algorithm that incorporated strain energy density (SED), SED gradient, principal strain, or principal strain gradient as the local objective criterion was utilized to simulate the formation of an oriented trabecular bone microstructure. The simulation solutions were convergent, unique, and relatively insensitive to the assumed initial distribution of mineralized nodules. Model predictions of trabecular bone morphology and anisotropy were quantitatively compared to experimental results. All simulations produced structures that qualitatively resembled oriented trabecular bone. However, only simulations utilizing a gradient objective criterion yielded results quantitatively similar to in vivo observations. This simulation approach coupled with an experimental model that delivers controlled in vivo mechanical stimuli can be utilized to study the relationship between physical factors and microstructural adaptation during bone repair.


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