Abstract

BackgroundAppropriate structural and material properties are essential for finite-element-modeling (FEM). In knee FEM, structural information could extract through 3D-imaging, but the individual subject’s tissue material properties are inaccessible.PurposeThe current study's purpose was to develop a methodology to estimate the subject-specific stiffness of the tibiofemoral joint using finite-element-analysis (FEA) and MRI data of knee joint with and without load.MethodsIn this study, six Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) datasets were acquired from 3 healthy volunteers with axially loaded and unloaded knee joint. The strain was computed from the tibiofemoral bone gap difference (ΔmBGFT) using the knee MR images with and without load. The knee FEM study was conducted using a subject-specific knee joint 3D-model and various soft-tissue stiffness values (1 to 50 MPa) to develop subject-specific stiffness versus strain models.ResultsLess than 1.02% absolute convergence error was observed during the simulation. Subject-specific combined stiffness of weight-bearing tibiofemoral soft-tissue was estimated with mean values as 2.40 ± 0.17 MPa. Intra-subject variability has been observed during the repeat scan in 3 subjects as 0.27, 0.12, and 0.15 MPa, respectively. All subject-specific stiffness-strain relationship data was fitted well with power function (R2 = 0.997).ConclusionThe current study proposed a generalized mathematical model and a methodology to estimate subject-specific stiffness of the tibiofemoral joint for FEM analysis. Such a method might enhance the efficacy of FEM in implant design optimization and biomechanics for subject-specific studies.Trial registration The institutional ethics committee (IEC), Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India, approved the study on 20th September 2017, with reference number P-019; it was a pilot study, no clinical trail registration was recommended.

Highlights

  • Appropriate structural and material properties are essential for finite-element-modeling (FEM)

  • The finite–element-modeling (FEM) with appropriate structural and biomechanical information is an efficient tool for analyzing the biomechanical behavior of the knee joint [1,2,3,4]

  • A few noninvasive techniques [12, 13] are available, such as radiography, Computed Tomography(CT), and Magnetic Resonance Imaging(MRI), which can indirectly measure biomechanical features; the output of these techniques do not suffice to incorporate in the FEM of the knee joint, which requires tissue mechanical properties

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Summary

Introduction

Appropriate structural and material properties are essential for finite-element-modeling (FEM). To use the FEM tool for appropriate knee joint analysis, a noninvasive method is required to estimate the subject-specific knee joint soft-tissue material properties. Other non-conventional imaging methods have reported significant changes in the knee joint MRI parameters under load conditions [14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]. Such practices provide only an indirect indicator of the knee joint soft-tissues properties but cannot measure the stiffness or relevant biomechanical properties used for FEM analysis

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