Abstract

The rapid spread of the finite element method has caused that it has become, among other methods, the standard tool for pre-clinical estimates of bone properties. This paper presents an application of this method for the calculation and prediction of strain and stress fields in the femoral head. The aim of the work is to study the influence of the considered anisotropy and heterogeneity of the modeled bone on the mechanical fields during a typical gait cycle. Three material models were tested with different properties of porous bone carried out in literature: a homogeneous isotropic model, a heterogeneous isotropic model, and a heterogeneous anisotropic model. In three cases studied, the elastic properties of the bone were determined basing on the Zysset-Curnier approach. The tensor of elastic constants defining the local properties of porous bone is correlated with a local porosity and a second order fabric tensor describing the bone microstructure. In the calculations, a model of the femoral head generated from high-resolution tomographic scans was used. Experimental data were drawn from publicly available database “Osteoporotic Virtual Physiological Human Project.” To realistically reflect the load on the femoral head, main muscles were considered, and their contraction forces were determined based on inverse kinematics. For this purpose, the results from OpenSim packet were used. The simulations demonstrated that differences between the results predicted by these material models are significant. Only the anisotropic model allowed for the plausible distribution of stresses along the main trabecular groups. The outcomes also showed that the precise evaluation of the mechanical fields is critical in the context of bone tissue remodeling under mechanical stimulations.

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