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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 45 - 45
1 Feb 2020
Knowles N Kusins J Pucchio A Ferreira L
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INTRODUCTION

Mechanical properties mapping based on CT-attenuation is the basis of finite element (FE) modeling with heterogeneous materials and bone geometry defined from clinical-resolution CT scans. Accuracy between empirical and computational models that use constitutive equations relating CT-attenuation to bone density are well described, but material mapping strategy has not gained similar attention. As such, the objective of this study was to determine variations in the apparent modulus of trabecular bone cores mapped with various material mapping strategies, using a validated density-modulus relationship and co-registered µFEMs as the gold standard.

METHODS

Micro-CT images (isotropic 32 µm) were used to create µFEMs from glenoid trabecular bone cores of 14 cadaveric scapula. Each µFEM was loaded in unconstrained compression to determine the trabecular core apparent modulus (Eapp). Quantitative CT (QCT) images (isotropic 0.625 mm) were subsequently acquired and co-registered QCT-FEMs created for each of the 14 cores. The QCT-FEMs were meshed with either linear hexahedral (HEX8), linear tetrahedral (TET4), or quadratic tetrahedral (TET10) elements at 3 mesh densities (0.3125 mm, 0.46875 mm, 0.625 mm). Three material mapping strategies were used to apply heterogeneous element-wise (element-averaging of the native HU field (Mimics V.20, Materialise, Leuven BE)) or nodal (tri-linear interpolation of HU Field or E Field (Matlab V. R2017a, Natick, RI, USA)) material properties to the QCT FEMs. Identical boundary conditions were used and Eapp between the µFEMs and QCT-FEMs was compared (Figure 1). The QCT density of each hexahedral mesh with element size equal to voxel dimensions was used to compare the QCT density mapping between tetrahedral meshes and material mapping strategy.