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Experimental Validation Of Finite Element Model For Proximal Composite Femur Using Optical Measurements

Grassi, Lorenzo LU orcid ; Väänänen, Sami P. ; Amin Yavari, Saber ; Weinans, Harrie ; Jurvelin, Jukka S. ; Zadpoor, Amir A. and Isaksson, Hanna LU orcid (2013) In Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials 21. p.86-94
Abstract
Patient-specific finite element models have been used to predict femur strength and fracture risk in individuals. Validation of the adopted finite element modelling procedure against mechanical testing data is a crucial step when aiming for clinical applications.



The majority of the works available in literature used data from strain gages to validate the model, thus having up to 15 experimental measurements. Optical techniques, such as Digital Image Correlation, can help to improve the models by providing a continuous field of deformation data over a femoral surface. The main objective of this study was to validate finite element models of six composite femora against strain data from digital image correlation, obtained... (More)
Patient-specific finite element models have been used to predict femur strength and fracture risk in individuals. Validation of the adopted finite element modelling procedure against mechanical testing data is a crucial step when aiming for clinical applications.



The majority of the works available in literature used data from strain gages to validate the model, thus having up to 15 experimental measurements. Optical techniques, such as Digital Image Correlation, can help to improve the models by providing a continuous field of deformation data over a femoral surface. The main objective of this study was to validate finite element models of six composite femora against strain data from digital image correlation, obtained during fracture tests performed in quasi-axial loading configuration. The finite element models were obtained from CT scans, by means of a semi-automatic segmentation. The principal strains both during the elastic phase and close to the fracture were compared, and showed a correlation coefficient close to 0.9. In the linear region, the slope and intercept were close to zero and unity, while for the case when fracture load was simulated, the slope decreased somewhat. The accuracy of the obtained results is comparable with the state-of-the-art literature, with the significant improvement of having around 50000 data points for each femur. This large number of measurements allows a more comprehensive validation of the predictions by the finite element models, since thousand of points are tracked along the femoral neck and trochanter region, i.e., the sites that are most critical for femur fracture. Moreover, strain measurement biases due to the strain gage reinforcement effect, were avoided. The combined experimental-numerical approach proved to be ready for application to in-vitro tests of human cadaver femurs, thus helping to develop a suitable mechanistic fracture risk criterion. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Composite femur, Digital image correlation, Bone fracture, Finite element
in
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
volume
21
pages
86 - 94
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • wos:000318837500010
  • scopus:84875331802
ISSN
1751-6161
DOI
10.1016/j.jmbbm.2013.02.006
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
1ca8666a-bf1f-4bef-a526-c14073b1b520 (old id 3516356)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 09:56:44
date last changed
2023-09-13 14:01:35
@article{1ca8666a-bf1f-4bef-a526-c14073b1b520,
  abstract     = {{Patient-specific finite element models have been used to predict femur strength and fracture risk in individuals. Validation of the adopted finite element modelling procedure against mechanical testing data is a crucial step when aiming for clinical applications.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The majority of the works available in literature used data from strain gages to validate the model, thus having up to 15 experimental measurements. Optical techniques, such as Digital Image Correlation, can help to improve the models by providing a continuous field of deformation data over a femoral surface. The main objective of this study was to validate finite element models of six composite femora against strain data from digital image correlation, obtained during fracture tests performed in quasi-axial loading configuration. The finite element models were obtained from CT scans, by means of a semi-automatic segmentation. The principal strains both during the elastic phase and close to the fracture were compared, and showed a correlation coefficient close to 0.9. In the linear region, the slope and intercept were close to zero and unity, while for the case when fracture load was simulated, the slope decreased somewhat. The accuracy of the obtained results is comparable with the state-of-the-art literature, with the significant improvement of having around 50000 data points for each femur. This large number of measurements allows a more comprehensive validation of the predictions by the finite element models, since thousand of points are tracked along the femoral neck and trochanter region, i.e., the sites that are most critical for femur fracture. Moreover, strain measurement biases due to the strain gage reinforcement effect, were avoided. The combined experimental-numerical approach proved to be ready for application to in-vitro tests of human cadaver femurs, thus helping to develop a suitable mechanistic fracture risk criterion.}},
  author       = {{Grassi, Lorenzo and Väänänen, Sami P. and Amin Yavari, Saber and Weinans, Harrie and Jurvelin, Jukka S. and Zadpoor, Amir A. and Isaksson, Hanna}},
  issn         = {{1751-6161}},
  keywords     = {{Composite femur; Digital image correlation; Bone fracture; Finite element}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{86--94}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials}},
  title        = {{Experimental Validation Of Finite Element Model For Proximal Composite Femur Using Optical Measurements}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2013.02.006}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jmbbm.2013.02.006}},
  volume       = {{21}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}