Abstract

Image-based mechanical modeling of the complex micro-structure of human bone has shown promise as a non-invasive method for characterizing bone strength and fracture risk in vivo. In particular, elastic moduli obtained from image-derived micro-finite element (μFE) simulations have been shown to correlate well with results obtained by mechanical testing of cadaveric bone. However, most existing large-scale finite-element simulation programs require significant computing resources, which hamper their use in common laboratory and clinical environments. In this work, we theoretically derive and computationally evaluate the resources needed to perform such simulations (in terms of computer memory and computation time), which are dependent on the number of finite elements in the image-derived bone model. A detailed description of our approach is provided, which is specifically optimized for μFE modeling of the complex three-dimensional architecture of trabecular bone. Our implementation includes domain decomposition for parallel computing, a novel stopping criterion, and a system for speeding up convergence by pre-iterating on coarser grids. The performance of the system is demonstrated on a dual quad-core Xeon 3.16 GHz CPUs equipped with 40 GB of RAM. Models of distal tibia derived from 3D in-vivo MR images in a patient comprising 200,000 elements required less than 30 seconds to converge (and 40 MB RAM). To illustrate the system's potential for large-scale μFE simulations, axial stiffness was estimated from high-resolution micro-CT images of a voxel array of 90 million elements comprising the human proximal femur in seven hours CPU time. In conclusion, the system described should enable image-based finite-element bone simulations in practical computation times on high-end desktop computers with applications to laboratory studies and clinical imaging.

Highlights

  • Large-scale finite-element simulations of complex physical systems are being used increasingly in many areas of science, engineering, biomedical and clinical research and industry [1,2,3,4]

  • Image-based micro-finite-element modeling on the basis of high-resolution medical images has shown promise as a technique for mechanical characterization of the complex microstructure of bone. Both magnetic resonance (MR) and peripheral high-resolution computed tomography (HR-pQCT) have already demonstrated the ability to monitor alterations in bone mechanical properties resulting from disease progression or drug intervention [5,6] or for assessment of fracture risk [7,8]

  • We investigate the feasibility of large-scale FE simulations and describe an optimized FE solver designed for high-resolution image-based computational bone mechanics of systems with 10–100 million elements within the constraints of standard workstations in minutes to hours

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Summary

Introduction

Large-scale finite-element simulations of complex physical systems (e.g. involving 10 million or more finite elements) are being used increasingly in many areas of science, engineering, biomedical and clinical research and industry [1,2,3,4]. Most existing large-scale finite-element simulation programs require significant computing resources, which may hamper their use in common laboratory and clinical environments. Image-based micro-finite-element (mFE) modeling on the basis of high-resolution medical images has shown promise as a technique for mechanical characterization of the complex microstructure of bone. Both magnetic resonance (MR) and peripheral high-resolution computed tomography (HR-pQCT) have already demonstrated the ability to monitor alterations in bone mechanical properties resulting from disease progression or drug intervention [5,6] or for assessment of fracture risk [7,8]. FE analyses at multiple scales from macro- to micro-structure have been proposed as possible means to provide insight into failure mechanisms [9]

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