4.5 Article

A hyperelastic fibre-reinforced continuum model of healing tendons with distributed collagen fibre orientations

Journal

BIOMECHANICS AND MODELING IN MECHANOBIOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages 1457-1466

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10237-016-0774-5

Keywords

Tendon healing; Constitutive model; Fibre-reinforced material; Finite element analysis; Fractional factorial design

Funding

  1. Oxford Mechanobiology Group
  2. Oxford Solid Mechanics Group
  3. BOTNAR Research Centre, Oxford
  4. Biomedical Engineering Department, Lund University

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The healing process of ruptured tendons is problematic due to scar tissue formation and deteriorated material properties, and in some cases, it may take nearly a year to complete. Mechanical loading has been shown to positively influence tendon healing; however, the mechanisms remain unclear. Computational mechanobiology methods employed extensively to model bone healing have achieved high fidelity. This study aimed to investigate whether an established hyperelastic fibre-reinforced continuum model introduced by Gasser, Ogden and Holzapfel (GOH) can be used to capture the mechanical behaviour of the Achilles tendon under loading during discrete timepoints of the healing process and to assess the model's sensitivity to its microstructural parameters. Curve fitting of the GOH model against experimental tensile testing data of rat Achilles tendons at four timepoints during the tendon repair was used and achieved excellent fits (0.9903 < R-2 < 0.9986). A parametric sensitivity study using a three-level central composite design, which is a fractional factorial design method, showed that the collagen-fibre-related parameters in the GOH model-kappa, k(1)' and k(2)'-had almost equal influence on the fitting. This study demonstrates that the GOH hyperelastic fibre-reinforced model is capable of describing the mechanical behaviour of healing tendons and that further experiments should focus on establishing the structural and material parameters of collagen fibres in the healing tissue.

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